Arctic dinoflagellate migrations mark the strongest Oligocene glaciations

Here we report on mid-Oligocene globally synchronous Arctic dinoflagellate migration events, calibrated against chron C9n. We show that sudden appearances and marked abundance increases of the Arctic taxon Svalbardella at lower and middle latitudes coincide with the Oi-2b benthic δ 18 O glacial epis...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geology
Main Authors: Van Simaeys, S., Brinkhuis, H., Pross, J., Williams, G.L., Zachos, J.C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.vliz.be/nl/open-marien-archief?module=ref&refid=101484
Description
Summary:Here we report on mid-Oligocene globally synchronous Arctic dinoflagellate migration events, calibrated against chron C9n. We show that sudden appearances and marked abundance increases of the Arctic taxon Svalbardella at lower and middle latitudes coincide with the Oi-2b benthic δ 18 O glacial episode, dated as ca. 27.1 Ma. These unprecedented migrations are taken to indicate anomalously strong surface-water cooling during Oi-2b time, in turn associated with strong concomitant Antarctic ice-sheet growth and sea-level lowering. We estimate the duration of these unique Svalbardella migrations and the associated episode of profound cooling as 500 k.y. Our records suggest a close link between this distinct Oligocene glaciation episode, strong sea-level fall, and the classic lower-upper Oligocene, or Rupelian-Chattian, boundary, dating this boundary as ca. 27.1 Ma.