Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths

Shelf settings comprise invaluable information about the impact of paleoenvironmental change on the shallow marine ecosystem. We measured δ18O and δ13C ratios in fossil fish otoliths to assess temperature and salinity variability in the Ypresian (Ypr., 56.0-47.8 Ma) southern North Sea Basin (sNSB)....

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Main Authors: Vanhove, Daan, Speijer, Robert, Steurbaut, Etienne, Ivany, Linda
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/437085
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spelling ftunivleuven:oai:lirias.kuleuven.be:123456789/437085 2023-05-15T16:30:38+02:00 Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths Vanhove, Daan Speijer, Robert Steurbaut, Etienne Ivany, Linda 2013-10-27 https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/437085 en eng Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs vol:45 issue:7 pages:701-701 Geological Society of America Annual Meeting edition:2013 location:Denver, Colorado date:27-30 October 2013 https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/437085 Description (Metadata) only IMa conference_paper 2013 ftunivleuven 2014-03-04T14:40:15Z Shelf settings comprise invaluable information about the impact of paleoenvironmental change on the shallow marine ecosystem. We measured δ18O and δ13C ratios in fossil fish otoliths to assess temperature and salinity variability in the Ypresian (Ypr., 56.0-47.8 Ma) southern North Sea Basin (sNSB). Well-preserved otoliths were selected from U.K. and Belgian collections, representing a series of levels mainly within the Blackheath and Harwich (lower Ypr.), London Clay (middle Ypr.) and Tielt (upper Ypr.) Formations. Thirteen species were selected, of which 8 belong to demersal and probably non-migratory fish such as ophidiids, bythitids and congrids. Powders for bulk (mean annual temperature, MAT) and incremental (seasonality) analyses were generated by microdrilling the sagittal plane of embedded and polished otoliths. Paleotemperatures are determined from the London Clay Fm. samples. This unit is composed of fine silts and clays deposited in an offshore environment (+/- 100 km from coast), unlikely to be influenced by freshwater influx. Mean bulk δ18O values reveal within-horizon consistency among different co-occurring taxa. The horizon means, including all taxa, range between -1.9 and -3.4 ‰. This translates to warm, albeit not extreme MAT’s between 21.3 and 28.5 °C during the 54-51.5 Ma interval. A paleowater composition of -1 ‰ is assumed, based on latitudinal correction and an open scenario for the Greenland-Norway Seaway. Based on the incremental sampling, low seasonality of 3-6 °C (about 1 to 1.5 ‰) is observed in the London Clay Fm. By contrast, mean bulk δ18O values from the Harwich and Blackheath Fms. (55.5-55.0 Ma) are very negative, ranging from -5 to -7 ‰, indicating substantial mixing with low-salinity waters reduced by probably 3-4 ‰. The marine character of these marginal deposits is indicated by the presence of glauconite and marine mollusks. Restricted connection of the sNSB with the North Atlantic and an intense global water cycle shortly after the PETM both may explain these results. Samples from the shallow sandy Tielt Fm. (~51.0 Ma) bear values between -3 and -5 and are thought to be influenced by continental freshwater runoff. All marginal facies are characterized by a much higher intra-annual variability of 3-4 ‰, probably the result of seasonally paced freshwater influx. status: published Conference Object Greenland North Atlantic KU Leuven: Lirias Greenland Norway
institution Open Polar
collection KU Leuven: Lirias
op_collection_id ftunivleuven
language English
description Shelf settings comprise invaluable information about the impact of paleoenvironmental change on the shallow marine ecosystem. We measured δ18O and δ13C ratios in fossil fish otoliths to assess temperature and salinity variability in the Ypresian (Ypr., 56.0-47.8 Ma) southern North Sea Basin (sNSB). Well-preserved otoliths were selected from U.K. and Belgian collections, representing a series of levels mainly within the Blackheath and Harwich (lower Ypr.), London Clay (middle Ypr.) and Tielt (upper Ypr.) Formations. Thirteen species were selected, of which 8 belong to demersal and probably non-migratory fish such as ophidiids, bythitids and congrids. Powders for bulk (mean annual temperature, MAT) and incremental (seasonality) analyses were generated by microdrilling the sagittal plane of embedded and polished otoliths. Paleotemperatures are determined from the London Clay Fm. samples. This unit is composed of fine silts and clays deposited in an offshore environment (+/- 100 km from coast), unlikely to be influenced by freshwater influx. Mean bulk δ18O values reveal within-horizon consistency among different co-occurring taxa. The horizon means, including all taxa, range between -1.9 and -3.4 ‰. This translates to warm, albeit not extreme MAT’s between 21.3 and 28.5 °C during the 54-51.5 Ma interval. A paleowater composition of -1 ‰ is assumed, based on latitudinal correction and an open scenario for the Greenland-Norway Seaway. Based on the incremental sampling, low seasonality of 3-6 °C (about 1 to 1.5 ‰) is observed in the London Clay Fm. By contrast, mean bulk δ18O values from the Harwich and Blackheath Fms. (55.5-55.0 Ma) are very negative, ranging from -5 to -7 ‰, indicating substantial mixing with low-salinity waters reduced by probably 3-4 ‰. The marine character of these marginal deposits is indicated by the presence of glauconite and marine mollusks. Restricted connection of the sNSB with the North Atlantic and an intense global water cycle shortly after the PETM both may explain these results. Samples from the shallow sandy Tielt Fm. (~51.0 Ma) bear values between -3 and -5 and are thought to be influenced by continental freshwater runoff. All marginal facies are characterized by a much higher intra-annual variability of 3-4 ‰, probably the result of seasonally paced freshwater influx. status: published
format Conference Object
author Vanhove, Daan
Speijer, Robert
Steurbaut, Etienne
Ivany, Linda
spellingShingle Vanhove, Daan
Speijer, Robert
Steurbaut, Etienne
Ivany, Linda
Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
author_facet Vanhove, Daan
Speijer, Robert
Steurbaut, Etienne
Ivany, Linda
author_sort Vanhove, Daan
title Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
title_short Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
title_full Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
title_fullStr Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
title_full_unstemmed Paleotemperature and seasonality in the early Eocene southern North Sea Basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
title_sort paleotemperature and seasonality in the early eocene southern north sea basin inferred from fossil fish otoliths
publishDate 2013
url https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/437085
geographic Greenland
Norway
geographic_facet Greenland
Norway
genre Greenland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Greenland
North Atlantic
op_relation Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs vol:45 issue:7 pages:701-701
Geological Society of America Annual Meeting edition:2013 location:Denver, Colorado date:27-30 October 2013
https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/437085
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