Environmental stress and diagenetic modifications in inoceramids and belemnites from the Upper Cretaceous James Ross Basin, Antarctica

New petrographic and isotopic data from inoceramid bivalve shells and belemnite rostra from the lower Campanian and belemnite rostra from the mid-upper Maastrichtian of the Marambio Group, James Ross Basin, Antarctica are presented. Most of the inoceramid data were processed from shell fragments of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Facies
Main Authors: Elorza, Javier, Gómez Alday, Juan J., Olivero, Eduardo Bernardo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11336/94940
Description
Summary:New petrographic and isotopic data from inoceramid bivalve shells and belemnite rostra from the lower Campanian and belemnite rostra from the mid-upper Maastrichtian of the Marambio Group, James Ross Basin, Antarctica are presented. Most of the inoceramid data were processed from shell fragments of the large formAntarcticeramus rabotensis (Crame and Luther) at the stratigraphic level marking the extinction of the inoceramids in the James Ross Basin (uppermost early Campanian-basal late Campanian). Standard transmitted light microscopy and cathodoluminescence (CL) studies in thin sections ofA. rabotensis show clear evidence of environmental stress, which is reflected as marked growth breaks in the shell banding of this large inoceramid bivalve. At Redonda Point, CL and the mean oxygen isotopic value (δ18O=-3.11‰ 3 (PDB); n=11; t°=25.4°C) indicate a varied degree of diagenetic modification, but without any evidence of neomorphism along the prismatic microstructures. Early Campanian belemnite rostra are much less diagenetically modified (at the Brandy Bay section; and the Santa Marta section; δ18O=-0.50‰ (PDB); n=5; t°=14.0°C and 3 δ18O=-0.94‰ (PDB); n=21; t°=15.8°C) and are non luminescent 3 except for localized, organic-rich bands. The mean oxygen isotopic value for mid-late Maastrichtian belemnite rostra (at the Seymour Island section; δ18O=-0.11‰ 3 (PDB); n=5; t°=12.5°C) indicates a substantial drop in the sea-water paleotemperature, suggesting a causal relationship between the early extinction of the inoceramid bivalves in high latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere and the falling sea-water temperature. Fil: Elorza, Javier. Universidad del País Vasco; España Fil: Gómez Alday, Juan J. Universidad del País Vasco; España Fil: Olivero, Eduardo Bernardo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Austral de Investigaciones Científicas; Argentina