The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution

An interdisciplinary investigation of the Pleistocene clay succession of Fornaci di Ranica (Italian Pre-Alps) aimed to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental history and its chronostratigraphic position and to consider the implications for the Quaternary evolution of the southern alpine borderland near...

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Main Authors: Ravazzi, Cesare, Pini, Roberta, Breda, Marzia, Martinetto, Edoardo, Muttoni, Giovanni, Chiesa, Sergio, Confortini, Federico, Egli, Ramon
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.140012
https://boris.unibe.ch/140012/
id ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.140012
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institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic 580 Plants Botany
spellingShingle 580 Plants Botany
Ravazzi, Cesare
Pini, Roberta
Breda, Marzia
Martinetto, Edoardo
Muttoni, Giovanni
Chiesa, Sergio
Confortini, Federico
Egli, Ramon
The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
topic_facet 580 Plants Botany
description An interdisciplinary investigation of the Pleistocene clay succession of Fornaci di Ranica (Italian Pre-Alps) aimed to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental history and its chronostratigraphic position and to consider the implications for the Quaternary evolution of the southern alpine borderland near the Early/Middle Pleistocene transition. A detailed survey of Quaternary deposits in boreholes and exposed sections provided a complete record of the basin. The most complete core was analyzed for palynology and magnetic properties. Plant macrofossils were obtained by flotation. Pollen and spectrometric analysis allowed a precise stratigraphic placement of a moose antler and braincase kept in museum collections. The basin originated from fluviatile obstruction of a tributary valley cut into bedrock. The basal deposits formed as a terrestrial hydromorphic soil under a dense Tsuga-forest (zone RNC 1). The overlying palustrine gyttja shows a marked forest withdrawal with a climatic signature (zone RNC 3), followed by a re-establishment of mixed conifer forests (zones RNC 4-6). The occurrences of pollen of cold-adapted taxa (Saxifraga oppositifolia type, Saxifraga stellaris type, Larix), are the oldest so far known south of the Alps and suggest that mean summer temperature was near or even below the thermic tree limit. High herb diversity, partially represented by tall forbs, characterizes this zone. A further increase of the water table can be assumed in zones RNC 4 and RNC 5, since pollen of aquatic plants increases. The find of Larix decidua L. cones demonstrates the existence of the European larch in the Early Pleistocene of the Alps, previously not identified at the species level. After the Serio river had reached the maximum Quaternary aggradation, the lake was rapidly filled up with turbiditic sediments. The identification of Cervalces latifrons (Johnson, 1874) by Azzaroli (Palaeantogr. Italica 71(1979) 48) was confirmed. Pollen spectra obtained from clay fragments preserved in the braincase allowed us to constrain the stratigraphic position of these fossil remains in the lower palustrine portion of the sequence. Pollen and moose palaeoecology corroborate the reconstruction of a boreal landscape. The succession of Fornaci di Ranica is attributed to the late Early Pleistocene on the basis of the following elements: (i) the occurrence of an acme pollen zone of Tsuga, with Carya and Pteroearya; (ii) the low representation of Cedrus; (iii) the biochronology of Cervalces latifrons; (iv) normal fossil magnetic polarity, interpreted as part of the Jaramillo subchron on the basis of correlations with other studied sections from the same region, and, finally, (v) indications from the regional geological evolution. The basin deposits spanned the final stage of a temperate period and the subsequent transition to a cold phase during the Jaramillo subchron or the Cobb cryptochron. The basin originated by fluvioglacial aggradation, triggered by glaciation in the northern part of the Serio river catchement. The lake succession may represent an episode of marked increase of polar ice volume related to MIS (36) 30, or 28. The correlation with the Leffe sequence also suggests that cold climate conditions inferred for pollen zone RNC 3 did not occur earlier in the Early Pleistocene of this region. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.
format Text
author Ravazzi, Cesare
Pini, Roberta
Breda, Marzia
Martinetto, Edoardo
Muttoni, Giovanni
Chiesa, Sergio
Confortini, Federico
Egli, Ramon
author_facet Ravazzi, Cesare
Pini, Roberta
Breda, Marzia
Martinetto, Edoardo
Muttoni, Giovanni
Chiesa, Sergio
Confortini, Federico
Egli, Ramon
author_sort Ravazzi, Cesare
title The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
title_short The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
title_full The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
title_fullStr The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
title_full_unstemmed The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
title_sort lacustrine deposits of fornaci di ranica (late early pleistocene, italian pre-alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2005
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.140012
https://boris.unibe.ch/140012/
long_lat ENVELOPE(165.287,165.287,-74.330,-74.330)
geographic Italica
geographic_facet Italica
genre Saxifraga oppositifolia
genre_facet Saxifraga oppositifolia
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.140012
_version_ 1766188360083177472
spelling ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.140012 2023-05-15T18:15:15+02:00 The lacustrine deposits of Fornaci di Ranica (late Early Pleistocene, Italian Pre-Alps): stratigraphy, palaeoenvironment and geological evolution Ravazzi, Cesare Pini, Roberta Breda, Marzia Martinetto, Edoardo Muttoni, Giovanni Chiesa, Sergio Confortini, Federico Egli, Ramon 2005 application/pdf https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.140012 https://boris.unibe.ch/140012/ en eng Elsevier info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess 580 Plants Botany Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2005 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.140012 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z An interdisciplinary investigation of the Pleistocene clay succession of Fornaci di Ranica (Italian Pre-Alps) aimed to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental history and its chronostratigraphic position and to consider the implications for the Quaternary evolution of the southern alpine borderland near the Early/Middle Pleistocene transition. A detailed survey of Quaternary deposits in boreholes and exposed sections provided a complete record of the basin. The most complete core was analyzed for palynology and magnetic properties. Plant macrofossils were obtained by flotation. Pollen and spectrometric analysis allowed a precise stratigraphic placement of a moose antler and braincase kept in museum collections. The basin originated from fluviatile obstruction of a tributary valley cut into bedrock. The basal deposits formed as a terrestrial hydromorphic soil under a dense Tsuga-forest (zone RNC 1). The overlying palustrine gyttja shows a marked forest withdrawal with a climatic signature (zone RNC 3), followed by a re-establishment of mixed conifer forests (zones RNC 4-6). The occurrences of pollen of cold-adapted taxa (Saxifraga oppositifolia type, Saxifraga stellaris type, Larix), are the oldest so far known south of the Alps and suggest that mean summer temperature was near or even below the thermic tree limit. High herb diversity, partially represented by tall forbs, characterizes this zone. A further increase of the water table can be assumed in zones RNC 4 and RNC 5, since pollen of aquatic plants increases. The find of Larix decidua L. cones demonstrates the existence of the European larch in the Early Pleistocene of the Alps, previously not identified at the species level. After the Serio river had reached the maximum Quaternary aggradation, the lake was rapidly filled up with turbiditic sediments. The identification of Cervalces latifrons (Johnson, 1874) by Azzaroli (Palaeantogr. Italica 71(1979) 48) was confirmed. Pollen spectra obtained from clay fragments preserved in the braincase allowed us to constrain the stratigraphic position of these fossil remains in the lower palustrine portion of the sequence. Pollen and moose palaeoecology corroborate the reconstruction of a boreal landscape. The succession of Fornaci di Ranica is attributed to the late Early Pleistocene on the basis of the following elements: (i) the occurrence of an acme pollen zone of Tsuga, with Carya and Pteroearya; (ii) the low representation of Cedrus; (iii) the biochronology of Cervalces latifrons; (iv) normal fossil magnetic polarity, interpreted as part of the Jaramillo subchron on the basis of correlations with other studied sections from the same region, and, finally, (v) indications from the regional geological evolution. The basin deposits spanned the final stage of a temperate period and the subsequent transition to a cold phase during the Jaramillo subchron or the Cobb cryptochron. The basin originated by fluvioglacial aggradation, triggered by glaciation in the northern part of the Serio river catchement. The lake succession may represent an episode of marked increase of polar ice volume related to MIS (36) 30, or 28. The correlation with the Leffe sequence also suggests that cold climate conditions inferred for pollen zone RNC 3 did not occur earlier in the Early Pleistocene of this region. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved. Text Saxifraga oppositifolia DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Italica ENVELOPE(165.287,165.287,-74.330,-74.330)