PALEOENVIRONMENTAL RECONSTRUCTION OF THE BARSTOW FORMATION, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, THROUGH THE MIDDLE MIOCENE CLIMATIC OPTIMUM

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharine M. Loughney ◽  
◽  
Michael T. Hren ◽  
Selena Y. Smith
2019 ◽  
Vol 132 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 113-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharine M. Loughney ◽  
Michael T. Hren ◽  
Selena Y. Smith ◽  
Janice L. Pappas

Abstract The Barstow Formation (ca. 19–13 Ma) of southern California, USA, is a terrestrial sequence known for its diverse Miocene mammalian faunas. The formation spans the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO; 17–14 Ma) and offers the opportunity to study environmental change during the last major interval of global warming of the Cenozoic. We combined isotopic analyses of carbon and hydrogen from sedimentary n-alkanes and bulk soil organic matter with analysis of phytoliths (plant silica) and diatoms to reconstruct vegetation composition, habitat structure, and moisture dynamics through the formation. The δ13C and δD of long-carbon-chain n-alkanes derived from terrestrial plants and preserved in sediments of the Barstow Formation record drying prior to the MMCO and through the Middle Miocene Climatic Transition (MMCT; beginning ca. 14 Ma), punctuated by increased moisture in fluvial environments during the peak of the MMCO. Variable isotopic results relate to changes in moisture, driven partly by facies, vegetation composition, tectonic activity, and climatic variability coinciding with intervals of high pCO2. Phytolith assemblages are dominated by forest indicators in riparian habitats during the MMCO, and grass morphotypes constitute significant components of phytolith assemblages after the MMCO, indicating a shift to drier, more open-canopy habitats. The establishment of dry, wooded grasslands in the Barstow Basin coincides with the beginning of the MMCT and cooling sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean. Our results indicate that moist, closed-canopy habitats formed in southern California during climatic warming, followed by savannah during climatic cooling and the shift to seasonal precipitation regimes.


1986 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-267
Author(s):  
Ted F. W. Bergen ◽  
Joanne Sblendorio-Levy ◽  
John T. Twining ◽  
Richard E. Casey

Lower bathyal sediments representing portions of the Luisian and Mohnian stages of Kleinpell (1938) occur on a submarine ridge near Tanner Bank, offshore southern California. The presence of abundant and well-preserved calcareous nannofossils, diatoms, silicoflagellates, radiolarians and foraminifera allows accurate correlations with the onshore type sections of these stages. In terms of the calcareous nannofossil zones, the age range is from the Sphenolithus heteromorphus Zone to the Discoaster kugleri Zone. Although abundant benthic foraminifera indicative of the Luisian and Mohnian are present, they are accompanied by species more characteristic of the Pliocene Repettian Stage of Natland (1952) and the Pliocene-Miocene “Delmontian” Stage of Kleinpell (1938). Many of these latter species live today at lower bathyal depths (below 2,000 m), others occur in lower bathyal sediments as old as Oligocene, but are absent in the onshore type sections of the Luisian and Mohnian stages in coastal California. We ascribe their absence in onshore sequences to deposition at middle bathyal depths. The known chronostratigraphic ranges of several species are extended and five new species and two new subspecies of benthic foraminifera are described.The following new taxa are described: Bolivina pelita n. sp., Cassidulinella inflata n. sp., Globocassidulina undulata n. sp., Cibicidoides mckannai miocenicus n. subsp., C. mckannai sigmosuturalis n. subsp., Pullenia fragilis n. sp., Parafissurina inornata n. sp.


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