Morphology and distribution of the Miocene dinoflagellate cysts Operculodinium? borgerholtense Louwye, 2001, emend

The extinct, organic-walled, proximochorate dinoflagellate cyst Operculodinium? borgerholtense Louwye 2001 was first described from Miocene shallow-marine deposits of northern Belgium, and has since been documented from the Miocene of the eastern North Atlantic, North Sea, Austria, Hungary, and Egyp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ali, Soliman, Martin, Head, Louwye, Stephen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/914386
http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-914386
https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/914386/file/914393
Description
Summary:The extinct, organic-walled, proximochorate dinoflagellate cyst Operculodinium? borgerholtense Louwye 2001 was first described from Miocene shallow-marine deposits of northern Belgium, and has since been documented from the Miocene of the eastern North Atlantic, North Sea, Austria, Hungary, and Egypt. Conventional and confocal light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy are used to reveal new details of the archeopyle, wall structure, and ornament. The archeopyle is shown to have well-defined rather than rounded angles, a distinction we consider significant in assigning this species only provisionally to the genus. Operculodinium? borgerholtense was a euryhaline neritic species highly tolerant of environmental stress, a feature consistent with its morphological variability. Present records indicate it tropical-subtropical to temperate paleoclimatic distribution. It ranges from the upper Lower Miocene to tipper Middle Miocene, and promises to be a useful stratigraphic marker particularly in neritic settings where adverse paleoenvironmental factors have excluded other species.