23 results on '"Scarponi, Daniele"'
Search Results
2. The 10Be record as a proxy of paleomagnetic reversals and excursions: A Mediterranean perspective
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Capraro, Luca, Ferretti, Patrizia, Macrì, Patrizia, Scarponi, Daniele, Fornaciari, Eliana, Xian, Feng, Zhou, Weijian, Kong, Xianghui, Boschi, Vanessa, Capraro, Luca, Ferretti, Patrizia, Macrì, Patrizia, Scarponi, Daniele, Fornaciari, Eliana, Xian, Feng, Zhou, Weijian, Kong, Xianghui, and Boschi, Vanessa
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Central Mediterranean ,Paleomagnetism ,Lower/middle Pleistocene ,10Be/9Be ,Archeology (arts and humanities) ,Stratigraphy ,Earth-Surface Processe ,Paleontology ,Geology ,10Be/9Be, Central Mediterranean, Lower/middle Pleistocene, Paleomagnetism, Stratigraphy, Archeology (arts and humanities), Geology, Earth-Surface Processes, Paleontology ,Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica e Sedimentologica ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The 10Be/9Be ratio is acknowledged as an effective tool for establishing the stratigraphic position of paleomagnetic excur-sions. Still, our data suggest that, in particular depositional settings, the interplay between climate, sedimentation and oceanography may jeopardize a realistic depiction of the natural 10Be/9Be record.
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- 2018
3. Unveiling an odd fate after death: The isolated Eneolithic cranium discovered in the Marcel Loubens Cave (Bologna, Northern Italy)
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Luca Pisani, Stefano Benazzi, Jo De Waele, Lucia Castagna, Valentina Mariotti, Luca Grandi, Maria Giovanna Belcastro, Nevio Preti, Maria Pia Morigi, Daniele Scarponi, Teresa Nicolosi, Sahra Talamo, Pietro Baraldi, Monica Miari, Matteo Bettuzzi, Paolo Zannini, Annalisa Pietrobelli, Rita Sorrentino, Belcastro, Maria Giovanna, Nicolosi, Teresa, Sorrentino, Rita, Mariotti, Valentina, Pietrobelli, Annalisa, Bettuzzi, Matteo, Morigi, Maria Pia, Benazzi, Stefano, Talamo, Sahra, Miari, Monica, Preti, Nevio, Castagna, Lucia, Pisani, Luca, Grandi, Luca, Baraldi, Pietro, Zannini, Paolo, Scarponi, Daniele, and De Waele, Jo
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Topography ,Critical Care and Emergency Medicine ,Taphonomy ,Social Sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Diagnostic Radiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,0601 history and archaeology ,Musculoskeletal System ,Tomography ,Trauma Medicine ,Sedimentary Geology ,Minerals ,Multidisciplinary ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,060102 archaeology ,biology ,Radiology and Imaging ,Calcite ,Geology ,06 humanities and the arts ,Mineralogy ,Caves ,Chemistry ,Geography ,Archaeology ,Italy ,Bone Fracture ,Corpse Dismemberment ,Physical Sciences ,Loubens, Eneolithic, cranium, Bologna ,Medicine ,Female ,Anatomy ,Traumatic Injury ,Research Article ,Chemical Elements ,010506 paleontology ,Imaging Techniques ,Science ,Neuroimaging ,Context (language use) ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Natural (archaeology) ,Prehistory ,Cave ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Eneolithic, Taphonomy, skull, funerary customs ,Humans ,Ceremonial Behavior ,Skeleton ,Petrology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Landforms ,Manganese ,Crania ,Skull ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Geomorphology ,Chalcolithic ,biology.organism_classification ,Computed Axial Tomography ,Earth Sciences ,Sediment ,Cranium ,Neuroscience - Abstract
An isolated human cranium, dated to the early Eneolithic period, was discovered in 2015 at the top of a vertical shaft in the natural Marcel Loubens gypsum Cave (Bologna area, northern Italy). No other anthropological or archaeological remains were found inside the cave. In other caves of the same area anthropic and funerary use are attested from prehistory to more recent periods. We focused on investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of this individual, since the cranium shows signs of some lesions that appear to be the results of a perimortem manipulation probably carried out to remove soft tissues. Anthropological analyses revealed that the cranium belonged to a young woman. We analysed the taphonomic features and geological context to understand how and why the cranium ended up (accidentally or intentionally) in the cave. The analyses of both the sediments accumulated inside the cranium and the incrustations and pigmentation covering its outer surface suggested that it fell into the cave, drawn by a flow of water and mud, likely from the edges of a doline. The accidental nature of the event is also seemingly confirmed by some post-mortem lesions on the cranium. The comparison with other Eneolithic archaeological sites in northern Italy made it possible to interpret the find as likely being from a funerary or ritual context, in which corpse dismemberment (in particular the displacement of crania) was practiced.
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- 2021
4. Climate change influence on calcification of the bivalve Chamelea gallina in the Adriatic Sea: exploring a temporal gradient from the Holocene to modern days
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Arianna Mancuso, Daniele Scarponi, Fiorella Prada, Giuseppe Falini, Alessandro Cheli, Stefano Goffredo, Andrea Baseotto, Alessandro Cheli, Arianna Mancuso, Fiorella Prada, Andrea Baseotto, Giuseppe Falini, Stefano Goffredo, Daniele Scarponi, Cheli, Alessandro, Mancuso, Arianna, Prada, Fiorella, Baseotto, Andrea, Falini, Giuseppe, Goffredo, Stefano, and Scarponi, Daniele
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Biomineralization ,Climate Change, Adriatic Sea, Mollusk ,Oceanography ,biology ,medicine ,Climate change ,Fossil, Conservation Paleoecology, Climate change, Adriatic Sea ,Chamelea gallina ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Geology ,Holocene ,Calcification - Abstract
The Mediterranean striped venus (Chamelea gallina) is a valuable economic species in the Mediterranean Sea. In the last decades the over-exploitation of this fishing resource and the occurrence of several mass mortality events, lead to a strong quantitative decline in clam population density in the Adriatic Sea. Studying the effects of climate-driven changes of environmental factors on C. gallina, therefore, is of increasing interest both from an academic and economic point of view.Previous studies have mainly focused on population dynamics, shell growth and structure of this species in the present-day Mediterranean Sea. In contrast, there is no information about shell variations in relation to climate-driven environmental change along temporal gradients.This ongoing study investigates and contrasts variations in shell microstructure and shell growth parameters of C. gallina assemblages from Holocene sedimentary archives of the Northern Adriatic (Italy). Four shoreface-related C. gallina horizons are being evaluated: two from the present-day Adriatic setting and two from the Middle Holocene sedimentary succession of the Adriatic-Po system, when regional sea surface temperatures were higher than today, thus representing a possible analogue for the near-future global warming. Specifically we aim to: 1) determine the life span of selected specimen using three independent ageing methods (shell surface growth rings, shell internal bands and stable isotope composition); 2) determine shell growth parameters and functions concerning linear extension and net calcification rates for each assemblage investigated.This approach should give access to an archive of ecological responses to past climate transitions and enabling reconstruction of the C. gallina natural range of variability on time-scale well beyond the ecological monitoring or small-scale experiments. Additionally, the young (sub)fossil record should offer insights on the adaptive capacities of C. gallina facing near-future anthropogenic warming and may allow implementation of a more effective management of this economically important bivalve species in the near-future.
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- 2021
5. Linking macrobenthic fauna and seismic facies to improve stratigraphic reconstructions: the case of the Mid Adriatic Depression since the late glacial period (Central Adriatic Sea)
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Claudio Pellegrini, Veronica Rossi, Fabiano Gamberi, Michele Azzarone, Daniele Scarponi, Giulia Barbieri, Fabio Trincardi, Azzarone, Michele, Scarponi, Daniele, Barbieri, Giulia, Rossi, Veronica, Pellegrini, Claudio, Gamberi, Fabiano, and Trincardi, Fabio
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Paleontology ,Seismic facies ,Depression (economics) ,Stratigraphy ,Fauna ,Mollusks, Ostracods, Paleoecology, Stratigraphy ,Paleoecology ,Glacial period ,Geology - Abstract
Direct observations from the geologic record are commonly used in conjunction with indirect seismo-stratigraphic inferences to detail environmental settings and stratal architecture of sedimentary successions. However, examples of integration between seismic facies and macrobenthic insights are scarce and limited to the use of such a group as auxiliary to other proxies. This case study investigated mollusc and ostracod dynamics along an onshore-offshore profile that intersects the C2 clinothem (15.6 – 14.4 ky BP) of the Po River Lowstand Wedge (PRLW) and the overlying transgressive deposits formed in the central Adriatic Sea. Multivariate analyses were applied to benthic data to assess to what extent mollusc and ostracod assemblages can improve the resolution of seismic-derived depositional environments and stratigraphic architecture of cored succession. Along the profile of the C2 clinothem, seismic reflection facies correspond with three sedimentary environments. Specifically, i) High Amplitude Continuous reflections (HAC) are interpreted as delta plain/subaqueous shelf; ii) High Amplitude Continuous Wavy Dipping reflections (HACWDip) characterize prodelta deposits, and iii) Low Amplitude Continuous reflections (LAC) are associated with distal basin settings. The integration of quantitative palaeoecologic trends with the seismic-derived depositional environments allowed the subdivision of the HAC facies into a proximal (core LSD-26) and a distal (cores LSD-27 and -28) area. In particular, the proximal area with HAC seismic facies encompasses semi-barred lower delta plain with vegetated substrates that evolves to more open, nearshore settings. Conversely, the distal area with HAC seismic facies is distinguished by clusters reminiscent of ecological mixing due to strong bioturbation and gravity flows in offshore transition/inner shelf settings. The paucity of benthic fauna for the units with HACWDip (core LSD-05) and LAC (core LSD-04) seismic facies, hampered a complete reconstruction of the palaeoenvironmental dynamics. However, both benthic groups investigated support the seismic-derived interpretation of shelf and basinal settings respectively, both subjected to high sedimentation rates. Moreover, the integration of mollusc and ostracod multivariate-derived trends with grain-size data across the study profile reveals distinctive stratal stacking patterns useful in constraining the position of key stratigraphic surfaces such as the Maximum Regressive Surface that marks the initial phase of the abandonment of the PRLW.
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- 2020
6. Response of benthic species to post-glacial sea-level rise on the northern Adriatic shelf revealed by stratigraphic unmixing of fossil assemblages
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Daniele Scarponi, Rafał Nawrot, Michał Kowalewski, Adam Tomašových, Nawrot, Rafał, Scarponi, Daniele, Tomašových, Adam, and Kowalewski, Michał
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Taphonomy ,Oceanography ,Sea level rise ,Stratigraphy ,Benthic zone ,Mollusk, Stratigraphy, Taphonomy, Sea Level Changes ,Glacial period ,Geology - Abstract
Late Quaternary fossil record offers a window into ecosystem dynamics during episodes of abrupt climate warming and sea-level rise following the Last Glacial Maximum, but in marine settings ecological inferences might be hindered by high time-averaging affecting transgressive deposits. However, the signature of temporal shifts in local skeletal production rates may be preserved in the age-frequency distributions (AFDs) of death assemblages. We use carbonate-target radiocarbon ages of 191 shells to examined variation in AFDs among four bivalves species collected from a 2.3-meter-long core recording the post-glacial transgression on the northern Adriatic shelf over the last the last ~14,500 yr.The scale of time-averaging within species (interquartile age range) varied from 200 to 7,400 yrs, while the between-species age offsets (differences between the median ages of species) ranged from ~2 to 6,400 yrs within 5-cm-thick core intervals. Although the median ages of Varicorbula, Timoclea and Parvicardium increased with increasing burial depth, shells of Lentidium appeared age-homogeneous throughout the core. Age unmixing revealed a single massive peaks in the abundance of this opportunistic, shoreface species around 14 cal ka BP, coincident with the initial marine flooding of this shelf area during the melt-water pulse 1A. Moreover, a prominent gap in the AFDs between 11 and 12.5 cal ka BP corresponds to a minor sea-level fall associated with the Younger Dryas cold spell. Importantly, the reconstructed onsets and durations of shell production pulses across the four species are consistent with independently-derived relative sea-level history at the site. The species gradually replaced each other through time as the dominant component of the assemblage in accordance with their bathymetric preferences estimated from surveys of the modern Adriatic benthic fauna.The diachronous production histories of four bivalve species coupled with subsequent exhumation of old shells and burial of younger shells through bioturbation and sediment reworking resulted in the ecologically mixed fossil assemblages. These assemblages are thus characterized by multi-modal age distribution and millennial-scale age offsets between species co-occurring in the same stratigraphic increments. Although this stratigraphic homogenization and disorder greatly limits the resolution of the raw stratigraphic record, our results demonstrate the power of AFDs to capture shifts in abundance of benthic species during recent episodes of rapid sea-level rise. Fossil assemblages from transgressive deposits preserved on continental shelves represent a rich and underutilized source of data on long-term biotic responses to global climate change and associated shifts in sea level.
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- 2020
7. A high-resolution record of the Matuyama-Brunhes transition from the Mediterranean region: The Valle di Manche section (Calabria, Southern Italy)
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Patrizia Macrì, Daniele Scarponi, Patrizia Ferretti, Luca Capraro, Macrì, Patrizia, Capraro, Luca, Ferretti, Patrizia, and Scarponi, Daniele
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Greigite ,Middle Pleistocene ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Geomagnetic reversal ,Paleontology ,Tephra ,MIS 19 ,Geophysic ,Magnetostratigraphy ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Magnetostratigraphy, Middle Pleistocene, MIS 19, Matuyama-Brunhes transition, Southern Italy ,Settore GEO/10 - Geofisica della Terra Solida ,Demagnetizing field ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astronomy and Astrophysic ,Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica e Sedimentologica ,Matuyama-Brunhes transition ,Geophysics ,Southern Italy ,Space and Planetary Science ,Stratigraphy ,Remanence ,Geology ,Chronology - Abstract
High-resolution palaeomagnetic and rock magnetic investigations on the Valle di Manche section (Crotone Basin, Calabria, Southern Italy) provide a detailed record of the Matuyama-Brunhes (M-B) reversal that, to our best knowledge, is the only available record of the last geomagnetic reversal for the Mediterranean on-land marine stratigraphy. The M-B transition can be pinpointed precisely, as it develops within a 3-cm-thick interval located just above a prominent tephra layer (the “Pitagora ash”) where the sedimentation rates are about 27 cm/kyr. Demagnetization analyses indicate a stable palaeomagnetic behaviour throughout the section for both normal and reversed polarity directions, with demagnetization vectors aligned toward the origin of Zijderveld diagrams after the removal of a small viscous low-coercivity remanence component. In the lower part of the studied interval, some samples acquired a spurious gyromagnetic remanent magnetization (GRM) during AF demagnetization in high fields. Rock magnetic analyses confirm that magnetite is the main magnetic carrier for all measured specimens, which also have an abundant paramagnetic fraction. Only the lower part of the record, well below the M-B boundary, is characterized by a downward-increasing presence of iron sulphides (greigite). According to our chronology, which is based on a robust, cross-validated age model, the final reverse-to-normal directional change of the M-B transition occurred at ca. 786.9 ± 5 ka (error includes uncertainty in orbital tuning) and was very rapid, of the order of 100 years or less.
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- 2018
8. A multidisciplinary study of ecosystem evolution through early Pleistocene climate change from the marine Arda River section, Italy
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Gianluca Raineri, Fabrizio Felletti, Daniele Scarponi, Gaia Crippa, Andrea Baucon, Crippa, Gaia, Baucon, Andrea, Felletti, Fabrizio, Raineri, Gianluca, and Scarponi, Daniele
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010506 paleontology ,Early Pleistocene ,Climate change ,Ecological succession ,Trace fossil ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,Paleo-Adriatic ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Ichnology ,Body fossil ,Earth-Surface Processe ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Sedimentary rock ,Facies analysi ,Sedimentology ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (all) ,Sea level ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The Arda River marine succession (Italy) is an excellent site to apply an integrated approach to paleoenvironmental reconstructions, combining the results of sedimentology, body fossil paleontology, and ichnology to unravel the sedimentary evolution of a complex marine setting in the frame of early Pleistocene climate change and tectonic activity. The succession represents a subaqueous extension of a fluvial system, originated during phases of advance of fan deltas affected by high-density flows triggered by river floods, and overlain by continental conglomerates, indicating a relative sea level fall and the establishment of a continental environment. An overall regressive trend is observed through the section, from prodelta to delta front and intertidal settings. The hydrodynamic energy and the sedimentation rate are not constant through the section, but they are influenced by hyperpycnal flows, whose sediments were mainly supplied by an increase in Apennine uplift and erosion, especially after 1.80 Ma. The Arda section documents the same evolutionary history of coeval successions in the Paleo-Adriatic region, as well as the climatic changes of the early Pleistocene. The different approaches used complement quite well one another, giving strength and robustness to the obtained results.
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- 2018
9. Early Holocene transgressive palaeogeography in the Po coastal plain (northern Italy)
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Veronica Rossi, Alessandro Amorosi, Daniele Scarponi, Luigi Bruno, Bruno Campo, Wan Hong, Irene Sammartino, Tina M. Drexler, Kevin M. Bohacs, Bruno, Luigi, Bohacs, Kevin M., Campo, Bruno, Drexler, Tina M., Rossi, Veronica, Sammartino, Irene, Scarponi, Daniele, Hong, Wan, and Amorosi, Alessandro
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010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Coastal plain ,Stratigraphy ,wave-dominated estuary ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Early Holocene ,Paleontology ,eustatic rise ,Palaeogeography ,Geomorphology ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,local factors ,Po coastal plain ,transgressive parasequences ,Geology ,Northern italy ,local factor ,transgressive parasequence ,Transgressive - Abstract
To understand the complex stratigraphic response of a coastal depositional system to rapid eustatic rise and sediment inputs, the evolution of the Adriatic coastline and Po River system, during the post-glacial (Holocene) transgression, was investigated. The landward migration and evolution of a wave-dominated estuary was mapped, based on an extensive data set comprising 14 boreholes, 28 core descriptions and 308 piezocone tests, chronologically constrained between 11·5 and 7·0Âkyr bp by 137 radiocarbon dates. Palaeogeographic maps reveal temporal differences in retrogradational geometries and mechanisms that likely underpin shoreline retreat. The Po estuary initially developed within a shallowly incised valley and then spread onto the interfluves. Between 11·5 and 9·2Âkyr bp the Po fluvial system became avulsive/distributive and wetlands developed in topographically depressed areas. The shoreline retreated at a mean rate of ca 10ÂmÂyearâ1, between 9·2Âkyr and 7·7Âkyr bp, following a stepped trajectory at the centennial scale. After 7·7Âkyr bp, bayhead deltas started to prograde and partially filled the estuary. The overall stratigraphic architecture is interpreted to reflect the sedimentary response of the coastal depositional system to the main pulses of early Holocene eustatic rise. The influence of antecedent topography, partly due to local subsidence, was dominant at the time of initial transgression. Basin morphology influenced sediment dispersal and partitioning. Sediment supplied by the Po River was trapped within the estuary, whereas coastal sand bodies at the estuary mouth were fed by alongshore currents and by reworking of older barriers. High-resolution age control that ties facies evolution to independently constrained eustasy provides direct data to test models of short-term coastal retreat under conditions of relative sea-level rise, and makes this case study a useful analogue for the interpretation of ancient marginal-marine, retrogradational systems where only stratal geometries are available.
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- 2017
10. Palaeocological anatomy of shallow-water Plio-Pleistocene biocalcarenites (northern Apennines, Italy)
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Marco Roveri, Marco Taviani, Paola Monegatti, Alex Laini, Simone Cau, Daniele Scarponi, Cau, Simone, Laini, Alex, Monegatti, Paola, Roveri, Marco, Scarponi, Daniele, and Taviani, Marco
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010506 paleontology ,Pliocene ,Stratigraphy Palaeoecology Mollusca Heterozoan carbonates Pliocene Mediterranean ,Stratigraphy ,Mediterranean ,Structural basin ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,14. Life underwater ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Terrigenous sediment ,Palaeoecology ,Macrofossil ,Plio-Pleistocene ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematic ,Waves and shallow water ,Mollusca ,13. Climate action ,Heterozoan carbonate ,Earth-Surface Processe ,Facies ,Sedimentary rock ,Geology ,Heterozoan carbonates - Abstract
Shell-rich biodetrital carbonate lithosomes punctuate the Plio-Pleistocene marine shallow-water successions of the Mediterranean basins. These m-thick sedimentary packages often display large-scale clinostratified geometry and show a remarkable rhythmic alternation with mudstone lithosomes. Our palaeoecological analysis defines the depositional settings and hints to the factors involved in the development of these peculiar bio-detrital carbonate units. Six distinct biofacies, have been identified through a two-way cluster analysis based on the macrofossil content, mostly molluscs, and matched with sedimentary facies. These are Aequipecten gr. opercularis and Bittium reticulatum biofacies, Anomia ephippium biofacies, Ditrupa arietina and Tritia semistriata biofacies, Corbula gibba and Saccella commutata biofacies, Timoclea ovata and Corbula gibba biofacies, Timoclea ovata and Anomia ephippium biofacies. Quantitative analyses suggest that these bio-detrital deposits have a multiphase history, and that, along with their bracketing marine mudstones, are not nearshore or shoreface deposits but developed in mid to outer shelf settings. Our results suggest that sea-level change was neither the only nor the main factor controlling the internal stacking pattern of individual biocalcarenites. They provide instead arguments in favour of periodic, high-amplitude climatic/oceanographic oscillations determining significant modifications of the source-to-sink dynamics of the basin and affecting the trophic structure, the supply of terrigenous sediments, as well as the energy and pattern of bottom currents of shelfal areas.
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- 2019
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11. Early-Middle Pleistocene benthic turnover and oxygen isotope stratigraphy from the Central Mediterranean (Valle di Manche, Crotone Basin, Italy): Data and trends
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Costanza Faranda, Patrizia Ferretti, Daniele Scarponi, Veronica Rossi, John Warren Huntley, Luca Capraro, Patrizia Macrì, Michele Azzarone, Azzarone, Michele, Ferretti, Patrizia, Rossi, Veronica, Scarponi, Daniele, Capraro, Luca, Macrì, Patrizia, Huntley, John W., and Faranda, Costanza
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Mediterranean climate ,010506 paleontology ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Pleistocene ,Structural basin ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica e Sedimentologica ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Isotopes of oxygen ,Foraminifera ,Paleontology ,Stratigraphy ,Settore GEO/01 - Paleontologia e Paleoecologia ,Benthic zone ,Ostracod ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Earth and Planetary Science ,Multidisciplinary approach, Stratigraphic Paleobiology, Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary, Ordination analysis, Glacial-Interglacial cycles, Ostracod, Mollusk ,lcsh:Science (General) ,Geology ,lcsh:Q1-390 ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Ostracod faunal turnover and oxygen isotope data (foraminifera) along the Valle di Manche (VdM) section are herein compiled. Specifically, the material reported in this work includes quantitative palaeoecological data and patterns of ostracod fauna framed within a high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy (δ 18 O) from Uvigerina peregrina . In addition, the multivariate ostracod faunal stratigraphic trend (nMDS axis-1 sample score) is calibrated using bathymetric distributions of extant molluscs sampled from the same stratigraphic intervals along the VdM section. Data and analyses support the research article “Dynamics of benthic marine communities across the Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary in the Mediterranean region (Valle di Manche, Southern Italy): biotic and stratigraphic implications” Rossi et al. [1].
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- 2018
12. INFERRING EXTINCTION DYNAMICS FROM STRATIGRAPHIC DATA: LESSONS FROM THE HOLOCENE FOSSIL RECORD
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Michał Kowalewski, Rafał Nawrot, Michele Azzarone, Daniele Scarponi, Roger W. Portell, Alessandro Amorosi, Jacalyn M. Wittmer, Troy A. Dexter, Kristopher M. Kusnerik, Nawrot, Rafal, Scarponi, Daniele, Azzarone, Michele, Amorosi, Alessandro, Wittmer, Jacalyn M., Dexter, Troy A., Kusnerik, Kristopher M., Portell, Roger W., and Kowalewski, Michal
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Extinctions, Paleoecology, Stratigraphy ,Paleontology ,Extinction ,Fossil Record ,Stratigraphy ,Paleoecology ,Geology ,Holocene - Published
- 2018
13. Dynamics of benthic marine communities across the Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary in the Mediterranean region (Valle di Manche, Southern Italy): Biotic and stratigraphic implications
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Patrizia Macrì, Patrizia Ferretti, Costanza Faranda, Michele Azzarone, Veronica Rossi, Daniele Scarponi, Luca Capraro, Rossi, Veronica, Azzarone, Michele, Capraro, Luca, Faranda, Costanza, Ferretti, Patrizia, Macrì, Patrizia, and Scarponi, Daniele
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010506 paleontology ,Gradient analysis ,Mollusk ,Ostracod ,Pleistocene ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Stratigraphic Paleobiology ,Detrended correspondence analysis ,Foraminifera ,Paleontology ,Ordination analysi ,Settore GEO/01 - Paleontologia e Paleoecologia ,Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,biology ,Stratigraphic Paleobiology, Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary, Ordination analysis, Glacial-Interglacial cycles, Ostracod, Mollusk ,Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica e Sedimentologica ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematic ,Benthic zone ,Earth-Surface Processe ,Interglacial ,Ordination analysis ,Ordination ,Glacial-Interglacial cycles ,Geology ,Glacial-Interglacial cycle - Abstract
The Valle di Manche (VdM) section (Calabria, Southern Italy) offers the opportunity to investigate the ostracod turnover along a continuous shelf succession straddling the Early-Middle Pleistocene boundary, and compare it against other paleoenvironmental (i.e., mollusks) and paleoclimatic (Uvigerina peregrina δ18O) records. High-resolution (ca. 1 sample/m) ostracod fauna quantitative data, coupled with gradient analysis (Detrended Correspondence Analysis and non-Metric Multi-Dimensional Scaling), document a strong relationship between changes in faunal composition and lithofacies vertical stacking patterns. The comparison between the mollusk- and ostracod-derived ordination data demonstrates that the meio- and macro-faunal turnover is guided by a common complex gradient: bathymetry. The integrated ostracod-mollusk gradient analysis also provides a trend in water depths along the section, highlighting to what extent such multivariate approach can improve the paleoenvironmental and sequence stratigraphic interpretation of ancient shallow marine successions. When plotted stratigraphically, ordination major axis sample scores reveal two increasing-decreasing patterns in water depth that fit well with the T-R cycles previously identified. Paleobathymetric estimates combined with the vertical distribution of key ostracod groups (i.e., epiphytic taxa on sandy substrates vs. deep-sea mud related taxa) allow refining depositional trends, stratal stacking patterns and position of previously not well resolved sequence stratigraphic surfaces within each T-R cycle (e.g., Transgressive Surface-TS). Indeed, two rapid increases in water depth values mark the TSs that separate shallowing-upward, progradational (RST) from deepening upward, retrogradational (TST) stratal stacking patterns of shelf deposits. The TSs, which underline fine-grained successions dominated by deep-sea mud-lover taxa, are invariably constrained to the inception of interglacials Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 21 and 19, identified within the VdM section by benthic foraminifera δ18O values. Within both the VdM T-R cycles, the deepest conditions (ca. 140 m of water depth) are invariably identified within the Neopycnodonte unit, slightly above the lightest δ18O intervals. The overlying decreasing bathymetric trend, coupled with shifts in ostracod ecological groups, allows to identify in the bryozoans lithofacies the stillstand+falling of the relative sea-level, also tracked by a progressively heavier δ18O record. More stable paleobathymetric conditions (around 40–45 m of water depth) characterize the overlying silt-sand deposits dominated by epiphytic species and showing the heaviest δ18O values.
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- 2018
14. RESILIENCE OF DELTA-ASSOCIATED BENTHIC COMMUNITIES DURING THE LATEST QUATERNARY GLACIAL-INTERGLACIAL CYCLES IN THE PO PLAIN-ADRIATIC SEA SYSTEM
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Jacalyn M. Wittmer, Claudio Pellegrini, Daniele Scarponi, Kristopher M. Kusnerik, Fabio Trincardi, Michele Azzarone, Michał Kowalewski, Rafał Nawrot, Troy A. Dexter, Fabiano Gamberi, Nawrot, Rafal, Scarponi, Daniele, Azzarone, Michele, Pellegrini, Claudio, Kusnerik, Kristopher M., Dexter, Troy A., Wittmer, Jacalyn M., Gamberi, Fabiano, Trincardi, Fabio, and Kowalewski, Michal
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Delta ,Oceanography ,Benthic zone ,Interglacial ,Paleontology, Extinctions, Paleoecology ,Paleoecology ,Glacial period ,Resilience (network) ,Quaternary ,Geology - Published
- 2018
15. Stratigraphic signatures of mass extinctions: Ecological and sedimentary determinants
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Troy A. Dexter, Rafał Nawrot, Michał Kowalewski, Michele Azzarone, Alessandro Amorosi, Daniele Scarponi, Kristopher M. Kusnerik, Jacalyn M. Wittmer, Nawrot, Rafał, Scarponi, Daniele, Azzarone, Michele, Dexter, Troy A., Kusnerik, Kristopher M., Wittmer, Jacalyn M., Amorosi, Alessandro, and Kowalewski, Michał
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Sequence stratigraphy ,Immunology and Microbiology (all) ,Biodiversity ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Extinction, Biological ,Sampling bia ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Mass extinction ,Paleontology ,Signor–Lipps effect ,Animals ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Extinction event ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Ecology ,Fossils ,General Medicine ,Biological evolution ,social sciences ,Biological Evolution ,humanities ,Stratigraphic palaeobiology ,Taxon ,Italy ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all) ,Mollusca ,Sedimentary rock ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Geology - Abstract
Stratigraphic patterns of last occurrences (LOs) of fossil taxa potentially fingerprint mass extinctions and delineate rates and geometries of those events. Although empirical studies of mass extinctions recognize that random sampling causes LOs to occur earlier than the time of extinction (Signor–Lipps effect), sequence stratigraphic controls on the position of LOs are rarely considered. By tracing stratigraphic ranges of extant mollusc species preserved in the Holocene succession of the Po coastal plain (Italy), we demonstrated that, if mass extinction took place today, complex but entirely false extinction patterns would be recorded regionally due to shifts in local community composition and non-random variation in the abundance of skeletal remains, both controlled by relative sea-level changes. Consequently, rather than following an apparent gradual pattern expected from the Signor–Lipps effect, LOs concentrated within intervals of stratigraphic condensation and strong facies shifts mimicking sudden extinction pulses. Methods assuming uniform recovery potential of fossils falsely supported stepwise extinction patterns among studied species and systematically underestimated their stratigraphic ranges. Such effects of stratigraphic architecture, co-produced by ecological, sedimentary and taphonomic processes, can easily confound interpretations of the timing, duration and selectivity of mass extinction events. Our results highlight the necessity of accounting for palaeoenvironmental and sequence stratigraphic context when inferring extinction dynamics from the fossil record.
- Published
- 2018
16. A potential global boundary stratotype section and point (GSSP) for the Tarentian Stage, Upper Pleistocene, from the Taranto area (Italy): Results and future perspectives
- Author
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Pontus Lurcock, Alessandro Amorosi, Veronica Rossi, Gian Battista Vai, Daniele Scarponi, Giovanni Zanchetta, Eleonora Regattieri, Fabio Florindo, Fabrizio Antonioli, Marco Taviani, Adele Bertini, Alessandra Negri, Stefano Marabini, Giuseppe Mastronuzzi, Antonioli, F., Negri, Alessandra, Amorosi, Alessandro, Antonioli, Fabrizio, Bertini, Adele, Florindo, Fabio, Lurcock, Pontus C., Marabini, Stefano, Mastronuzzi, Giuseppe, Regattieri, Eleonora, Rossi, Veronica, Scarponi, Daniele, Taviani, Marco, Zanchetta, Giovanni, and Vai, Gian Battista
- Subjects
Marine isotope stage ,Paleomagnetism ,Stable oxygen isotope ,biology ,Pleistocene ,Foraminifera ,Palynomorphs ,biology.organism_classification ,MIS 5.5 ,Calcarenite ,Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point ,Paleontology ,Stage (stratigraphy) ,Marine Upper Pleistocene ,Stable oxygen isotopes ,Cladocora ,Sedimentary rock ,Palynomorph ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Geology - Abstract
We present new data collected at the Fronte composite section near Taranto, where the Upper Pleistocene marine sedimentary succession is continuously exposed. Above a fossiliferous calcarenite yielding the "Senegalese" fauna, and abundant Cladocora, the Th-230/U age of which is consistent with Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5, a 6.25 m thick pelitic unit is characterized by lithologically homogeneous marine sediments in which stable oxygen isotope, micropaleontological and palynological analyses suggest a long and undisturbed sedimentary interval across the Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5.5 peak (plateau). High sedimentation rates and a successful paleomagnetic pilot study indicate the probability of locating brief chronostratigraphic events useful for correlation with both continental and marine successions elsewhere. These results show the composite section to be a very promising candidate in the search for the Upper Pleistocene global boundary stratotype section and point (GSSP). (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2015
17. Global sea-level control on local parasequence architecture from the Holocene record of the Po Plain, Italy
- Author
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Veronica Rossi, Luigi Bruno, Wan Hong, Alessandro Amorosi, Tina M. Drexler, Daniele Scarponi, Agnese Morelli, Kevin M. Bohacs, Bruno Campo, Amorosi, Alessandro, Bruno, Luigi, Campo, Bruno, Morelli, Agnese, Rossi, Veronica, Scarponi, Daniele, Hong, Wan, Bohacs, Kevin M., and Drexler, Tina M.
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Holocene ,Parasequence ,Po Plain ,Sequence stratigraphy ,Shoreline trajectory ,Stacking patterns ,Oceanography ,Geophysics ,Geology ,Economic Geology ,Stratigraphy ,Coastal plain ,Fluvial ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,Stacking pattern ,Younger Dryas ,Geophysic ,Sea level ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Progradation - Abstract
Holocene deposits exhibit distinct, predictable and chronologically constrained facies patterns that are quite useful as appropriate modern analogs for interpreting the ancient record. In this study, we examined the sedimentary response of the Po Plain coastal system to short-term (millennial-scale) relative fluctuations of sea level through high-resolution sequence-stratigraphic analysis of the Holocene succession. Meters-thick parasequences form the building blocks of stratigraphic architecture. Above the Younger Dryas paleosol, a prominent stratigraphic marker that demarcates the transgressive surface, Early Holocene parasequences (#s 1–3) record alternating periods of rapid flooding and gradual shoaling, and are stacked in a retrogradational pattern that mostly reflects stepped, post-glacial eustatic rise. Conversely, Middle to Late Holocene parasequences (#s 4–8) record a complex, pattern of coastal progradation and delta upbuilding that took place following sea-level stabilization at highstand, starting at about 7 cal ky BP. The prominent transgressive surface at the base of parasequence 1 correlates with the period of rapid, global sea-level rise at the onset of the Holocene (MWP-1B), whereas flooding surfaces associated with parasequences 2 and 3 apparently reflect minor Early Holocene eustatic jumps reported in the literature. Changes in shoreline trajectory, parasequence architecture and lithofacies distribution during the following eustatic highstand had, instead, an overwhelming autogenic component, mostly driven by river avulsions, delta lobe switching, local subsidence and sediment compaction. We document a ∼1000-year delayed response of the coastal depositional system to marine incursion, farther inland from the maximum landward position of the shoreline. A dramatic reduction in sediment flux due to fluvial avulsion resulted in marine inundation in back-barrier position, whereas coastal progradation was simultaneously taking place basinwards. We demonstrate that the landward equivalents of marine flooding surfaces (parasequence boundaries) may be defined by brackish and freshwater fossil assemblages, and traced for tens of kilometers into the non-marine realm. This makes millennial-scale parasequences, whether auto- or allogenic in origin, much more powerful than systems tracts for mapping detailed extents and volumes of sediment bodies. The Holocene parasequences of the Po coastal plain, with strong age control and a detailed understanding of sea-level variation, may provide insight into the driving mechanisms and predictability of successions characterized by similar depositional styles, but with poor age constraint, resulting in more robust interpretations of the ancient record.
- Published
- 2017
18. A low seasonality scenario in the Mediterranean Sea during the Calabrian (Early Pleistocene) inferred from fossil Arctica islandica shells
- Author
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Bernd R. Schöne, Thomas Brey, Gotje von Leesen, Daniele Scarponi, Lars Beierlein, von Leesen, Gotje, Beierlein, Lar, Scarponi, Daniele, Schöne, Bernd R., and Brey, Thomas
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010506 paleontology ,Early Pleistocene ,Stable oxygen isotope ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Pleistocene ,engineering.material ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,Mediterranean sea ,Sclerochronology ,14. Life underwater ,Glacial period ,Arctica islandica ,Sicily ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,biology ,Aragonite ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematic ,language.human_language ,Paleotemperature reconstruction ,13. Climate action ,Earth-Surface Processe ,engineering ,language ,Sicilian ,Geology - Abstract
Understanding past seasonal temperature variability in the ocean is essential to evaluate the effects of future climate change on marine ecosystems. Here, we estimate seasonal water temperature amplitudes from stable oxygen isotope (δ18Oshell) values of fossil shells of Arctica islandica (assuming δ18Owater= + 0.9 ± 0.1â° V-SMOW). Specimens were collected from three Pleistocene successions (Emilian and Sicilian substages of the Calabrian) in Central and Southern Italy (i.e., Rome, Lecce and Sicily). Biostratigraphic analyses from Rome Quarry deposits indicate an age between 1.6 and 1.2 Ma, whereas Sicily and Lecce successions are slightly more recent (between 1.1 and 0.62 Ma). Prior to carbonate geochemical analysis, we checked the shells for potential diagenetic alterations (e.g., from aragonite to calcite) using confocal Raman microscopy. δ18Oshelltransects indicate an annual temperature amplitude of about 3 °C during the Early Pleistocene. This is in sharp contrast to reconstructions based on faunal assemblages, according to which the simultaneous occurrence of boreal and warm-water species in the Calabrian Mediterranean Sea suggests a much higher seasonality (ca. 10 °C). The low seasonality and the relatively cold water (9â10 °C) indicate the outcrops represent colder climatic conditions compared to modern times, and suggest the occurrence of a maximum glacial phase.
- Published
- 2017
19. Systematic vertical and lateral changes in quality and time resolution of the macrofossil record: Insights from Holocene transgressive deposits, Po coastal plain, Italy
- Author
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Kevin M. Bohacs, Michał Kowalewski, Kristopher M. Kusnerik, Michele Azzarone, Daniele Scarponi, Alessandro Amorosi, Tina M. Drexler, Scarponi, Daniele, Azzarone, Michele, Kusnerik, Kristopher, Amorosi, Alessandro, Bohacs, Kevin M., Drexler, Tina M., Kowalewski, Michaå, and Kowalewski, Michał
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Sequence stratigraphy ,Coastal plain ,Stratigraphy ,Taphonomy, Macrofossil, Transgressive deposits, Po Plain, Holocene ,Benthic invertebrate ,Po plain ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,Geophysic ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Macrofossil ,Geology ,Geophysics ,Taphonomy ,Facies ,Siliciclastic ,Economic Geology ,Transgressive ,Stratigraphic paleobiology - Abstract
In siliciclastic marine settings, skeletal concentrations are a characteristic feature of transgressive intervals that provide insights into biological and sequence-stratigraphic processes. To investigate taphonomic signatures of transgressive intervals, we analysed three cores along a depositional profile from the high resolution chrono- and stratigraphic framework of the Holocene Po coastal plain, in northern Italy. Coupled multivariate taphonomic and bathymetric trends delineated spatial and temporal gradients in sediment starvation/bypassing, suggesting that quality and resolution of the fossil record vary predictably along the studied depositional profile. Moreover, integration of taphonomic, bathymetric, and fossil density trends across the study area reveals distinctive signatures useful in characterizing facies associations and determining surfaces and intervals of sequence-stratigraphic significance. Within the southern Po plain succession, taphonomic degradation of macroskeletal remains increases from proximal/nearshore to distal/offshore locations. This trend is discernible for both biologically-driven (bioerosion) and physically-driven (e.g., dissolution, abrasion) shell alterations. Compared to the up-dip (most proximal) core, the down-dip core is distinguished by shell-rich lithosomes affected by ecological condensation (co-occurrence of environmentally non-overlapping taxa) and by higher taphonomic alteration. The onshore-offshore taphonomic trend likely reflects variation in sediment-accumulation along the depositional profile of the Holocene Northern Adriatic shelf, with surface/near-surface residence-time of macroskeletal remains increasing down dip due to lower accumulation rates. These results indicate that, during transgressive phases, changes in sea level (base level) are likely to produce down-dip taphonomic gradients across shelves, where the quality and resolution of the fossil record both deteriorate distally. Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemisation dates on individual bivalve specimens and the chronostratigraphic framework for this profile suggest jointly that the high levels of taphonomic degradation observed distally developed over millennial time scales (∼8ky). Whereas in proximal setting overall low taphonomic degradation and geochronologic constrains point to centennial-scale time-averaging during the late transgression phase. Patterns documented in the Holocene transgressive (and lowermost regressive) deposits of the southern Po Plain may be characteristic of siliciclastic-dominated depositional systems that experience high-frequency, base-level fluctuations.
- Published
- 2017
20. STRATIGRAPHIC ARTIFACTS IN EXTINCTION DYNAMICS: AN EMPIRICAL EVALUATION USING THE HOLOCENE FOSSIL RECORD
- Author
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Rafał Nawrot, Troy A. Dexter, Daniele Scarponi, Roger W. Portell, Jacalyn M. Wittmer, Kristopher M. Kusnerik, Michele Azzarone, Michał Kowalewski, Alessandro Amorosi, Nawrot, Rafal, Scarponi, Daniele, Azzarone, Michele, Amorosi, Alessandro, Wittmer, Jacalyn M., Dexter, Troy A., Kusnerik, Kristopher M., Portell, Roger W., and Kowalewski, Michal
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Paleontology ,Taphonomy ,Extinction ,Fossil Record ,Paleobiology ,Quaternary ,Po Plain, Paleobiology, Quaternary, Taphonomy ,Holocene ,Geology - Published
- 2017
21. CHANGES IN TREMATODE INFESTATION RATES ACROSS PARASEQUENCES: INSIGHTS FROM HOLOCENE DEPOSITS OF THE PO COASTAL PLAIN, ITALY
- Author
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Daniele Scarponi, Michele Azzarone, Liane Christine Linehan, Michał Kowalewski, John Warren Huntley, Azzarone, Michele, Huntley, John Warren, Scarponi, Daniele, Linehan, Liane Christine, and Kowalewski, Michal
- Subjects
geography ,Oceanography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Coastal plain ,Trematode infestation ,Trematodes, Sequence stratigraphy, Floodings, Temporal trends ,Geology ,Holocene - Abstract
Previous work in Late Pleistocene–Holocene sequences from the Po plain revealed significant long-term fluctuations in trematode prevalence in marine environments: higher prevalence in retrogradational environments (TST) and negligible prevalence in progradational environments (HST). Here we expand upon this work by investigating traces of trematode parasitism among bivalves within parasequence sets from the Holocene brackish deposits of the Po Plain. The investigated portion of core 204-S7 is 24 m long and, from bottom to top, includes 5 m of amalgamated fluvial channel sands (latest Pleistocene) followed upwards by alternating packages of swamp and poorly drained floodplain deposits. The middle part of the core includes brackish deposits (inner to outer lagoon) accumulated through the Holocene. Using dense sampling (32 bulk samples and >1,550 specimens) of wetland and lagoonal strata from core 204-S7, we documented trematode occurrences in Abra segmentum, Loripes orbiculatus, and Cerastoderma glaucum. A randomization (10,000 iterations) at the level of individual specimens was conducted to investigate the statistical significance of the observed variability in trematode frequency. Frequencies of trematode infestation of A. segmentum were significantly elevated (p < 0.01) in samples associated with flooding surfaces and significantly depressed (p < 0.01) in samples collected from in-between flooding surfaces. Frequencies of termatode occurrences were similarly elevated around flooding surfaces in the case of L. orbiculatus. However, frequencies of trematode infestations in C. glaucum did not vary signinficantly across samples likely refelcting their low abundance. These results, documented at a much finer scale of observation within the sequence stratigraphic framework (dissecting parasequences) than in our previous studies (comparing data pooled by systems tracts), further support the hypothesis that increasing trematode prevalence is linked to transgressive cycles, a pattern now documented in shallow marine and estuarine settings, on two continents, and in both modern and fossil taxa.
- Published
- 2016
22. Coral-algal Reef Complex of Vigoleno, Piacenza, Northern Italy
- Author
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Andrea Artoni, Daniele Scarponi, Antonio Russo, Paolo Serventi, Russo, Antonio, Artoni, Andrea, Scarponi, Daniele, and Serventi, Paolo
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geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Outcrop ,Coral ,Porites ,Structural basin ,Late Miocene ,biology.organism_classification ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,Siliciclastic ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (all) ,Reef ,Geology - Abstract
During the late Miocene, reef complexes characterised by poorly diversified coral associations (mainly Porites, occasionally associated with Tarbellastraea and/or Siderastraea), became widespread in the Mediterranean area. One of these complexes crops out at Vigoleno (Castell'Arquato, Piacenza, Northern Italy). According to the regional palaeogeographic and palinspastic reconstructions, it can be considered up to now the northernmost late Miocene (Tortonian-Messinian) reef of the Mediterranean area. Despite the limited outcropping and the faulting, the multidisciplinary investigations reveal the anatomy of this reef complex along two reference sections. In addition, a marked cyclicity characterises both carbonate and siliciclastic deposits of the Vigoleno wedge-top basin. At present, the lack of reliable geochronological markers and unsuitability of the material for stable isotope analyses are not sufficient to constrain the time-span and the main controlling environmental factors of these depositional cycles.
- Published
- 2017
23. The Lower to Middle Pleistocene Valle di Manche section (Calabria, Southern Italy): state of the art and current advances
- Author
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Daniele Scarponi, Luca Capraro, Patrizia Macrì, Domenico Rio, Capraro, Luca, Macrì, Patrizia, Scarponi, Daniele, and Rio, Domenico
- Subjects
Crotone Basin ,GSSP ,Chronostratigraphy ,Early-Middle Pleistocene ,Pleistocene ,Range (biology) ,Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point ,Paleontology ,Stratigraphy ,Section (archaeology) ,Stage (stratigraphy) ,Interglacial ,Southern Italy ,Geology ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The Valle di Manche (VdM) section represents one of the best-documented on-land marine records of the Early to Middle (E/M) Pleistocene transition available to date. Accordingly, the VdM succession is among the few appropriate candidates to host the GSSP of the Middle Pleistocene (“Ionian”) Stage. In particular, the VdM section uniquely documents the Matuyama–Brunhes magnetic reversal (mid-MIS 19), which is agreed to be the main criterion for defining the chronostratigraphic position of the base of the Middle Pleistocene. The section also yields a wide range of chronological, paleoclimatic and stratigraphic data sets that allow long-distance correlation with both marine and terrestrial reference records. Notably, the stratigraphy across the MIS 19 interglacial is greatly expanded, permitting a precise and detailed investigation of this critical interval. The section is also easy to reach, and fortunately the exposure is destined to persist. Therefore, the section fulfills the essential requirements to host the GSSP for the “Ionian” Stage and Middle Pleistocene Subseries. We suggest that the GSSP be placed at the base of the “Pitagora ash”, a prominent bed that occurs in mid-MIS 19, close to the Matuyama–Brunhes magnetic reversal. Here, we present and discuss scientific information gathered in the past two decades, and give a preliminary account of the work to which we are presently committed, that aims at improving our knowledge on the VdM section.
- Published
- 2015
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