390 research outputs found

    Assessing pelagic palaeoenvironments using foraminiferal assemblages — A case study from the late Campanian Radotruncana calcarata Zone (Upper Cretaceous, Austrian Alps)

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    AbstractTwo upper Campanian sections in the Austrian Alps representing the north western Tethyan biogeographic realm from either sides of the Penninic Ocean (Alpine Tethys) have been examined aiming at a high-resolution assessment of foraminiferal assemblages: the Postalm section from the Northern Calcareous Alps (southern active margin) and the Oberhehenfeld section from the Ultrahelvetics (northern passive margin). This study focuses on plankton biostratigraphy and foraminiferal palaeoecology of the Radotruncana calcarata Total Range Zone.The Postalm section displays cyclic red deposits with marls and marly limestones, while we find uniform grey marls at Oberhehenfeld. The Oberhehenfeld section from the Ultrahelvetics can be correlated stratigraphically to the Postalm section using foraminifera, calcareous nannoplankton and stable isotope stratigraphy, and provides a point of comparison from the northern margin of the Penninic Ocean.The two sections show minimal difference in faunal composition and few distinct local stratigraphic signals. Palaeoenvironmental trends from the late Campanian can be recognised relating the two sections from the Austrian Alps. The depositional water depth can be reconstructed as some 500–800m. Plankton assemblages show a remarkable stability despite the sudden appearance and disappearance of R. calcarata, hinting at the late Campanian as a time interval of general foraminiferal stasis without significant evolutionary events. We speculate that the origin and extinction of R. calcarata are related to the prolonged evolution of ocean stratification during the Campanian from the mid-Cretaceous sluggish hothouse during a time of general slow greenhouse climate decline

    The climatic role of interactive leaf phenology in the vegetation-atmosphere system of radiative-convective equilibrium storm-resolving simulations

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    Storm-resolving simulations where deep convection can be explicitly resolved are performed in the idealized radiative-convective equilibrium framework to explore the climatic role of interactive leaf phenology. By initializing the system with different initial soil moisture and leaf area index (LAI) conditions, we find three categories of potential equilibrium climatic and vegetation states: a hot desert planet without vegetation, an intermediate sparsely vegetated planet, and a wet fully vegetated planet. The wet fully vegetated equilibrium category occurs over the widest range of initial soil moisture as it occurs as soon as soil saturation is 19 higher than the permanent wilting point (35). This indicates that a quite harsh environment is needed in our modeling system to force leaves to be shed. The attained equilibrium states are only dependent upon the initial soil moisture, not the initial LAI. However, interactive leaves do allow an earlier transition from the intermediate to the wet vegetated equilibrium category. Hence, interactive leaves make the vegetation-atmosphere system more stable and more resilient to drying. This effect could be well approximated by just prescribing the LAI to its maximum value. Finally, our sensitivity experiments reveal that leaves influence the climate equally through their controls on canopy conductance and vegetation cover, whereas albedo changes play a negligible role. © 2022 The Author(s)
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