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Evento

Cretaceous-Eocene dinoflagellate blooms of the James Ross Basin, Antarctic Peninsula

Carvalho, M. A.; Rodriguez Amenabar, CeciliaIcon ; Costa, H.; Abbate, V.; Santiago, G.
Tipo del evento: Reunión
Nombre del evento: 54th Annual Meeting The Palynological Society
Fecha del evento: 07/08/2022
Institución Organizadora: Universidad de Caldas; Agencia Nacional de Hidrocarburos; Instituto de Investigaciones en Estratigrafía;
Título del Libro: Abstracts of the 54th Annual Meeting AASP The Palynological Society
Título de la revista: 54th Annual Meeting The Palynological Society
Editorial: Universidad de Caldas
Idioma: Inglés
Clasificación temática:
Paleontología

Resumen

Studies conducted to date indicate that the records of fossil dinoflagellate blooms are relatively well-known. This natural phenomenon of flowering or proliferation (bloom) of algae usually occurs in response to sudden environmental or climatic changes, leading to a monospecific or few-species assemblages. Some dinoflagellate bloom events, evidenced by their cysts (dinocysts), have been recognized in Antarctica in both Cretaceous and Cenozoic strata. In this preliminary study, five blooms events are characterized, three of them identified from material collected in the James Ross Basin, Antarctic Peninsula (Cretaceous and Eocene) while the remaining two were obtained from the literature (late Maastrichtian and K/Pg boundary). In the Santa Marta Formation (lower Santonian) outcropping on James Ross Island, a bloom of Odontochitina porifera was recorded, reaching 80% of the marine assemblage (92 cysts in total). This bloom matches with the lowest values of continental-derived elements (spores, pollen grains and phytoclasts), which indicates a marine environment far from terrigenous sources. In the Snow Hill Island Formation (late Campanian - early Maastrichtian) cropping out on James Ross and Snow Hill Islands, two peaks of abundance of Impletosphaeridium clavus were identified (73% and 31% of the marine assemblage, respectively), which would have been occurred in response to cold pulses during the Cretaceous, however, without the development of sea ice cover. Likewise, the bloom of Impletosphaeridium clavus (99% of the marine association) in a section of the López de Bertodano Formation (late Maastrichtian) on Marambio Island (Seymour) was reported in the literature associated with the presence of seasonal sea ice and a stratified water column. In the same section, a bloom of different Manumiella species (68% of cysts) was recognized. This genus is characteristic of coastal and shallow-marine environments and could indicate short-term regressions and/or an oceanic cooling that occurred just before the Late Cretaceous massive extinction (K/Pg boundary). Finally, the proliferation of Impletosphaeridium clavus together with Manumiella could be due to the combination of cold and nutrient-rich surface waters that would have favored the increase of both taxa. For the early Paleocene (Danian), the literature indicates an increase in Senegalinium obscurum (23% of the cysts) in the Sobral Formation near the base of a glauconite-rich level, which helps to identify the K/Pg boundary in Marambio Island (Seymour). In addition, Palaeoperidinium pyrophorum was recorded in this same formation, in intervals that show a conspicuous increase in abundance. Finally, in the La Meseta Formation (middle-late Eocene), in the Valle de las Focas and Acantilados I (or Telm 1) allomembers, the bloom is attributed to the dinoflagellate or acritarch species Enigmadinium cylindrifloriferum, which represents more than 90% of the marine assemblage (~150 cysts). Previous work associates the abundance of this species with a shallow and stressful marine environment, interpreted as an outer part of a wave-dominated estuary. Evidently, the causes of the dinoflagellate blooms are diverse, but they are constantly repeated throughout the Mesozoic and Cenozoic of Antarctica. These blooms are manifested mainly as peridinoid cysts (Manumiella, Senegalinium, Palaeoperidinium) and, somewhat, as gonyaulacoid forms (Odontochitina porifera, Impletosphaeridum, and possibly Enigmadinium). Peridinoid blooms mark bioevents, some of which are globally recognized (e.g., Manumiella spike).
Palabras clave: DINOFLAGELLATE BLOOMS , CRETACEOUS , CENOZOIC , ANTARCTICA
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info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Excepto donde se diga explícitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11336/240548
URL: https://sites.google.com/view/aaspmeeting2022/home-p%C3%A1gina-principal?authuse
URL: https://sites.google.com/view/aaspmeeting2022/oral-presentations-presentaciones-
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Eventos(IDEAN)
Eventos de INSTITUTO DE ESTUDIOS ANDINOS "DON PABLO GROEBER"
Citación
Cretaceous-Eocene dinoflagellate blooms of the James Ross Basin, Antarctic Peninsula; 54th Annual Meeting The Palynological Society; Manizales; Brasil; 2022; 37-38
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