Carbon Cycle and Ecosystem Response to the Jenkyns Event in the Early Toarcian (Jurassic)
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The Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event, also known as the Jenkyns Event, was a hyperthermal episode which occurred during the early Toarcian (c. 183 Ma; Early Jurassic) and resulted in numerous collateral effects including global warming, enhanced weathering, sea-level change, carbonate crisis, marine anoxia–dysoxia, and a second-order mass extinction. This volume presents the last advances for understanding early Toarcian environmental changes through different disciplines: biostratigraphy, micropalaeontology, palaeontology, ichnology, palaeoecology, sedimentology, integrated stratigraphy, inorganic, organic and isotopic geochemistry, and cyclostratigraphy. The study of this abrupt climate change is critical for predicting future global changes, and for understanding the complex biogeochemical interactions through time between geosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere.
The effects of the Jenkyns Event on the radiation of Early Jurassic dinoflagellate cysts
Correspondence: vfraguito@hotmail.com
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Published:November 03, 2021
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CiteCitation
Vânia F. Correia, James B. Riding, Luís V. Duarte, Paulo Fernandes, Zélia Pereira, 2021. "The effects of the Jenkyns Event on the radiation of Early Jurassic dinoflagellate cysts", Carbon Cycle and Ecosystem Response to the Jenkyns Event in the Early Toarcian (Jurassic), M. Reolid, L. V. Duarte, E. Mattioli, W. Ruebsam
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Abstract
This contribution is an overview of the Early Jurassic dinoflagellate cysts of the Lusitanian Basin in Portugal, with particular emphasis on the effects of the Jenkyns Event (Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event) on the evolution of this planktonic group. We review and discuss data from 214 samples from six Lower Jurassic successions (upper Sinemurian to upper Toarcian) in the Lusitanian Basin. The late Pliensbachian radiation of dinoflagellate cysts was well recognized in this basin. The pre-Jenkyns Event interval is highly productive, with maximum abundance and species richness values. However, this palaeoenvironmental perturbation severely affected the evolution of this group for...
- adaptive radiation
- Arctic region
- biogeography
- biologic evolution
- Boreal Realm
- Dinoflagellata
- Europe
- Iberian Peninsula
- Jurassic
- Lower Jurassic
- Lusitanian Basin
- Mesozoic
- microfossils
- morphology
- oceanic anoxic events
- paleobiology
- paleoenvironment
- paleogeography
- palynomorphs
- Pliensbachian
- Portugal
- Southern Europe
- Tethys
- Toarcian
- Gonyaulacaceae
- T-OAE
- Jenkyns event