The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent

In contrast to the rich marine fossil record that extends to the late Mesozoic, records of pre-Quaternary lacustrine diatom deposits are relatively scarce, particularly from the high latitudes. Such records provide information concerning paleoenvironmental change, as well as new insights concerning...

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Main Authors: Pinseel, Eveline, Harper, Margaret, Wolfe, Alexander P, Lewis, Adam R, Dickinson, Warren, Ashworth, Allan C, Sabbe, Koen, Van de Vijver, Bart, Verleyen, Elie, Vyverman, Wim
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8196961
http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8196961
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spelling ftunivgent:oai:archive.ugent.be:8196961 2023-06-11T04:04:57+02:00 The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent Pinseel, Eveline Harper, Margaret Wolfe, Alexander P Lewis, Adam R Dickinson, Warren Ashworth, Allan C Sabbe, Koen Van de Vijver, Bart Verleyen, Elie Vyverman, Wim 2016 https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8196961 http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8196961 eng eng https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8196961 http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8196961 24th International diatom symposium : program and abstracts Biology and Life Sciences conference info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2016 ftunivgent 2023-05-10T22:32:47Z In contrast to the rich marine fossil record that extends to the late Mesozoic, records of pre-Quaternary lacustrine diatom deposits are relatively scarce, particularly from the high latitudes. Such records provide information concerning paleoenvironmental change, as well as new insights concerning the evolution of freshwater diatom floras. Here, we report two well-preserved lacustrine diatom assemblages from the Transantarctic Mountains in Continental Antarctica dating back to the Middle Miocene (ca. 14 – 17.5 Ma): Mount Boreas in the Olympus Range in the western Dry Valleys, and the Friis Hills adjacent to the Asgard Range in the southern Dry Valleys. In total, 17 samples of Mount Boreas and 9 samples of the Friis ills were investigated. Diverse diatom floras were revealed, represented by at least 131 taxa (38 genera) and 128 taxa (36 genera) from Mount Boreas and the Friis Hills, respectively. Both floras are dominated by small colonial fragilarioid taxa and a large diversity of benthic taxa belonging to the genera Eunotia, Gomphonema, Pinnularia and Brachysira. Detailed counts of the Mount Boreas sediments suggest that the Mount Boreas lake persisted for several thousands of years and underwent progressive natural acidification. Extensive bryophyte growth suggest an initial shallow water phase, followed by deepening and the occurrence of tychoplanktonic taxa including Aulacoseira. Many of the observed Miocene genera and species groups are currently not found in Continental Antarctica, suggesting that the extant Continental Antarctic diatom flora became established after the Mid Miocene cooling event (ca. 14 Ma), when Antarctic glaciation became intensified. In contrast, the Miocene flora shares compositional affinities with the present-day flora of the Arctic region (e.g., high diversity with eunotioid and cymbelloid diatoms), as well as marked biogeographical links with the Gondwanan continents of South America and Australasia, as evidenced by the occurrence of marker genera such as Veigaludwigia. Together, ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Arctic Ghent University Academic Bibliography Arctic Antarctic The Antarctic Transantarctic Mountains Boreas ENVELOPE(-3.933,-3.933,-71.300,-71.300) Olympus ENVELOPE(156.767,156.767,-80.217,-80.217) Asgard Range ENVELOPE(161.500,161.500,-77.617,-77.617) Friis Hills ENVELOPE(161.417,161.417,-77.750,-77.750) Olympus Range ENVELOPE(162.000,162.000,-77.467,-77.467) Mount Boreas ENVELOPE(-68.365,-68.365,-69.637,-69.637)
institution Open Polar
collection Ghent University Academic Bibliography
op_collection_id ftunivgent
language English
topic Biology and Life Sciences
spellingShingle Biology and Life Sciences
Pinseel, Eveline
Harper, Margaret
Wolfe, Alexander P
Lewis, Adam R
Dickinson, Warren
Ashworth, Allan C
Sabbe, Koen
Van de Vijver, Bart
Verleyen, Elie
Vyverman, Wim
The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent
topic_facet Biology and Life Sciences
description In contrast to the rich marine fossil record that extends to the late Mesozoic, records of pre-Quaternary lacustrine diatom deposits are relatively scarce, particularly from the high latitudes. Such records provide information concerning paleoenvironmental change, as well as new insights concerning the evolution of freshwater diatom floras. Here, we report two well-preserved lacustrine diatom assemblages from the Transantarctic Mountains in Continental Antarctica dating back to the Middle Miocene (ca. 14 – 17.5 Ma): Mount Boreas in the Olympus Range in the western Dry Valleys, and the Friis Hills adjacent to the Asgard Range in the southern Dry Valleys. In total, 17 samples of Mount Boreas and 9 samples of the Friis ills were investigated. Diverse diatom floras were revealed, represented by at least 131 taxa (38 genera) and 128 taxa (36 genera) from Mount Boreas and the Friis Hills, respectively. Both floras are dominated by small colonial fragilarioid taxa and a large diversity of benthic taxa belonging to the genera Eunotia, Gomphonema, Pinnularia and Brachysira. Detailed counts of the Mount Boreas sediments suggest that the Mount Boreas lake persisted for several thousands of years and underwent progressive natural acidification. Extensive bryophyte growth suggest an initial shallow water phase, followed by deepening and the occurrence of tychoplanktonic taxa including Aulacoseira. Many of the observed Miocene genera and species groups are currently not found in Continental Antarctica, suggesting that the extant Continental Antarctic diatom flora became established after the Mid Miocene cooling event (ca. 14 Ma), when Antarctic glaciation became intensified. In contrast, the Miocene flora shares compositional affinities with the present-day flora of the Arctic region (e.g., high diversity with eunotioid and cymbelloid diatoms), as well as marked biogeographical links with the Gondwanan continents of South America and Australasia, as evidenced by the occurrence of marker genera such as Veigaludwigia. Together, ...
format Conference Object
author Pinseel, Eveline
Harper, Margaret
Wolfe, Alexander P
Lewis, Adam R
Dickinson, Warren
Ashworth, Allan C
Sabbe, Koen
Van de Vijver, Bart
Verleyen, Elie
Vyverman, Wim
author_facet Pinseel, Eveline
Harper, Margaret
Wolfe, Alexander P
Lewis, Adam R
Dickinson, Warren
Ashworth, Allan C
Sabbe, Koen
Van de Vijver, Bart
Verleyen, Elie
Vyverman, Wim
author_sort Pinseel, Eveline
title The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent
title_short The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent
title_full The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent
title_fullStr The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent
title_full_unstemmed The Miocene freshwater diatom flora of the Antarctic Continent
title_sort miocene freshwater diatom flora of the antarctic continent
publishDate 2016
url https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8196961
http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8196961
long_lat ENVELOPE(-3.933,-3.933,-71.300,-71.300)
ENVELOPE(156.767,156.767,-80.217,-80.217)
ENVELOPE(161.500,161.500,-77.617,-77.617)
ENVELOPE(161.417,161.417,-77.750,-77.750)
ENVELOPE(162.000,162.000,-77.467,-77.467)
ENVELOPE(-68.365,-68.365,-69.637,-69.637)
geographic Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
Transantarctic Mountains
Boreas
Olympus
Asgard Range
Friis Hills
Olympus Range
Mount Boreas
geographic_facet Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
Transantarctic Mountains
Boreas
Olympus
Asgard Range
Friis Hills
Olympus Range
Mount Boreas
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
op_source 24th International diatom symposium : program and abstracts
op_relation https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8196961
http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8196961
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