Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
The present study attempts a correlation between calcareous plankton (foraminifera and nannofossils)
and terrestrial (pollen and mammal fauna) bioevents in Italy and Mediterranean Sea, through the last
3.3 million years, within a standard chronostratigraphical time scale. The approach was basically interdisciplinary
and considered biochronological, biostratigraphical, chronostratigraphical, climatostratigraphical,
and tephrochronological data. Despite different timing and mode characterised evolution of
marine and continental organisms in relation to their ecology and relationships with environment, the
main biota changes seem related with severe climate changes. The short interval of the known global
scale Pliocene warmth (w3.0 Ma) has been documented by the last significant expansion of the warm
subtropical forest before the progressive disappearance of its main components and possibly by the
paracme of some nannofossil species. The first evidence of cooler conditions near 2.8 Ma has been mainly
indicated by both the progressive decrease of subtropical to warm temperate pollen taxa and by the
notable change in the ecological structure of mammalian faunal complexes as well as by the first
incursion of left-coiled cold N. pachyderma into the Mediterranean. The first glacial phases related to
Northern Hemisphere ice-sheet growth (w2.5 Ma) are indicated by the drastic drop of Discoaster spp.
and by the first (cyclical) expansion of steppe or cooler coniferous forests, as well as by the progressive
dispersal of mammalian taxa dwelling in open landscapes. The most significant biotical changes have
been observed during the Calabrian-Ionian transition; several calcareous plankton appearances and
extinctions occurred across marine isotope stages 25-20, together with the expansion of cold steppes
(glacials) and the progressive disappearance of the most thermophilous arboreal and non-arboreal taxa.
The late Early to Middle Pleistocene terrestrial faunal ''revolution'' actually was not an ''abrupt''
phenomenon, which started from about 1.3 Ma giving rise to a progressive reconstruction of mammalian
faunal complexes, which ended during the early Ionian. The last node of 1.2 Ma obliquity cycles, centred
at about 0.9 Ma, significantly influenced changes in the structure and composition of palaeocommunities.
After the Ionian, fluctuations in biota assemblages, without any significant appearance-
extinction events, testify that the new oceanographical and climate system is related to dominant
periodicity of 100 ky in glacial-interglacial cycles. Although the changes observed in fossil assemblages
do not always correspond to the standard chronostratigraphical boundaries, the data suggest that the
Piacenzian-Gelasian and Calabrian-Ionian transitions are also noticeable by large, even if gradual, biota
modifications.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Palombo, MARIA RITA; Bertini, Adele
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