Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica

The Cenozoic Era is one of the most intriguing periods in Earth’s geological, climatic and biological history (major transition from greenhouse to icehouse conditions across the Eocene-Oligocene Transition and the onset of major glaciations). Its major geological events are: 1) tectonic continents o...

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Main Authors: TOLOTTI, RAFFAELLA, BONCI, MARIA CRISTINA, CORRADI, NICOLA, De Santis, Laura, Lodolo, Emanuele, Harwood, David
Other Authors: Tolotti, Raffaella, Bonci, MARIA CRISTINA, Corradi, Nicola
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11567/810335
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spelling ftunivgenova:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/810335 2024-01-28T10:01:08+01:00 Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica TOLOTTI, RAFFAELLA BONCI, MARIA CRISTINA CORRADI, NICOLA De Santis, Laura Lodolo, Emanuele Harwood, David Tolotti, Raffaella De Santis, Laura Lodolo, Emanuele Harwood, David Bonci, MARIA CRISTINA Corradi, Nicola 2014 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11567/810335 eng eng ispartofbook:Abstract Book, Session S25-16 9th European Palaeobotany and Palynology Conference (EPPC) http://hdl.handle.net/11567/810335 info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2014 ftunivgenova 2024-01-03T17:50:27Z The Cenozoic Era is one of the most intriguing periods in Earth’s geological, climatic and biological history (major transition from greenhouse to icehouse conditions across the Eocene-Oligocene Transition and the onset of major glaciations). Its major geological events are: 1) tectonic continents onset with the opening of oceanic gateways (like the Drake Passage) 2) the formation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current with the establishment of the Polar Front and the rapid evolution of the marine phytoplankton floras. Diatoms are the dominant primary producer group in the modern oceans, they account for a major proportion of total oceanic primary productivity and of organic carbon burial in marine sediments. Directly involved in the biological pump, diatoms are commonly used to infer past oceanographic and climatic changes in polar regions. Understanding how ecosystems have evolved in the oceanic area between the continent and the polar front (before, during and after its formation) and comparing with high resolution stratigraphic and geochemical data around Antarctica, is basic to understand relationship among cryosphere /atmosphere /ocean realms and then better define the history of the polar ice cap. A qualitative and quantitative analyses on diatom microflora across the late Eocene-Oligocene-early Miocene interval at ODP Site 744 in Prydz Bay (Indian sector of the Southern Antarctic Ocean) provides a compared biostratigraphy and new informations about the timing and characteristic of climate events linked with ice sheet dynamics. The results include a diatom biostratigraphy, compared with that from other organisms sensitive to water temperature and composition changes. The poster will show the oceanic diatoms response to Antarctic ice sheet evolution from the Eocene (E/O transition) to the late Oligocene/Miocene; during these periods the Earth cooled significantly from a greenhouse to an icehouse Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Ocean Antarctica Drake Passage Ice cap Ice Sheet Polar Ice Cap Prydz Bay Università degli Studi di Genova: CINECA IRIS Antarctic Antarctic Ocean Drake Passage Indian Prydz Bay The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Università degli Studi di Genova: CINECA IRIS
op_collection_id ftunivgenova
language English
description The Cenozoic Era is one of the most intriguing periods in Earth’s geological, climatic and biological history (major transition from greenhouse to icehouse conditions across the Eocene-Oligocene Transition and the onset of major glaciations). Its major geological events are: 1) tectonic continents onset with the opening of oceanic gateways (like the Drake Passage) 2) the formation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current with the establishment of the Polar Front and the rapid evolution of the marine phytoplankton floras. Diatoms are the dominant primary producer group in the modern oceans, they account for a major proportion of total oceanic primary productivity and of organic carbon burial in marine sediments. Directly involved in the biological pump, diatoms are commonly used to infer past oceanographic and climatic changes in polar regions. Understanding how ecosystems have evolved in the oceanic area between the continent and the polar front (before, during and after its formation) and comparing with high resolution stratigraphic and geochemical data around Antarctica, is basic to understand relationship among cryosphere /atmosphere /ocean realms and then better define the history of the polar ice cap. A qualitative and quantitative analyses on diatom microflora across the late Eocene-Oligocene-early Miocene interval at ODP Site 744 in Prydz Bay (Indian sector of the Southern Antarctic Ocean) provides a compared biostratigraphy and new informations about the timing and characteristic of climate events linked with ice sheet dynamics. The results include a diatom biostratigraphy, compared with that from other organisms sensitive to water temperature and composition changes. The poster will show the oceanic diatoms response to Antarctic ice sheet evolution from the Eocene (E/O transition) to the late Oligocene/Miocene; during these periods the Earth cooled significantly from a greenhouse to an icehouse
author2 Tolotti, Raffaella
De Santis, Laura
Lodolo, Emanuele
Harwood, David
Bonci, MARIA CRISTINA
Corradi, Nicola
format Conference Object
author TOLOTTI, RAFFAELLA
BONCI, MARIA CRISTINA
CORRADI, NICOLA
De Santis, Laura
Lodolo, Emanuele
Harwood, David
spellingShingle TOLOTTI, RAFFAELLA
BONCI, MARIA CRISTINA
CORRADI, NICOLA
De Santis, Laura
Lodolo, Emanuele
Harwood, David
Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica
author_facet TOLOTTI, RAFFAELLA
BONCI, MARIA CRISTINA
CORRADI, NICOLA
De Santis, Laura
Lodolo, Emanuele
Harwood, David
author_sort TOLOTTI, RAFFAELLA
title Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica
title_short Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica
title_full Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica
title_fullStr Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late Eocene-oligocene- early Miocene transitions in Antarctica
title_sort biosiliceous marine floras responses to climatic and environmental changes during late eocene-oligocene- early miocene transitions in antarctica
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11567/810335
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Drake Passage
Indian
Prydz Bay
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Drake Passage
Indian
Prydz Bay
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Antarctica
Drake Passage
Ice cap
Ice Sheet
Polar Ice Cap
Prydz Bay
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Antarctica
Drake Passage
Ice cap
Ice Sheet
Polar Ice Cap
Prydz Bay
op_relation ispartofbook:Abstract Book, Session S25-16
9th European Palaeobotany and Palynology Conference (EPPC)
http://hdl.handle.net/11567/810335
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