3:00 PM - 3:15 PM
[MIS28-06] Depositional environments of the Late Cretaceous REY-rich mud in the western North Pacific Ocean inferred from deep-water agglutinated foraminifers
Keywords:deep-water agglutinated foraminifers, pelagic clay, REY-rich mud, microfossils, Pacific Ocean, Cretaceous
Pelagic clay including REY-rich mud has deposited very slowly over a long period of time, and thus, are expected to have recorded the history of pelagic environment. However, the water depth greater than the carbonate compensation depth (CCD) and generally low surface productivity hampered preserving calcareous and siliceous fossils, making it difficult to decipher the environmental changes in the pelagic realm.
Here, we focused on a certain type of benthic foraminifers called deep-water agglutinated foraminifers (DWAF). DWAF have agglutinative shells of aluminosilicates that do not dissolve even at depths below the CCD [4] and consist of various species such as those highly dependent on biological production or tolerant of oligotrophic environments [5]. Therefore, it is expected that investigation of DWAF assemblage will provide a new insight into the depositional environments of REY-rich mud. In the presentation, based on the production and species composition of DWAF, we will discuss the environmental conditions during the time of deposition of REY-rich mud around Minamitorishima Island in the Late Cretaceous.
[1] Kato et al. (2011) Nature Geoscience 4, 535-539. [2] Takaya et al. (2018) Scientific Reports 8, 5763. [3] Wightman and Kuhnt (1992) Proc. ODP, Scientific Results 129, 247-264. [4] Nakamura et al. (2016) Geochemical Journal 50, 605-619. [5] Kaminski and Gradstein (2005) Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 10, 547