scholarly journals The Recent temperate foraminiferal biofacies of the Gippsland Shelf: an analogue for Neogene environmental analyses in southeastern Australia

2001 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Smith ◽  
Stephen J. Gallagher ◽  
Malcolm Wallace ◽  
Guy Holdgate ◽  
Jim Daniels ◽  
...  

Abstract. This study describes the foraminiferal biofacies of a temperate stenohaline shelf and associated euryhaline marine lakes of Gippsland in southeast Australia. The study incorporates facies analyses and interpretations of three types of foraminiferal distributional data: forms alive at the time of collection, recently dead forms and relict forms. Four principal biofacies types occur: (1) the euryhaline marine Gippsland Lakes silts and sands; (2) inner shelf medium to coarse quartz-rich sands and bioclastic silty sands; (3) medium shelf bryozoan-rich bioclastic silt and silty sand; (4) outer shelf bryozoan- and plankton-rich silts and fine sands.The euryhaline marine Gippsland Lakes silts and sands contain abundant Ammonia beccarii and Eggerella, with minor Quinqueloculina, Elphidium and Discorbinella. The Gippsland inner shelf biofacies (0–50 m depths) consists of medium to coarse quartz-rich sands and bioclastic silty sand. Abundant living, relict and recently dead miliolids occur in the inner shelf with rare planktonic forms. Common planktonic foraminifera, with Cibicides, Parrellina, Elphidium and Lenticulina and relict forms occur in the bryozoan-rich bioclastic silt and silty sand of the Gippsland middle shelf (50–100 m depth). Bryozoan and plankton-rich silts and fine sand occur in the outer shelf to upper slope facies (100–300 m) below swell wave base on the Gippsland Shelf. A diverse fauna with common textulariids, Uvigerina, Bulimina, Anomalinoides and Astrononion and rare relict forms, occurs in this biofacies. Planktonic foraminifera and Uvigerina are most abundant at the shelf break due to local upwelling at the head of the Bass Canyon.Estimates of faunal production rates from live/dead ratios and full assemblage data suggest that the fauna of the Gippsland Shelf has not been significantly reworked by wave and/or bioturbation processes. Most relict foraminifera occur in the inner shelf, with minor relict forms in the middle to outer shelf. This pattern is similar to other shelf regions in Australia, where shelf areas were exposed during Pleistocene lowstand times, principally reworking pre-existing inner to middle shelf faunas. Correspondence analyses of the foraminiferal data yield a clear depth-related distribution of the faunal assemblage data. Most of the modern Gippsland Shelf fauna are cosmopolitan species and nearly a third are (semi-)endemic taxa suitable for regional palaeo-environmental studies. From biostratigraphic studies it is clear that the modern Gippsland foraminiferal assemblage evolved since Early Miocene times, with most elements present by the Late Miocene. Hence, the Recent Gippsland Shelf foraminiferal biofacies distribution is a good analogue for Neogene palaeo-environmental studies in the region. The longer ranging pre-Miocene mixture of epifaunal and infaunal taxa are deeper shelf cosmopolitan forms and are inferred to be more conservative since they evolved in relatively lower stress environments, typifying mesotrophic to eutrophic conditions compared to inner shelf epifaunal forms with ecological niches markedly affected by sea-level and temperature fluctuations in zones of constant wave action, in oligotrophic environments.The foraminiferal and facies analogues of this study on the Gippsland Shelf can be used for palaeo-environmental analyses of the Gippsland and Otway Neogene sedimentary successions. Such improvements will lead ultimately to a better understanding of the evolution of the neritic realm in southeastern Australia, an area facing the evolving Southern Ocean during the Cenozoic.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Wolfgring ◽  
Michael A. Kaminski ◽  
Anna Waśkowska ◽  
Maria Rose Petrizzo ◽  
Eun Young Lee ◽  
...  

<p>Site U1512 was drilled during Expedition 369 of the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP), which is located in the Great Australian Bight, southern Indian Ocean. It provides exceptional insights into the benthic foraminiferal biostratigraphy and paleoecology of a high southern latitude restricted marginal marine basin during the Late Cretaceous hot greenhouse climate and the rifting between Australia and Antarctica. The sedimentary sequence recovered at Site U1512 presents a rare record of a deep water agglutinated foraminifera (DWAF) community from the Southern High Latitudes. The Cretaceous record at Site U1512 covers the lower Turonian through Santonian (nannofossil zones UC8b to UC12/CC10b to CC16, <em>H. helvetica</em> to <em>Marginotruncana</em> spp. - <em>Planoheterohelix papula</em> - <em>Globotruncana linneana</em> planktonic foraminifera zones). Diverse benthic foraminiferal assemblages yield many new taxa that are yet to be described.</p><p>Agglutinated forms dominate the assemblage in most intervals. In lower to mid Turonian and Santonian strata, calcareous benthic as well as planktonic foraminifera are frequent. Abundant radiolaria are recovered from the mid Turonian, and they increase up-section and exceed 50% of the microfossil assemblage. We documented a diverse benthic foraminiferal assemblage consisting of 162 taxa (110 agglutinated and 52 calcareous). The most common taxa of the DWAF assemblage are tubular (i.e., <em>Kalamopsis grzybowskii,</em> <em>Bathysiphon</em> spp.) and planispiral forms (i.e., <em>Ammodiscus</em> spp., <em>Haplophragmoides</em> spp., <em>Buzasina</em> sp., <em>Labrospira</em> spp.).</p><p>The Turonian strata yield highly abundant <em>Bulbobaculites problematicus</em> and <em>Spiroplectammina navarroana</em>. The presence of the agglutinated foraminiferal marker taxa <em>Uvigerinammina jankoi</em> and <em>Bulbobaculites problematicus</em> provides a tie-point to the Tethyan DWAF biozonation of Geroch and Nowak (1984). The composition of foraminiferal assemblages and the increase in radiolaria abundance suggest unstable environmental conditions at Site U1512 during the early Turonian through Santonian. These characteristics refer to changes in bathymetry associated with changing ocean chemistry. Results of quantitative analyses of the benthic foraminiferal assemblages indicate a restricted paleoenvironmental regime, dictated by changes in paleobathymetry, unstable patterns in ocean circulation, and the discharge of a nearby river delta system.</p><p>References: Geroch, S., Nowak, K., 1984. Proposal of zonation for the Late Tithonian – late Eocene. based upon arenaceous Foraminifera from the Outer Carpathians, Poland, 225-239, In: Oertli, H.J. (Ed.), Benthos ´83; 2nd international 915 Symposium on Benthic Foraminifera, Pau (France) April 11-15, 1983, Elf Aquitaine, ESO REP and TOTAL CFP, Pau and Bordeaux.</p><p> </p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Germaine Noujaim Clark ◽  
Marcelle Boudagher-Fadel

The biostratigraphy and sedimentology of the outcrops and bedrock recently exposed in archaeological excavations around the harbour area of Beirut (~5 km²) unlock the geological and structural history of that area, which in turn are key to understanding the hydrocarbon and hydrogeological potential of the region. A key location (Site 2) of a studied outcrop section and newly uncovered bedrock is on the northern foothill cliff of East Beirut (Achrafieh). The outcrop section of carbonates is of Eocene beds overlain by conformable Miocene beds. The excavation of the slope bordering the outcrop uncovered a bedrock section of an early Pliocene shoreline of carbonate/siliciclastic sands at its base and topped by a beach-rock structure. The early Pliocene age of the shoreline section is dated by an assemblage of planktonic foraminifera that includes Sphaeroidinellopsis subdehiscens , Sphaeroidinella dehiscens and Orbulina universa . The Eocene carbonates of Site 2 extend the coverage of the previously reported Eocene outcrops in the harbour area. They form a parasequence of thin-bedded, chalky white limestones that includes the youngest fossil fish deposits in Lebanon ( Bregmaceros filamentosus ). The deposits are dated as early Priabonian by their association with the planktonic foraminiferal assemblage of Porticulasphaera tropicalis , Globigerinatheka barri , Dentoglobigerina venezuelana , Globigerina praebulloides , Turborotalia centralis and Borelis sp. The Middle Miocene carbonates that conformably overlie the early Priabonian, parasequence include a planktonic foraminiferal assemblage of Globigerinoides trilobus , Orbulina universa and Borelis melo . Elsewhere, in the harbour area, the preserved Eocene limestones are also overlain by conformable Miocene carbonate parasequences of Langhian–Serravallian age. Younger argillaceous limestone beds of the Mio/Pliocene age occur in the eastern central part of the harbour area and enclose an assemblage of Truncorotalia crassaformis , Globorotalia inflata and Orbulina universa . The three markers of old and recently raised structural blocks in the harbour area are a Lutetian/Bartonian marine terrace in the south west corner, a lower Pliocene shoreline carbonate section in the north east side and a Holocene raised beach of marine conglomerates in the north east corner of the area. The locations of these paleo-shorelines, less than 2 km apart, indicate a progressive platform narrowing of North Beirut since the Paleogene. This study underpins the geological complexity of the region and contributes to understanding the underlying geology, which will be needed for future regional archaeological, hydrocarbon and hydrogeological exploration.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4821 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-147
Author(s):  
EMILIANA BERNASCONI

The study about the distribution of benthic foraminifers in relationship with the type of substrate is presented. Samples of surface sediments from 15 to 60 m of depth from the southeast coast of the province of Buenos Aires (40º 30´ - 42ºS), Argentina were analysed. The foraminiferal assemblage was constituted by forty-eight species that belong to 22 genera. It was characterized mostly by the free-living style, epifaunal microhabitats, oxic levels and a detritivore trophic strategy. Based on statistical analysis, three zones were determinated: at 15 m depth , characterized mainly by Buccella peruviana (d´Orbigny), and species of Bolivina reflected a littoral environment with sandy sediments and the most important clay contribution, whereas it also presented the lowest oxygen levels were determinated; between 24-48 m depth, associted by Ammonia parkinsoniana (d´Orbigny), Buccella peruviana and Quinqueloculina seminula (Linné), this zone displayed an oxygenated environment with coarse grainsize from inner shelf where local water circulation may explain the high energy observed; and the last one located between 36 to 58 m of depth was characterized by Buccella peruviana, Ammonia parkinsoniana, Elphidium macellum (Fichtel & Moll), Cibicides dispars (d´Orbigny) and Cibicides aknerianus (d´Orbigny) regflecting an inner shelf environment with sandy sediments, the lowest water temperature and the highest oxygen levels.


2005 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Haig

Abstract. Diverse foraminifera, Lingula-like brachiopods and the geological setting indicate that Aptian radiolarian-rich black shales forming the Windalia Radiolarite were deposited at water depths probably less than 40 m in the Southern Carnarvon Basin. Elsewhere in Australia, coeval radiolarian-rich deposits are widespread in other western-margin basins and in vast interior basins. The organic-rich mudstones containing the radiolaria include the foraminiferal Ammobaculites Association, a sparse benthic macrofauna and kerogens of mainly terrestrial plant origin. The deposits suggest that there was substantial high-nutrient freshwater input into the epeiric seas as well as high levels of dissolved silica resulting from marine flooding of a mature silicate-rich landscape bordered on the eastern and western continental margins by large volcanic provinces. The widespread presence of organic-rich muds through the broad, shallow Southern Carnarvon Basin and through the coeval interior basins suggests that regional geomorphology controlled the distribution of eutrophic facies in the Australian Aptian rather than any global expansion of the oceanic oxygen minimum zone. The foraminiferal assemblage from the Windalia Radiolarite consists of calcareous hyaline benthic types (diverse Lagenida as well as abundant Lingulogavelinella, Epistomina and Coryphostoma) and organic-cemented agglutinated species (including common Ammobaculites humei, Haplophragmoides–Recurvoides spp., and Verneuilinoides howchini). Planktonic foraminifera are very rare and present only in the northern, more open part of the basin.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 226-226
Author(s):  
William Olson ◽  
Chris Dewey

The Pennington Formation (Chesterian, Mississippian) of northeastern Alabama is a regressive, distal lobe of the Pennington/Lee clastic wedge, located on the western flank of the Appalachians in the Tennessee structural salient. The clastic units of the Pennington include sandstone, siltstone, mudstone, clay shale and coal and are genetically related to the effects of progradation. The presence of limestones and dolostones within the southwestwardly prograding and thinning Pennington is due to the lateral equivalency and interfingering relationships of the Pennington with the upper part of the adjacent Bangor Limestone shelf.A highly diverse ostracode fauna as been collected from outcrops along the Pennington-Bangor transition in northeastern Alabama. The most common assemblage of ostracodes is dominated by kirkbyaceans and includes species of Amphissites, Polytylites, Kirkbyella, Kirkbya and Reviya. Bairdiaceans are noteably absent from this assemblage. The Kirkbyacean Assemblage is only found in middle to outer shelf palaeoenvironments where clastic input is high, but where salinity conditions are thought to have been typically marine. In middle to outer shelf limestone-producing palaeoenvironments, a Bairdiacean Assemblage is dominant, although kirkbyaceans are still present.A Sansabellid Assemblage, consisting of kloedenellaceans such as Sansabella, Geisina, Geffenina, Nufferella and Glyptopleura appears to be produced under rapidly changing nearshore, inner shelf conditions, where terrigenous input was often high and palaeosalinities may have been variable or less than normal marine. The Sansabellid Assemblage contains occasional kirkbyaceans, however bairdiaceans are noteably absent. Intermediate assemblages contain elements of the three main assemblages and reflect the transition from the inner to outer shelf.In summary, the ostracode assemblages of the Pennington-Bangor transition in northeast Alabama provide indicators of palaeoenvironmental change during the southwestward progradation of the Pennington deltaic wedge onto the Bangor Limestone shelf. The prime factors resulting in palaeoecological response appear to have been variations in terrigenous input and palaeosalinity.


2001 ◽  
Vol 172 (4) ◽  
pp. 411-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luc Hance ◽  
Eddy Poty ◽  
Francois-Xavier Devuyst

Abstract The relative influences of local tectonics and global eustasy in the architecture of the sedimentary units of the Namur-Dinant Basin (southern Belgium) are determined. Nine third-order sequences are recognised. During the Lower Tournaisian (Hastarian and lower Ivorian) a homoclinal ramp extended from southern Belgium through southern England (Mendips) and into southern Ireland. From the upper Ivorian to the lower Visean rapid facies changes occurred due to progradation and increasing prominence of Waulsortian mudmounds. Progradation gradually produced a situation in which inner shelf facies covered the Namur (NSA), Condroz (CSA) and southern Avesnes (ASA) sedimentation areas, whereas outer shelf facies were restricted to the Dinant sedimentation area (DSA). During the middle and late Visean a broad shelf was established from western Germany to southern Ireland. Because the shelf built up mainly by aggradation, parasequences can be followed over a large area. An early phase of Variscan shortening is perceptible during the Livian. The stratigraphic gap between the first Namurian sediments (E2 Goniatite Zone) and the underlying Visean varies from place to place, but is more important in the north.


1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
An-Bin Huang ◽  
Huai-Houh Hsu ◽  
Jia-Wei Chang

Publications associated with sands are often limited to clean (i.e., little fines content), uniform, uncemented silica or quartz sand. On the other hand, the importance of mineral content, particle shapes, as well as gradation to the behavior of sand has long been recognized. Although systematic studies of sands other than clean quartz sand have been limited, there is increasing attention being paid to sands with an appreciable fines content. Because of a major construction project, extensive field and laboratory experiments were performed on a silty fine sand from Mai-Liao, which is located on the central west coast of Taiwan. Results show that Mai-Liao Sand (MLS), a silty sand, can be significantly more compressible than clean quartz sand under static load. The particles of MLS have moderate strength, and significant crushing can be induced by triaxial shearing. As a result, MLS has low dilatancy and a relatively small range of peak friction angles. Cone penetration tests in MLS were conducted in a calibration chamber. Analyses of the data indicate that interpreting cone tip resistance in MLS using methods developed based on clean quartz sand without considering the differences of compressibility can be unrealistic. This paper documents results of the experimental studies on MLS.Key words: silty fine sand, strength, dilatancy, compressibility, crushing, in situ test.


PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e1757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Wolfgring ◽  
Michael Wagreich

Deposits spanning theRadotruncana calcarataTaxon Range Zone at the Postalm section, Northern Calcareous Alps (Austria) are examined quantitatively for foraminiferal assemblages, especially the planktonic group. This study focuses on establishing a high resolution record spanning an 800 ka long stratigraphic interval from the active continental margin of the Penninic Ocean. The Postalm section displays reddish limestone- marl alternations representing precession cycles. For this study, 26 samples were taken bed by bed to allow a “per-precession-cycle” resolution (i.e., a minimum sample distance of ∼20 ka). Samples from limestones as well as from marls were examined for foraminiferal assemblages. Data suggest a typical, open marine Campanian foraminiferal community. The >63 µm fraction is dominated by opportunist taxa, i.e., members ofMuricohedbergellaand biserial planktic foraminifera.Archaeoglobigerinaand “Globigerinelloides” appear frequently and benthic foraminifera are very sparsely found. The share of globotruncanids, representing more complex morphotypes amongst planktonic foraminifera, is recorded with 5–10%. The state of preservation of foraminifera from the Postalm section is moderate to poor. Differences between samples from marls and samples from limestone are evident, but do not reveal evidence that there was an influence on the postdepositional microfossil communities. However, data from microfossils showing moderate to bad preservation can still offer valuable insight into the palaeoenvironment and biostratigraphy. Information gathered on the composition of the planktonic foraminiferal assemblage confirms a low-to-mid-latitude setting for the Postalm section. As well resolved records of Late Cretaceous foraminifera assemblages are rare, the examination of theRadotruncana calcarataTaxon Range Zone provides some insights into variations and short term changes during the very short period of 800 ka.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 1405-1437
Author(s):  
L. Zhao ◽  
X. Guo

Abstract. A three dimensional coupled biophysical model was used to examine the supply of oceanic nutrients to the shelf of the East China Sea (ECS) and its role in primary production over the shelf. The model consisted of two modules: the hydrodynamic module was based on a nested model with a horizontal resolution of 1/18 degree, whereas the biological module was a low trophic level ecosystem model including two types of phytoplankton, three elements of nutrients, and biogenic organic material. Model results suggested that seasonal variation in chlorophyll-a had a strong regional dependence over the shelf of the ECS. The area with high chlorophyll-a appears firstly at the outer shelf in winter, and gradually migrates toward the inner shelf (offshore region of Changjiang estuary) from spring to summer. Vertically, chlorophyll-a was generally homogenous from the coastal zone to the inner shelf. In the middle and outer shelves, high chlorophyll-a appeared in the surface in spring but moved to the subsurface from summer to early autumn. The annual averaged onshore flux across the shelf break was estimated to be 1.53 Sv for volume, 9.4 kmol s−1 for DIN, 0.7 kmol s−1 for DIP, and 18.2 kmol s−1 for silicate, which are supplied mainly from the northeast of Taiwan and southwest of Kyushu. From calculations that artificially increased the concentration of nutrients in the Kuroshio water, the additional oceanic nutrients were distributed in the bottom layer from the shelf break to the region offshore of Changjiang estuary from spring to summer, and appeared in the surface layer from autumn to winter. The contribution of oceanic nutrients to primary production over the shelf was found not only in the surface layer (mainly at the outer shelf and shelf break in winter and in the region offshore of Changjiang estuary in summer) but also in the subsurface layer over the shelf from spring to autumn.


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