Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica

No page 69 Six distinct benthonic foraminiferal assemblages are recognized in the Dumont D'Urville Sea of Antarctica on the basis of the common occurrence and predominance of taxons. The distribution of calcareous and arenaceous faunal facies on the continental shelf coincides remarkably with t...

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Main Author: Milam, Robert Wilson
Other Authors: Anderson, John B., Casey, Richard E.;Schwarzer, Rudy R.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018
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spelling ftriceuniv:oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/104018 2023-05-15T13:39:43+02:00 Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica Milam, Robert Wilson Anderson, John B. Casey, Richard E.;Schwarzer, Rudy R. 1981 145 pp reformatted digital application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018 eng eng Milam, Robert Wilson. "Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica." (1981) Master’s Thesis, Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018 . https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018 RICE1644 Thesis Geol. 1981 Milam Thesis Text 1981 ftriceuniv 2022-08-09T20:32:30Z No page 69 Six distinct benthonic foraminiferal assemblages are recognized in the Dumont D'Urville Sea of Antarctica on the basis of the common occurrence and predominance of taxons. The distribution of calcareous and arenaceous faunal facies on the continental shelf coincides remarkably with the relative distribution of reworked glacial sediments and organic-rich biogenic muds. Surface productivity, seafloor topography, and bottom current velocities are thought to control the distribution of these biogenic muds, which are restricted to shelf depressions, and the surface sediments themselves are thought to control the relative distribution of arenaceous and calcareous populations on the shelf. Depth is a subsidiary factor in controlling faunal distributions on the continental shelf. A mixed calcareous and arenaceous fauna defines the contact of the lysocline with the continental slope, below which lies the oceanic CCD at 19m and a slope arenaceous fauna. Shelf assemblages are generally of low diversity, but high diversity populations underlie upwelling nutrient-rich plumes of modified Upper Circumpolar Deep Water, which have been injected along an isopycnal between underlying dense shelf water and overlying surface water. Benthonic foraminifera are therefore useful as indicators of hydrographic conditions, and models relating the distribution of high diversity standing crops of benthonic foraminifera to such upwelling plumes are discussed. Thesis Antarc* Antarctica D'Urville Sea Dumont D'Urville Sea Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive D'Urville Sea ENVELOPE(140.000,140.000,-65.000,-65.000) Dumont d'Urville ENVELOPE(140.017,140.017,-66.667,-66.667) Dumont-d'Urville ENVELOPE(140.013,140.013,-66.667,-66.667)
institution Open Polar
collection Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive
op_collection_id ftriceuniv
language English
description No page 69 Six distinct benthonic foraminiferal assemblages are recognized in the Dumont D'Urville Sea of Antarctica on the basis of the common occurrence and predominance of taxons. The distribution of calcareous and arenaceous faunal facies on the continental shelf coincides remarkably with the relative distribution of reworked glacial sediments and organic-rich biogenic muds. Surface productivity, seafloor topography, and bottom current velocities are thought to control the distribution of these biogenic muds, which are restricted to shelf depressions, and the surface sediments themselves are thought to control the relative distribution of arenaceous and calcareous populations on the shelf. Depth is a subsidiary factor in controlling faunal distributions on the continental shelf. A mixed calcareous and arenaceous fauna defines the contact of the lysocline with the continental slope, below which lies the oceanic CCD at 19m and a slope arenaceous fauna. Shelf assemblages are generally of low diversity, but high diversity populations underlie upwelling nutrient-rich plumes of modified Upper Circumpolar Deep Water, which have been injected along an isopycnal between underlying dense shelf water and overlying surface water. Benthonic foraminifera are therefore useful as indicators of hydrographic conditions, and models relating the distribution of high diversity standing crops of benthonic foraminifera to such upwelling plumes are discussed.
author2 Anderson, John B.
Casey, Richard E.;Schwarzer, Rudy R.
format Thesis
author Milam, Robert Wilson
spellingShingle Milam, Robert Wilson
Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica
author_facet Milam, Robert Wilson
author_sort Milam, Robert Wilson
title Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica
title_short Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica
title_full Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica
title_fullStr Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica
title_sort distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the dumont d'urville sea, antarctica
publishDate 1981
url https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.000,140.000,-65.000,-65.000)
ENVELOPE(140.017,140.017,-66.667,-66.667)
ENVELOPE(140.013,140.013,-66.667,-66.667)
geographic D'Urville Sea
Dumont d'Urville
Dumont-d'Urville
geographic_facet D'Urville Sea
Dumont d'Urville
Dumont-d'Urville
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
D'Urville Sea
Dumont D'Urville Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
D'Urville Sea
Dumont D'Urville Sea
op_relation Milam, Robert Wilson. "Distribution and ecology of recent benthonic foraminifera of the Dumont D'Urville Sea, Antarctica." (1981) Master’s Thesis, Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018 .
https://hdl.handle.net/1911/104018
RICE1644
Thesis Geol. 1981 Milam
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