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Smart, Christopher W. and Thomas, Ellen (2006): The enigma of early Miocene biserial planktic Foraminifera
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
ODP 208
ODP 208 1264
ODP 208 1265
Identifier:
ID:
2006-091362
Type:
georefid
ID:
10.1130/G23038A.1
Type:
doi
Creator:
Name:
Smart, Christopher W.
Affiliation:
University of Plymouth, School of Earth, Ocean and Environmental Sciences, Plymouth, United Kingdom
Role:
author
Name:
Thomas, Ellen
Affiliation:
Yale University, United States
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
The enigma of early Miocene biserial planktic Foraminifera
Year:
2006
Source:
Geology (Boulder)
Publisher:
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
Volume:
34
Issue:
12
Pages:
1041-1044
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.
Language:
English
Genre:
Serial
Rights:
URL:
Coverage:
Geographic coordinates:
North:-28.3200
West:2.3800
East: 2.5100
South:-28.5000
Keywords:
Invertebrate paleontology; Stratigraphy; Antarctic Circumpolar Current; Atlantic Ocean; biserial taxa; Bolivina; Bolivinitidae; Buliminacea; Cenozoic; classification; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; Leg 208; lower Miocene; marine environment; marine sediments; Miocene; modern analogs; morphology; Neogene; nutrients; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1264; ODP Site 1265; paleo-oceanography; paleocirculation; paleoecology; planktonic taxa; productivity; Protista; Rotaliina; sedimentation rates; sediments; South Atlantic; Streptochilus; taxonomy; Tertiary; thermocline; upwelling; Walvis Ridge;
.
Copyright © 2006-2007 IODP-MI