Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean

The analysis of middle Eocene dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from sites at Punta del Este (~36°S, Uruguay) and Colorado (~38°S, Argentina) basins allows to interpret ocean circulation patterns on the South American Shelf prior to the opening of the Drake Passage. The assemblages contain endemic-Ant...

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Autores principales: Daners, G., Guerstein, G.R., Amenábar, C.R., Morales, E.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15197530_v19_n2_p283_Daners
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spelling todo:paper_15197530_v19_n2_p283_Daners2023-10-03T16:20:02Z Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean Daners, G. Guerstein, G.R. Amenábar, C.R. Morales, E. Biostratigraphy Colorado basin Dinoflagellate cysts Eocene Paleoceanography Punta del este basin The analysis of middle Eocene dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from sites at Punta del Este (~36°S, Uruguay) and Colorado (~38°S, Argentina) basins allows to interpret ocean circulation patterns on the South American Shelf prior to the opening of the Drake Passage. The assemblages contain endemic-Antarctic taxa such as Enneadocysta, Deflandrea, Vozzhennikovia and Spinidinium, which are also dominant in several circum-Antarctic sites, located southern 45°S. Enneadocysta dictyostila is the most abundant species recorded from the studied sites and the unique member of the endemic assemblage apparently tolerant to warm surface waters. The presence of endemic taxa at mid latitudes has been related to a strong clockwise subpolar gyre favoured by the partial continental blockage of the Tasmanian Gateways and the Drake Passage. The distribution of the dinoflagellate cyst assemblages along the South Atlantic Ocean Shelf can be explained by a similar dynamical mechanism induced by a cyclonic subpolar gyre on the South Atlantic Ocean. The western boundary current of this gyre, starting on the west Antarctic continental slope, would follow a similar path to the present Malvinas Current on the Patagonian slope, which introduce cold oceanic waters to the shelf and intensifies the northward shelf transport. In the same way, during the middle Eocene the western boundary current of a proto-Weddell Gyre transported the circum-Antarctic waters and the endemic taxa northward along the Southwestern Atlantic Shelf. The opening and deepening of the Tasmanian Gateway and Drake Passage and the development of an incipient Antarctic Circumpolar Current during the latest Eocene-Oligocene disrupted the subpolar gyres and promoted the extinction of the endemic species. © 2016 by the Sociedade Brasileira de Paleontologia. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15197530_v19_n2_p283_Daners
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Biostratigraphy
Colorado basin
Dinoflagellate cysts
Eocene
Paleoceanography
Punta del este basin
spellingShingle Biostratigraphy
Colorado basin
Dinoflagellate cysts
Eocene
Paleoceanography
Punta del este basin
Daners, G.
Guerstein, G.R.
Amenábar, C.R.
Morales, E.
Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
topic_facet Biostratigraphy
Colorado basin
Dinoflagellate cysts
Eocene
Paleoceanography
Punta del este basin
description The analysis of middle Eocene dinoflagellate cyst assemblages from sites at Punta del Este (~36°S, Uruguay) and Colorado (~38°S, Argentina) basins allows to interpret ocean circulation patterns on the South American Shelf prior to the opening of the Drake Passage. The assemblages contain endemic-Antarctic taxa such as Enneadocysta, Deflandrea, Vozzhennikovia and Spinidinium, which are also dominant in several circum-Antarctic sites, located southern 45°S. Enneadocysta dictyostila is the most abundant species recorded from the studied sites and the unique member of the endemic assemblage apparently tolerant to warm surface waters. The presence of endemic taxa at mid latitudes has been related to a strong clockwise subpolar gyre favoured by the partial continental blockage of the Tasmanian Gateways and the Drake Passage. The distribution of the dinoflagellate cyst assemblages along the South Atlantic Ocean Shelf can be explained by a similar dynamical mechanism induced by a cyclonic subpolar gyre on the South Atlantic Ocean. The western boundary current of this gyre, starting on the west Antarctic continental slope, would follow a similar path to the present Malvinas Current on the Patagonian slope, which introduce cold oceanic waters to the shelf and intensifies the northward shelf transport. In the same way, during the middle Eocene the western boundary current of a proto-Weddell Gyre transported the circum-Antarctic waters and the endemic taxa northward along the Southwestern Atlantic Shelf. The opening and deepening of the Tasmanian Gateway and Drake Passage and the development of an incipient Antarctic Circumpolar Current during the latest Eocene-Oligocene disrupted the subpolar gyres and promoted the extinction of the endemic species. © 2016 by the Sociedade Brasileira de Paleontologia.
format JOUR
author Daners, G.
Guerstein, G.R.
Amenábar, C.R.
Morales, E.
author_facet Daners, G.
Guerstein, G.R.
Amenábar, C.R.
Morales, E.
author_sort Daners, G.
title Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
title_short Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
title_full Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
title_fullStr Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
title_full_unstemmed Middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
title_sort middle to upper eocene dinoflagellate cysts from punta del este and colorado basins, mid latitude southwest atlantic ocean
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15197530_v19_n2_p283_Daners
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