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Late Cretaceous through Neogene deep-sea benthic foraminifera(Maud Rise, Weddell Sea, Antarctica)

Ellen Thomas
- Vol. 113, pp 571-594
TLDR
In this article, the authors show that the extinction of deep-sea benthic foraminifers in the latest Paleocene may have been caused by a change in formational processes of the deep to intermediate waters of the oceans.
Abstract
Upper abyssal to lower bathyal benthic foraminifers from ODP Sites 689 (present water depth 2080 m) and 690 (present water depth 2941 m) on Maud Rise (eastern Weddell Sea, Antarctica) are reliable indicators of Maestrichtian through Neogene changes in the deep-water characteristics at high southern latitudes. Benthic foraminiferal faunas were divided into eight assemblages, with periods of faunal change at the early/late Maestrichtian boundary (69 Ma), at the early/late Paleocene boundary (62 Ma), in the latest Paleocene (57.5 Ma), in the middle early Eocene to late early Eo­ cene (55-52 Ma), in the middle middle Eocene (46 Ma), in the late Eocene (38.5 Ma), and in the middle-late Miocene (14.9-11.5 Ma). These periods of faunal change may have occurred worldwide at the same time, although specific first and last appearances of deep-sea benthic foraminifers are commonly diachronous. There were minor faunal changes at the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary (less than 14°7o of the species had last appearances at Site 689, less than 9% at Site 690). The most abrupt benthic foraminiferal faunal event occurred in the latest Paleocene, when the diversity dropped by 50% (more than 35% of species had last appearances) over a period of less than 25,000 years; after the extinction the diversity remained low for about 350,000 years. The highest diversities of the post-Paleocene occurred during the middle Eocene; from that time on the diversity de­ creased steadily at both sites. Data on faunal composition (percentage of infaunal versus epifaunal species) suggest that the waters bathing Maud Rise were well ventilated during the Maestrichtian through early Paleocene as well as during the latest Eocene through Recent. The waters appeared to be less well ventilated during the late Paleocene as well as the late middle through early late Eocene, with the least degree of ventilation during the latest Paleocene through early Eo­ cene. The globally recognized extinction of deep-sea benthic foraminifers in the latest Paleocene may have been caused by a change in formational processes of the deep to intermediate waters of the oceans: from formation of deep waters by sinking at high latitudes to formation of deep to intermediate water of the oceans by evaporation at low latitudes. Benthic foraminiferal data (supported by carbon and oxygen isotopic data) suggest that there was a short period of in­ tense formation of warm, salty deep water at the end of the Paleocene (with a duration of about 0.35 m.y.), and that less intense, even shorter episodes might have occurred during the late Paleocene and early Eocene. The faunal record from the Maud Rise sites agrees with published faunal and isotopic records, suggesting cooling of deep to intermediate waters in the middle through late Eocene.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Abrupt climate change and transient climates during the Paleogene: a marine perspective.

TL;DR: It is investigated the possibility that sudden reorganizations in ocean and/or atmosphere circulation during these abrupt transitions generated short-term positive feedbacks that briefly sustained these transient climatic states.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Paleocene-Eocene benthic foraminiferal extinction and stable isotope anomalies

TL;DR: In the late Paleocene to early Eocene, deep sea benthic foraminifera suffered their only global extinction of the last 75 million years and diversity decreased worldwide by 30-50% in a few thousand years.
Journal ArticleDOI

The biology of deep-sea foraminifera; a review of some advances and their applications in paleoceanography

Andrew J. Gooday
- 01 Feb 1994 - 
TL;DR: Foraminifera commonly dominate ocean-floor eukaryotic communities and are the most abundant benthic organisms to be preserved in the post-Paleozoic deep-sea fossil record as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stable isotope stratigraphy and paleoclimatology of the Paleogene Bighorn Basin (Wyoming, USA)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the carbon isotope composition of paleosol carbonates and mammalian tooth enamel from stratigraphic sections in northwestern Wyoming and found that a short interval of extreme high-latitude warming coincided precisely with the first appearance of several important modern mammalian orders.
Book ChapterDOI

Cenozoic mass extinctions in the deep sea: What perturbs the largest habitat on Earth?

TL;DR: In this article, the extinction of deep-sea benthic foraminifera was linked to a global feature of the end-Paleocene environmental change, i.e., rapid global warming.
References
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Cenozoic evolution of Antarctic glaciation the Circum-Antarctic Ocean and their impact on global paleoceanography

TL;DR: Deep-sea drilling in the Antarctic region (Deep-Sea Drilling Project legs 28, 29, 35, and 36) has provided many new data about the development of circum-Antarctic circulation and closely related glacial evolution of Antarctica as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphotype patterns of Norwegian Sea deep-sea benthic foraminifera and ecological implications

TL;DR: In this paper, deep-sea benthic foraminifera from Norwegian Sea surface sediments are classified into morphotypes on the basis of test shape and nature of test coiling and show distinct patterns with water depth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Periodic extinction of families and genera

TL;DR: Time-series analysis of eight major episodes of biological extinction of marine families over the past 250 million years strongly suggests a 26-million-year periodicity, robust even when adjusted for simultaneous testing of many trial periods.
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