Kamikuri, Schin-Ichi et al. (2009): Neogene radiolarian biostratigraphy and faunal evolution rates in the eastern Equatorial Pacific ODP Sites 845 and 1241

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 138
ODP 202
ODP 202 1241
ODP 138 845
Identifier:
2013-000394
georefid

10.4202/app.2008.0076
doi

Creator:
Kamikuri, Schin-Ichi
University of Tsukuba, Department of Earth Evolution Sciences, Tsukuba, Japan
author

Motoyama, Isao
Hokkaido University, Japan
author

Nishi, Hiroshi
Kochi University, Japan
author

Iwai, Masao
author

Identification:
Neogene radiolarian biostratigraphy and faunal evolution rates in the eastern Equatorial Pacific ODP Sites 845 and 1241
2009
Acta Palaeontologica Polonica
Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, Warsaw, Poland
54
4
713-742
Radiolarians from Sites 845 and 1241 in the eastern equatorial Pacific were examined in order to evaluate the role of paleoceanographic perturbations upon the general faunal evolutionary pattern of tropical planktonic organisms during the last 17 Ma. Radiolarian appearance and extinction rates indicate no periods of mass extinctions during the past 17 Ma. However, a relatively rapid replacement of the species in the radiolarian assemblages occurs near the middle-late Miocene boundary. This replacement event represents the gradual extinction of a number of radiolarian species and their gradual replacement by evolving new species. The modern equatorial circulation system was formed near the middle-late Miocene boundary due to the closure of the Indonesian seaway. The minor faunal turnover appears to be associated with the formation of the modern equatorial circulation system near the middle-late Miocene boundary. Diatom assemblages in the equatorial Pacific became more provincial in character after about 9 Ma. The appearance and extinction rates of planktic foraminifers were relatively high near the middle-late Miocene boundary, and those of calcareous nannoplankton reached high values in the early late Miocene in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. Thus, faunal evolution from the middle Miocene type to late Miocene types occurred first, being followed by floral evolution. The middle-late Miocene boundary is not a sharp boundary for planktonic microfossils, but marks a time of transition critical for faunal and floral evolution in both siliceous and calcareous microfossil assemblages in the equatorial Pacific Ocean.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:9.3500
West:-94.3527East: -86.2700
South:5.5100

Invertebrate paleontology; Stratigraphy; biologic evolution; biostratigraphy; Cenozoic; Cocos Ridge; East Pacific; Equatorial Pacific; Guatemala Basin; Invertebrata; Leg 138; Leg 202; microfossils; middle Miocene; Miocene; Neogene; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1241; ODP Site 845; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; paleoenvironment; Protista; Radiolaria; rates; stratigraphic boundary; Tertiary; tropical environment; upper Miocene;

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