Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia

Trochospiral planktonic foraminifera will coil either sinistral (left) or dextral (right). The prevalence of sinistral or dextral coiling can change through the stratigraphic range of morphospecies with a preference in coiling direction. A number of coiling shifts have been applied as secondary mark...

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Main Authors: King, David J, Wade, Bridget S, Miller, C Giles
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Schweizerbart 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/7/Wade_nos_56_3_0331_0355_king_online_OA.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/
id ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:10164144
record_format openpolar
spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:10164144 2023-12-24T10:24:20+01:00 Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia King, David J Wade, Bridget S Miller, C Giles 2023-06 text https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/7/Wade_nos_56_3_0331_0355_king_online_OA.pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/ eng eng Schweizerbart https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/7/Wade_nos_56_3_0331_0355_king_online_OA.pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/ open Newsletters on Stratigraphy , 56 (3) pp. 331-355. (2023) Planktonic foraminifera Paragloborotalia coiling biostratigraphy Miocene Langhian Article 2023 ftucl 2023-11-27T13:07:32Z Trochospiral planktonic foraminifera will coil either sinistral (left) or dextral (right). The prevalence of sinistral or dextral coiling can change through the stratigraphic range of morphospecies with a preference in coiling direction. A number of coiling shifts have been applied as secondary marker events through the Recent to late Miocene (~0–7 Ma) biochronology. However, no such events have been applied beyond this age despite a number of species being known to adopt preferential coiling directions. Here we investigate selected Miocene species within the genus Paragloborotalia. Previous work in the tropical to subtropical realm has shown that the mayeri–siakensis group undergoes a shift from random to sinistrally dominated coiling in the mid Miocene (~15 Ma). We extend the investigation to other Miocene paragloborotaliids in the low (IODP Sites U1337, U1338, ODP Sites 871 and 925), mid (JOIDES-3 hole) and high latitudes (ODP Site 747) in order to assess whether there is global synchronicity and if the change is unique to the mayeri-siakensis group. In addition, a number of outcrop samples from the Cipero and Lengua formations in southern Trinidad are quantitatively compared to previously published trends. Our results show that in the low-mid latitudes the coiling shift is at ~15.37 Ma within planktonic foraminiferal Zone M5 within both Paragloborotalia siakensis and Paragloborotalia continuosa. In the high latitudes the absence of paragloborotaliids through a portion of the mid Miocene interval prevents accurate dating of a shift from early forms showing random coiling to later paragloborotaliids adopting a sinistral preference. We also find two coiling changes in the genus Globorotalia at high latitude Site 747, from random to sinistral in the mid Miocene (15.14 Ma) and sinistral to dextral (10.02 Ma) in the late Miocene. We propose the recognition of a coiling change in Paragloborotalia as a secondary bioevent in the mid Miocene at 15.37 Ma, and a useful means for the recognition of the base of the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Planktonic foraminifera University College London: UCL Discovery Trinidad ENVELOPE(-60.734,-60.734,-63.816,-63.816) Lengua ENVELOPE(-59.788,-59.788,-62.526,-62.526)
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language English
topic Planktonic foraminifera
Paragloborotalia
coiling
biostratigraphy
Miocene
Langhian
spellingShingle Planktonic foraminifera
Paragloborotalia
coiling
biostratigraphy
Miocene
Langhian
King, David J
Wade, Bridget S
Miller, C Giles
Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia
topic_facet Planktonic foraminifera
Paragloborotalia
coiling
biostratigraphy
Miocene
Langhian
description Trochospiral planktonic foraminifera will coil either sinistral (left) or dextral (right). The prevalence of sinistral or dextral coiling can change through the stratigraphic range of morphospecies with a preference in coiling direction. A number of coiling shifts have been applied as secondary marker events through the Recent to late Miocene (~0–7 Ma) biochronology. However, no such events have been applied beyond this age despite a number of species being known to adopt preferential coiling directions. Here we investigate selected Miocene species within the genus Paragloborotalia. Previous work in the tropical to subtropical realm has shown that the mayeri–siakensis group undergoes a shift from random to sinistrally dominated coiling in the mid Miocene (~15 Ma). We extend the investigation to other Miocene paragloborotaliids in the low (IODP Sites U1337, U1338, ODP Sites 871 and 925), mid (JOIDES-3 hole) and high latitudes (ODP Site 747) in order to assess whether there is global synchronicity and if the change is unique to the mayeri-siakensis group. In addition, a number of outcrop samples from the Cipero and Lengua formations in southern Trinidad are quantitatively compared to previously published trends. Our results show that in the low-mid latitudes the coiling shift is at ~15.37 Ma within planktonic foraminiferal Zone M5 within both Paragloborotalia siakensis and Paragloborotalia continuosa. In the high latitudes the absence of paragloborotaliids through a portion of the mid Miocene interval prevents accurate dating of a shift from early forms showing random coiling to later paragloborotaliids adopting a sinistral preference. We also find two coiling changes in the genus Globorotalia at high latitude Site 747, from random to sinistral in the mid Miocene (15.14 Ma) and sinistral to dextral (10.02 Ma) in the late Miocene. We propose the recognition of a coiling change in Paragloborotalia as a secondary bioevent in the mid Miocene at 15.37 Ma, and a useful means for the recognition of the base of the ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author King, David J
Wade, Bridget S
Miller, C Giles
author_facet King, David J
Wade, Bridget S
Miller, C Giles
author_sort King, David J
title Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia
title_short Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia
title_full Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia
title_fullStr Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia
title_full_unstemmed Biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in Miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus Paragloborotalia
title_sort biostratigraphic utility of coiling direction in miocene planktonic foraminiferal genus paragloborotalia
publisher Schweizerbart
publishDate 2023
url https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/7/Wade_nos_56_3_0331_0355_king_online_OA.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.734,-60.734,-63.816,-63.816)
ENVELOPE(-59.788,-59.788,-62.526,-62.526)
geographic Trinidad
Lengua
geographic_facet Trinidad
Lengua
genre Planktonic foraminifera
genre_facet Planktonic foraminifera
op_source Newsletters on Stratigraphy , 56 (3) pp. 331-355. (2023)
op_relation https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/7/Wade_nos_56_3_0331_0355_king_online_OA.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10164144/
op_rights open
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