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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Micropaleontology, 31 (3-4). pp. 157-175.
    Publication Date: 2016-06-15
    Description: The Skagerrak basin is a deep water extension of the North Sea. It is of particular interest as an analogue for past epicontintal shelf basins because it presents environmental contrasts with the adjacent shelf seas. In this study the distribution patterns of benthic foraminifera have been used to infer taphonomic and oceanographic processes. Only by separating living from dead assemblages is it possible to interpret taphonomic changes. The transport of foraminiferal tests to the Danish slope is inferred from the presence there of dead exotic tests whose provenance is considered to be from the south. The abundance of detrital organic matter on the Danish slope is likewise inferred to be sourced from the same direction. Thus, the Danish slope is interpreted to be a depositional sink. Apart from transport, another taphonomic process is the dissolution of calcareous tests. This is clearly demonstrated both by the fragility of some tests as viewed under the microscope and by the disparity between the composition of the living and dead factor associations. In the deep basin in particular, the two predominantly calcareous living associations are replaced by a single predominantly agglutinated dead association due to carbonate dissolution. The Danish slope of the Skagerrak Basin is demonstrated to be an area of high benthic fertility. This is based on the high density of living (stained) benthic foraminifera (comparable with that of the Mississippi delta), particularly the abundance of Stainforthia fusiformis, an opportunistic species, and tubular agglutinated forms. The fertility is linked with the high abundance of particulate organic matter here. Previous regional studies have focused on total (living plus dead) distributions of 〉 100 or 〉 125 μm sized foraminifera. These factor assemblages are distinct from the 〉63 μm living and dead associations described here.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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