4.7 Article

Schizosphaerella size and abundance variations across the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event in the Sogno Core (Lombardy Basin, Southern Alps)

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2022.110969

Keywords

T-OAE; Nannofossils; Jurassic; Morphometry; Calcareous nannoplankton

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education (MIUR) project Dipartimenti di Eccellenza [PRIN 436 2017RX9XXXY]
  2. Le Geoscienze per la Societ`a: Risorse e loro evoluzione [753 2018-2022]

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This study quantifies the abundance and size variations of nannofossil Schizosphaerella punctulata in the Lombardy Basin, Northern Italy. It identifies the large fluctuations in nannofossil abundance and morphometric changes during the Jenkyns Event, and suggests that hyperthermal conditions and ocean acidification caused the reduction in abundance and size of S. punctulata. Strong positive correlations between the abundance/size of S. punctulata (> 7 μm) and CaCO3 content are observed in the pelagic succession of the Sogno Core.
Abundance and size variations of nannofossil Schizosphaerella punctulata were quantified in the uppermost Pliensbachian-Lower Toarcian succession recovered with the Sogno Core (Lombardy Basin, Northern Italy). High-resolution nannofossil biostratigraphy and C-isotopic chemostratigraphy identified the Jenkyns Event within the Toarcian oceanic anoxic event (T-OAE) interval. Absolute abundances and morphometric changes of small S. punctulata (< 7 mu m), S. punctulata (7-10 mu m; 10-14 mu m; > 14 mu m) and encrusted S. punctulata (specimens with a fringing crust) show large fluctuations across the negative delta C-13 Jenkyns Event. The Schizosphaerella crisis is further characterized by a decrease in average valve size in the early-middle Jenkyns Event. The abundance fall was caused by the failure of S. punctulata specimens > 7 mu m and encrusted S. punctulata that along with the increased relative abundance of small specimens, produced the reduction of average dimensions also documented in the Lusitanian and Paris Basins, although with a diachronous inception. The average valve size from the Lombardy Basin is similar to 2 mu m smaller than in these other basins. Hyperthermal conditions associated with excess CO2 and ocean acidification possibly forced the drastic reduction of S. punctulata abundance/size. In the pelagic succession of the Sogno Core there is a strong positive correlation between the S. punctulata (> 7 mu m) absolute abundance/size and the CaCO3 content, with a negligible contribution by small specimens (< 7 mu m). Encrusted specimens testify selective neomorphic processes: the diagenetic crust seems diagnostic to separate S. punctulata from S. astraea.

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