Smart, Christopher W.; Thomas, Ellen (2006): The enigma of early Miocene biserial planktic Foraminifera. Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States, Geology (Boulder), 34 (12), 1041-1044, georefid:2006-091362

Abstract:
Small biserial foraminifera were abundant in the early Miocene (ca. 18.9-17.2 Ma) in the eastern Atlantic and western Indian Oceans, but absent in the western equatorial Atlantic Ocean, Weddell Sea, eastern Indian Ocean, and equatorial Pacific Ocean. They have been assigned to the benthic genus Bolivina, but their high abundances in sediments without evidence for dysoxia could not be explained. Apertural morphology, accumulation rates, and isotopic composition show that they were planktic (genus Streptochilus). Living Streptochilus are common in productive waters with intermittent upwelling. The widespread early Miocene high Streptochilus abundances may reflect vigorous but intermittent upwelling, inducing high phytoplankton growth rates. However, export production (estimated from benthic foraminiferal accumulation rates) was low, possibly due to high regeneration rates in a deep thermocline. The upwelled waters may have been an analog to Subantarctic Mode Waters, carrying nutrients into the eastern Atlantic and western Indian Oceans as the result of the initiation of a deep-reaching Antarctic Circumpolar Current, active Agulhas Leakage, and vigorous vertical mixing in the Southern Oceans.
Coverage:
West: 2.3800 East: 2.5100 North: -28.3200 South: -28.5000
Relations:
Expedition: 208
Site: 208-1264
Site: 208-1265
Supplemental Information:
With GSA Data Repository Item 2006227
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=10.1130/G23038A.1 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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