Steineck, P. Lewis and Thomas, E. (1996): The latest Paleocene crisis in the deep sea; ostracode succession at Maud Rise, Southern Ocean

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 113
ODP 113 689
Identifier:
1996-054279
georefid

10.1130/0091-7613(1996)024<0583:TLPCIT>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
Steineck, P. Lewis
Purchase College, Division of Natural Sciences, Purchase, NY, United States
author

Thomas, E.
Yale University, Center for the Study of Global Change, New Haven, CT, United States
author

Identification:
The latest Paleocene crisis in the deep sea; ostracode succession at Maud Rise, Southern Ocean
1996
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
24
7
583-586
During the late Paleocene thermal maximum (ca. 55.50 Ma) mid-bathyal ostracodes at Maud Rise in the Southern Ocean (Ocean Drilling Program Site 689) underwent a sudden, dramatic turnover synchronous with a global extinction in deep-sea benthic foraminifers and with large-scale, short-lived negative excursions in the stable isotope record of foraminiferal calcite. A previously stable and long-lived ostracode assemblage, dominated by heavily calcified, chiefly epifaunal taxa, was replaced within approximately 10 k.y. by a taxonomically novel association of small, thin-walled opportunistic and generalist forms that persisted for approximately 25 - 40 k.y. Thereafter, ostracode faunas recovered and common bathyal forms returned, although species were smaller and/or less-heavily calcified than before the turnover. The complex fabric of change in ostracode shell morphology and assemblage composition and structure reflects both long-term and sudden perturbations in seawater chemistry at this site. Ostracode data are in agreement with the hypothesis that the latest Paleocene extinctions in the deep sea were caused by a change in the dominant source area of intermediate water mass from high altitudes to the subtropics. These data also suggest that warm saline waters persisted at Maud Rise for the next 100 k.y.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-64.3100
West:3.0559East: 3.0600
South:-64.3101

Stratigraphy; Antarctic Ocean; Arthropoda; biochemistry; Cenozoic; cores; Crustacea; deep-sea environment; geochemistry; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 113; Mandibulata; marine environment; marine sediments; Maud Rise; microfossils; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 689; Ostracoda; oxygen; paleo-oceanography; Paleocene; paleocirculation; paleocurrents; paleoecology; Paleogene; sediments; shells; Southern Ocean; stable isotopes; Tertiary; upper Paleocene; Weddell Sea;

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