Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount

The Miocene is a key epoch in the climatic history of our planet since it witnessed the transition from the Green House Earth to the modern Ice House condition. Although the beginning of this fundamental climatic shift dates back to the Eocene, with the opening of the Drake Passage, it is only after...

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Main Authors: Coletti, G, Basso, D, Betzler, C, Robertson, A, Bosio, G, El Kateb, A, Foubert, A, Meilijson, A, Spezzaferri, S
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: country:IT 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10281/246246
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmilanobic:oai:boa.unimib.it:10281/246246 2024-02-04T09:54:29+01:00 Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount Coletti, G Basso, D Betzler, C Robertson, A Bosio, G El Kateb, A Foubert, A Meilijson, A Spezzaferri, S Coletti, G Basso, D Betzler, C Robertson, A Bosio, G El Kateb, A Foubert, A Meilijson, A Spezzaferri, S 2019 ELETTRONICO http://hdl.handle.net/10281/246246 eng eng country:IT place:Roma info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-88-944576-2-9 ispartofbook:34th IAS International Meeting of Sedimentology International Meeting of Sedimentology http://hdl.handle.net/10281/246246 Miocene Eastern Mediterranean bioconstruction coralline algae GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2019 ftunivmilanobic 2024-01-09T23:27:31Z The Miocene is a key epoch in the climatic history of our planet since it witnessed the transition from the Green House Earth to the modern Ice House condition. Although the beginning of this fundamental climatic shift dates back to the Eocene, with the opening of the Drake Passage, it is only after the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum that the Antarctic Ice-sheets experienced a major expansion and the North Hemisphere Ice-sheets began to form. While Earth’s climate was cooling, the Mediterranean basin was facing a major revolution: turning from a large seaway connecting the Indo-Pacific with the Atlantic to anenclosed basin. During the early Miocene, the eastern deep-water connection was severed. During the late Miocene, the sealing of the western passage determined the Messinian Salinity Crisis. Since the Eastern Mediterranean basin was for a long time the only gateway to the Indopacific Ocean, it plays a crucial role in the understanding of the environmental evolution of the Mediterranean.In order to understand the environmental dynamics of Mediterranean during the Miocene, the carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount, located offshore Cyprus in the Eastern Mediterranean (ODP Leg 160, Site 966), have been reanalysed. The use of SEDEX sequential extraction for evaluating the nutrient concentrations and of CT-Scan for the identification of large benthic foraminifera resulted in a detailed palaeoenvironmental reconstruction and an improved stratigraphic framework.The succession formed in an oligotrophic tropical environment and it is possible to recognize three major intervals within it. The lower interval, dated to the early Miocene, is characterised by a large benthic foraminifera and echinoid skeletal assemblage deposited in a water depth of 30-60 m. The central interval, which likely represents the middle Miocene, is dominated in its basal part by coralline algae and corals, probably related to a moderately shallow setting (20-30 m). Upward, epiphytic foraminifera, hooked coralline-algal crusts and thin and ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Drake Passage Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca: BOA (Bicocca Open Archive) Antarctic The Antarctic Drake Passage Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca: BOA (Bicocca Open Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivmilanobic
language English
topic Miocene
Eastern Mediterranean
bioconstruction
coralline algae
GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA
spellingShingle Miocene
Eastern Mediterranean
bioconstruction
coralline algae
GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA
Coletti, G
Basso, D
Betzler, C
Robertson, A
Bosio, G
El Kateb, A
Foubert, A
Meilijson, A
Spezzaferri, S
Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount
topic_facet Miocene
Eastern Mediterranean
bioconstruction
coralline algae
GEO/01 - PALEONTOLOGIA E PALEOECOLOGIA
description The Miocene is a key epoch in the climatic history of our planet since it witnessed the transition from the Green House Earth to the modern Ice House condition. Although the beginning of this fundamental climatic shift dates back to the Eocene, with the opening of the Drake Passage, it is only after the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum that the Antarctic Ice-sheets experienced a major expansion and the North Hemisphere Ice-sheets began to form. While Earth’s climate was cooling, the Mediterranean basin was facing a major revolution: turning from a large seaway connecting the Indo-Pacific with the Atlantic to anenclosed basin. During the early Miocene, the eastern deep-water connection was severed. During the late Miocene, the sealing of the western passage determined the Messinian Salinity Crisis. Since the Eastern Mediterranean basin was for a long time the only gateway to the Indopacific Ocean, it plays a crucial role in the understanding of the environmental evolution of the Mediterranean.In order to understand the environmental dynamics of Mediterranean during the Miocene, the carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount, located offshore Cyprus in the Eastern Mediterranean (ODP Leg 160, Site 966), have been reanalysed. The use of SEDEX sequential extraction for evaluating the nutrient concentrations and of CT-Scan for the identification of large benthic foraminifera resulted in a detailed palaeoenvironmental reconstruction and an improved stratigraphic framework.The succession formed in an oligotrophic tropical environment and it is possible to recognize three major intervals within it. The lower interval, dated to the early Miocene, is characterised by a large benthic foraminifera and echinoid skeletal assemblage deposited in a water depth of 30-60 m. The central interval, which likely represents the middle Miocene, is dominated in its basal part by coralline algae and corals, probably related to a moderately shallow setting (20-30 m). Upward, epiphytic foraminifera, hooked coralline-algal crusts and thin and ...
author2 Coletti, G
Basso, D
Betzler, C
Robertson, A
Bosio, G
El Kateb, A
Foubert, A
Meilijson, A
Spezzaferri, S
format Conference Object
author Coletti, G
Basso, D
Betzler, C
Robertson, A
Bosio, G
El Kateb, A
Foubert, A
Meilijson, A
Spezzaferri, S
author_facet Coletti, G
Basso, D
Betzler, C
Robertson, A
Bosio, G
El Kateb, A
Foubert, A
Meilijson, A
Spezzaferri, S
author_sort Coletti, G
title Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount
title_short Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount
title_full Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount
title_fullStr Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount
title_full_unstemmed Miocene carbonates of the Eratosthenes Seamount
title_sort miocene carbonates of the eratosthenes seamount
publisher country:IT
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10281/246246
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Drake Passage
Pacific
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Drake Passage
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Drake Passage
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Drake Passage
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/978-88-944576-2-9
ispartofbook:34th IAS International Meeting of Sedimentology
International Meeting of Sedimentology
http://hdl.handle.net/10281/246246
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