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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-07-01
    Description: Abstract High‐resolution analysis of the late Pliensbachian – early Toarcian belemnite assemblages from the Peniche section (Lusitanian Basin) has enabled, for the first time, recognition of eight taxa of the suborder Belemnitina, previously reported from contemporaneous north‐west Tethyan and Arctic sections. The presence of Bairstowius amaliae sp. nov. in the late Pliensbachian (emaciatum Zone) represents a novelty given that hitherto the genus Bairstowius was known only from late Sinemurian and early Pliensbachian deposits. Additionally, the replacement of Bairstowius amaliae by Catateuthis longiforma, during the latest Pliensbachian, suggests an evolutionary relationship between the two taxa. This relationship suggests a new scenario for the subsequent development of endemic Toarcian Boreal–Arctic faunas, characterized by the occurrence of Catateuthis. Comparison of the Peniche belemnite fauna with coeval faunas from the Mediterranean/Submediterranean and Euro‐Boreal domains indicates taxonomic uniformity during the late Pliensbachian and early Toarcian (emaciatum and polymorphum Zones), in the north‐west Tethys. Despite the lack of a marked taxonomic turnover, the Pliensbachian–Toarcian boundary corresponds to a slight decrease in diversity observed not only in the Lusitanian Basin but also in coeval north‐western European basins. Ordination and cluster analyses indicate that the largest changes in belemnite diversity and palaeogeographical distribution occurred rather during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (base of the levisoni Zone). This event is marked by the extinction of taxa, affecting more severely the Mediterranean/Submediterranean domain and resulting in a more pronounced provincial differentiation among north‐western European and Arctic belemnite faunas.
    Description: DFG Research Unit FOR 2332
    Description: IUGS–UNESCO
    Keywords: 564.5 ; belemnite ; diversity ; palaeobiogeography ; Pliensbachian–Toarcian boundary ; Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event ; Lusitanian Basin
    Type: article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: The loss of carbonate production during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE, ca. 183 Ma) is hypothesized to have been at least partly triggered by ocean acidification linked to magmatism from the Karoo-Ferrar large igneous province (southern Africa and Antarctica). However, the dynamics of acidification have never been directly quantified across the T-OAE. Here, we present the first record of temporal evolution of seawater pH spanning the late Pliensbachian and early Toarcian from the Lusitanian Basin (Portugal) reconstructed on the basis of boron isotopic composition (δ11B) of brachiopod shells. δ11B declines by ~1‰ across the Pliensbachian-Toarcian boundary (Pl-To) and attains the lowest values (~12.5‰) just prior to and within the T-OAE, followed by fluctuations and a moderately increasing trend afterwards. The decline in δ11B coincides with decreasing bulk CaCO3 content, in parallel with the two-phase decline in carbonate production observed at global scales and with changes in pCO2 derived from stomatal indices. Seawater pH had declined significantly already prior to the T-OAE, probably due to the repeated emissions of volcanogenic CO2. During the earliest phase of the T-OAE, pH increased for a short period, likely due to intensified continental weathering and organic carbon burial, resulting in atmospheric CO2 drawdown. Subsequently, pH dropped again, reaching the minimum in the middle of the T-OAE. The early Toarcian marine extinction and carbonate collapse were thus driven, in part, by ocean acidification, similar to other Phanerozoic events caused by major CO2 emissions and warming.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: text
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