Magnetostratigraphically-calibrated dinoflagellate cyst bioevents for the uppermost Eocene to lowermost Miocene of the western North Atlantic (IODP Expedition 342, Paleogene Newfoundland sediment drifts)

TitleMagnetostratigraphically-calibrated dinoflagellate cyst bioevents for the uppermost Eocene to lowermost Miocene of the western North Atlantic (IODP Expedition 342, Paleogene Newfoundland sediment drifts)
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsEgger, LM, liwińska, KKŚ, van Peer, TE, Liebrand, D, Lippert, PC, Friedrich, O, Wilson, PA, Norris, RD, Pross, J
JournalReview of Palaeobotany and Palynology
Volume234
Pagination159–185
ISSN0034-6667
Keywordsbiostratigraphy, Dinoflagellates, Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, North Atlantic, Oligocene, Paleogene
Abstract

Abstract The Oligocene epoch represents a somewhat neglected chapter in paleoclimate and paleoceanographic history, which is at least partially due to the scarcity of complete Oligocene sedimentary archives and poor biostratigraphic age control. Many of the biotic events registered in Oligocene microfossils are strongly diachronous across latitudes as a response to increased global cooling and enhanced meridional temperature gradients. To improve biostratigraphic age control for the Oligocene of the North Atlantic Ocean, we carried out a high-resolution study of dinoflagellate cysts from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Sites U1405, {\{}U1406{\}} and {\{}U1411{\}} off Newfoundland. Together the sites comprise an apparently complete uppermost Eocene (34.9 Ma) to lowermost Miocene (21.7 Ma) sequence with good magnetostratigraphic age control. This allows us to firmly tie identified dinoflagellate cyst bioevents to the geomagnetic polarity timescale. In the dinoflagellate cyst assemblages studied we have identified and magnetostratigraphically-calibrated ten first and 19 last appearance datums. Our magnetostratigraphically-calibrated dinocyst-based biostratigraphy, which is based on an average sample resolution of a sample every {\~{}} 150 kyrs, will contribute to an improved age framework for future paleoceanographical studies in the higher-latitude North Atlantic.

URLhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0034666716300100
DOI10.1016/j.revpalbo.2016.08.002
d96b37e25c18f40a