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Witnesses of the early Pliocene sea-level rise in the Manilva Basin (Málaga, S Spain)

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TLDR
The Sierra de la Utrera, a relief in the Manilva Basin (Malaga, SW Spain), shows bored surfaces at different heights above present-day sea level, from 96 m to 287 m as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
The Sierra de la Utrera, a relief in the Manilva Basin (Malaga, SW Spain), shows bored surfaces at different heights above present-day sea level, from 96 m to 287 m. Borings occur in the eastern, central, and western parts of the Canuto de la Utrera, a prominent gorge in the central southern part of the relief excavated in Mesozoic limestones, as well as on the western end of the Canuto Chico, a smaller canyon in the northern part. Pliocene marine deposits fossilized the bored surfaces. Bored boulders of the substrate are embedded in the Pliocene sediments. The traces Gastrochaenolites ispp., Entobia ispp., Caulostrepsis ispp., Circolites kotoucensis, and Ericichnus asgaardi have been identified. Among these, Caulostrepsis is found only in the reworked blocks. This ichnoassemblage, attributed to the archetypical Entobia Ichnofacies of rocky shores, represents boring activity in high-energy, very-shallow-water settings, close to the sea level, and with a virtually null sedimentation rate. The vertical distribution of bored surfaces attests to a progressive sea-level rise. The onlap of the Pliocene deposits on the substrate is consistent with the deepening trend. Planktonic foraminiferal assemblages collected from the sediment adjacent to the Sierra de la Utrera demonstrate that boring activity spanned, at most, 1 Ma during the early Pliocene, Zanclean (biozones MPl 1 and MPl 2), ranging from 5.33 to 4.36 Ma.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Boring bivalve traces in modern reef and deeper-water macroid and rhodolith beds

TL;DR: In the Mediterranean Sea, Gastrochaenolites are perforated by small-sized boring bivalve traces (Gastrochaens) and mytilids are more slender and smaller than those living inside shallow water rocky substrates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early Miocene (Burdigalian) marine rocky shores in the French Jura Massif: a palaeoecological and palaeoenvironmental analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the percentage of the surface affected by the erosive activity of polychaete worms, bivalves and echinoids has been calculated by means of digital analysis of high-resolution field images.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pliocene trace fossils from oyster substrates in the Nijar Basin, Betic Cordillera, southern Spain

TL;DR: In this article, a suite of ichnotaxa is assigned to the Entobia ichnofacies sensu Bromley and Asgaard; they are comparable with the Boulder Assemblage of the Pliocene of Rhodes, Greece.
References
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The Neogene Period

TL;DR: An Astronomically Tuned Neogene Time Scale (ATNTS2012) is presented in this article, as an update of ATNTS2004 in GTS2004, and the numerical ages are identical or almost so.
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A conceptual model explaining benthic foraminiferal microhabitats

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a conceptual model which explains benthic foraminiferal microhabitat preferences in terms of differences in the downward organic flux in the sediment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review and revision of Cenozoic tropical planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphy and calibration to the geomagnetic polarity and astronomical time scale

TL;DR: In this article, an amended low-latitude (tropical and subtropical) Cenozoic planktonic foraminiferal zonation is presented, based on the first appearance dates of Globigerinatheka kugleri and Hantkenina singanoae.
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