A novel multiproxy approach to reconstruct the paleoecology of extinct cephalopods
Reconstructing marine paleoenvironments from the skeletal hardparts of nektic organisms is often hampered by their unknown migrational pathways involving different water masses and their corresponding physico-chemical parameters. Despite significant progress over the last years, the reconstruction o...
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Published in | Gondwana research Vol. 67; pp. 64 - 81 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier B.V
01.03.2019
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Reconstructing marine paleoenvironments from the skeletal hardparts of nektic organisms is often hampered by their unknown migrational pathways involving different water masses and their corresponding physico-chemical parameters. Despite significant progress over the last years, the reconstruction of migration patterns of extinct ammonoids is difficult because both, vertical and horizontal ones lead to an intricate combination of reconstructed seawater temperatures. Paleonvironmental data retrieved from exceptionally well-preserved lower Albian (Douvilleiceras mammillatum ammonite zone, uppermost CC8a nannofossil zone, 110.5–111.0 Ma) cephalopod shells from Madagascar (Mahajanga Basin, 40–42° southern latitude) are reconstructed based on a novel multi-proxy approach. Here we combine and contrast: (i) nacre tablet-paleobathymetry, (ii) Westermann Morphospace, and (iii) shell isotope geochemistry analysis. Results obtained allow for a robust reconstruction of habitat depth, paleo-seawater temperatures, and paleoecology of extinct cephalopod taxa. The discocone nautiloid Cymatoceras is regarded as vertical migrant with a maximum habitat depth of 250 m and a mean habitat water temperature of 20–21 °C. All three ammonoid taxa (Cleoniceras, Desmoceras, and Eogaudryceras) share a platycone to planorbicone shell shape suggesting a demersal life habit at maximal water depths of 450–500 m and temperatures of 19–21 °C for Cleoniceras and Desmoceras, and the deepest (525 m) and coolest (14 °C) habitat for Eogaudryceras. Circumstantial evidence from benthic mollusk shells from the same stratigraphic interval as well as sedimentological and paleopathological data provide further support for habitat reconstructions. Reconstructed paleotemperatures shown here provide well-constrained evidence for the thermal structure of past oceanic water masses and have significance for Cretaceous paleoceanography in general.
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•Application of a multi-proxy approach results in more robust paleobiology reconstruction of extinct cephalopods•The paleoecology (habitat depth, water temperature, and mobility) of Lower Albian cephalopods of Madgascar were specified•Paleoenvironments, e.g. sea surface temperatures (SST´s) and the thermal structure of paleo-oceans were specified•The complicated depositional setting and diagenetic history has also been discussed |
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ISSN: | 1342-937X 1878-0571 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.gr.2018.10.011 |