Kamikuri, Shin-ichi and Wade, Bridget S. (2012): Radiolarian magnetobiochronology and faunal turnover across the middle/late Eocene boundary at Ocean Drilling Program Site 1052 in the western North Atlantic Ocean

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 171B
ODP 171B 1052
Identifier:
2012-056702
georefid

10.1016/j.marmicro.2012.03.001
doi

Creator:
Kamikuri, Shin-ichi
Kochi University, Center for Advanced Marine Core Research, Kochi, Japan
author

Wade, Bridget S.
University of Leeds, United Kingdom
author

Identification:
Radiolarian magnetobiochronology and faunal turnover across the middle/late Eocene boundary at Ocean Drilling Program Site 1052 in the western North Atlantic Ocean
2012
Marine Micropaleontology
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands
88-89
41-53
Quantitative radiolarian assemblage analysis has been conducted on middle and upper Eocene sediments (Zones RP16 to RP18) from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1052 in order to establish the radiolarian magnetobiochronology and determine the nature of the faunal turnover across the middle/late Eocene boundary in the western North Atlantic Ocean. We recognize and calibrate forty-five radiolarian bioevents to the magneto- and cyclo-stratigraphy from Site 1052 to enhance the biochronologic resolution for the middle and late Eocene. Our data is compared to sites in the equatorial Pacific (Leg 199) to access the diachrony of biostratigraphic events. Eleven bioevents are good biostratigraphic markers for tropical/subtropical locations (south of 30 degrees N). The primary markers (lowest occurrences of Cryptocarpium azyx and Calocyclas bandyca) which are tropical zonal boundary markers for Zones RP17 and RP18 provide robust biohorizons for correlation and age determination from the low to middle latitudes and between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Some other radiolarian bioevents are highly diachronous (<1 million years) between oceanic basins. A significant faunal turnover of radiolarians is recognized within Chron C17n.3n (37.7Ma) where 13 radiolarian species disappear rapidly in less than 100kyr and 4 new species originate. The radiolarian faunal turnover coincides with a major extinction in planktonic foraminifera. We name the turnover phase, the middle/late Eocene Turnover (MLET). Assemblage analysis reveals the MLET to be associated with a decrease in low-mid latitude taxa and increase in cosmopolitan taxa and radiolarian accumulation rates. The MLET might be related to increased biological productivity rather than to surface-water cooling. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:29.5705
West:-76.3736East: -76.3736
South:29.5705

Stratigraphy; assemblages; Atlantic Ocean; biostratigraphy; biozones; Blake Nose; Blake Plateau; Cenozoic; cluster analysis; cyclostratigraphy; Eocene; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; Leg 171B; magnetostratigraphy; microfossils; morphology; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1052; paleo-oceanography; paleoecology; Paleogene; planktonic taxa; Protista; Radiolaria; statistical analysis; Tertiary;

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