Calcareous nannofossil quantitative analyses were carried out on upper Hauterivian sediments from the Cismon core and results from the uppermost Hauterivian "Faraoni Level" were compared to nannofloral fluctuations in abundance and composition recorded in the S.S. Arceviese road and Palazzo D'Arcevia sections, Umbria-Marche Basin (central Italy). Fragile taxa are generally absent since the preservation is poor in all lithologies analyzed, but dissolution-resistant taxa show remarkable fluctuations. Smear-slide investigations reveal that limestones are characterized by high abundances of nannoconids (principally narrow-canal nannoconids) suggesting oligotrophic conditions throughout the interval investigated. Conversely, nannoconids are rare or absent in black shales, whereas Assipetra infracretacea and Rucinolithus terebrodentarius are prevailing. In addition, high abundances of pentaliths are recorded in limestones through the interval preceding the deposition of the Faraoni Level. This finding possibly suggests a decrease in salinity of surface waters. Different paleoceanographic regimes seem to have triggered repetitive changes in abundance and composition of nannofloral assemblages. Limestones were plausibly deposited under oligotrophic conditions, whilst black shales may suggest increasing primary productivity. Thin section investigations show a drop in abundance of pentaliths and a marked decrease of narrow-canal nannoconids starting definitively before and reaching a minimum in the Faraoni Level. In the black shales bounding the ammonite-rich Guide Bed, A. infracretacea and R. terebrodentarius become dominant. Such nannofloral changes may suggest enhanced primary productivity and more arid conditions associated with dysoxic bottom waters. We stress the fact that nannofloral variations recorded in the Faraoni Level are not exclusive, but match the repetitive nannofloral-lithological fluctuations preceding and following it. Perhaps, the paleoenvironmental changes triggering the Faraoni event were not affecting calcareous phytoplankton or represent the over-reaching of threshold conditions after gradual and progressive modifications in nutrient availability.

Calcareous nannofossil fluctuations during the late Hauterivian in the Cismon core (Venetian Alps, northeastern Italy) and in selected sections of the Umbria-Marche Basin (central Italy) : paleoceanographic implications of the Faraoni Level / F. Tremolada, E. Erba, B. De Bernardi, F. Cecca. - In: CRETACEOUS RESEARCH. - ISSN 0195-6671. - 30:3(2009), pp. 505-514.

Calcareous nannofossil fluctuations during the late Hauterivian in the Cismon core (Venetian Alps, northeastern Italy) and in selected sections of the Umbria-Marche Basin (central Italy) : paleoceanographic implications of the Faraoni Level

E. Erba
Secondo
;
B. De Bernardi
Penultimo
;
2009

Abstract

Calcareous nannofossil quantitative analyses were carried out on upper Hauterivian sediments from the Cismon core and results from the uppermost Hauterivian "Faraoni Level" were compared to nannofloral fluctuations in abundance and composition recorded in the S.S. Arceviese road and Palazzo D'Arcevia sections, Umbria-Marche Basin (central Italy). Fragile taxa are generally absent since the preservation is poor in all lithologies analyzed, but dissolution-resistant taxa show remarkable fluctuations. Smear-slide investigations reveal that limestones are characterized by high abundances of nannoconids (principally narrow-canal nannoconids) suggesting oligotrophic conditions throughout the interval investigated. Conversely, nannoconids are rare or absent in black shales, whereas Assipetra infracretacea and Rucinolithus terebrodentarius are prevailing. In addition, high abundances of pentaliths are recorded in limestones through the interval preceding the deposition of the Faraoni Level. This finding possibly suggests a decrease in salinity of surface waters. Different paleoceanographic regimes seem to have triggered repetitive changes in abundance and composition of nannofloral assemblages. Limestones were plausibly deposited under oligotrophic conditions, whilst black shales may suggest increasing primary productivity. Thin section investigations show a drop in abundance of pentaliths and a marked decrease of narrow-canal nannoconids starting definitively before and reaching a minimum in the Faraoni Level. In the black shales bounding the ammonite-rich Guide Bed, A. infracretacea and R. terebrodentarius become dominant. Such nannofloral changes may suggest enhanced primary productivity and more arid conditions associated with dysoxic bottom waters. We stress the fact that nannofloral variations recorded in the Faraoni Level are not exclusive, but match the repetitive nannofloral-lithological fluctuations preceding and following it. Perhaps, the paleoenvironmental changes triggering the Faraoni event were not affecting calcareous phytoplankton or represent the over-reaching of threshold conditions after gradual and progressive modifications in nutrient availability.
Calcareous nannofossils; Faraoni Level; Hauterivian; Relative and absolute abundances
Settore GEO/01 - Paleontologia e Paleoecologia
2009
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/142551
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