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Research article
23 May 2011

Distribution of deep-sea benthic foraminifera in the Neogene of Blake Ridge, NW Atlantic Ocean

Publication: Journal of Micropalaeontolgy
Volume 30
Pages 33 - 74

Abstract

This study describes and illustrates the evolution of deep-sea benthic foraminifera from the Blake Ridge during the late Neogene. In total, 305 species of benthic foraminifera belonging to 107 genera were identified. The Blake Ridge receives fine-grained nannofossil-bearing hemipelagic sediments, transported from the Canadian continental margin by the Deep Western Boundary Undercurrent (DWBUC). We thus presume that changes in benthic foraminifera at Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) sites 991A, 994C, 995A and B and 997A reflect mainly changes in the intensity of the DWBUC, which is closely related to North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) production. However, the dominance of Uvigerina peregrina, U. proboscidea and Cassidulina carinata during the late Miocene in all the holes suggests an increased influence of Southern Component Waters in the Blake Ridge region. During the early Pliocene (4.8–2.8 Ma) in all the sites benthic faunal assemblages suggest that there was an increased transport of organic-rich sediments by the DWBUC from the Canadian margin to the Blake Ridge, driven by increased production of NADW. During this time the species diversity (Sanders' rarefied values) was low. In the younger interval (since 2.8 Ma), the faunal data suggest less transport of organic-rich sediments to the Blake Ridge, which appears to be related to weakening of the DWBUC during cold intervals. An increase in species diversity at 3 Ma probably resulted from decreased population of bacteria due to low organic matter and/or less competition. In the late Pleistocene (c. 0.6 Ma), Stilostomella lepidula became extinct in all the studied holes, suggesting that this species may have possessed a mode of feeding which no longer existed in the cold, well-oxygenated oceans of the present.
Supplementary material: Relative abundances of important benthic foraminifera and Sanders' rarefied values used in this study from ODP Holes 991A, 994C, 995A, 995B and 997A, Blake Ridge, NW Atlantic Ocean are available at: http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18457

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Published In

cover image Journal of Micropalaeontology
Journal of Micropalaeontolgy
Volume 30Number 1May 2011
Pages: 33 - 74

History

Received: 19 April 2010
Accepted: 27 January 2011
Published: May 2011
Published online: 23 May 2011

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Keywords

  1. Benthic foraminifera
  2. late Neogene
  3. Blake Ridge
  4. North Atlantic Deep Water

Authors

Affiliations

KUPPUSAMY MOHAN
Department of Geology & Geophysics, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur - 721 302, India
ANIL K. GUPTA* [email protected]
Department of Geology & Geophysics, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur - 721 302, India
AJOY K. BHAUMIK
Department of Applied Geology, Indian School of Mines Dhanbad, Jharkhand – 826 004, India

Notes

*
Corresponding author (e-mail: [email protected])

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