A revised marine fossil record of the Mediterranean before and after the Messinian salinity crisis

The Messinian salinity crisis and its precursor events have been the greatest environmental perturbation of the Mediterranean Sea to date, offering an opportunity to study the response of marine ecosystems to extreme hydrological change and a large-scale biological invasion. The restriction of the m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth system science data 2024-10, Vol.16 (10), p.4767-4775
Hauptverfasser: Agiadi, Konstantina, Hohmann, Niklas, Gliozzi, Elsa, Thivaiou, Danae, Bosellini, Francesca R, Taviani, Marco, Bianucci, Giovanni, Collareta, Alberto, Londeix, Laurent, Faranda, Costanza, Bulian, Francesca, Koskeridou, Efterpi, Lozar, Francesca, Mancini, Alan Maria, Dominici, Stefano, Moissette, Pierre, Bajo Campos, Ildefonso, Borghi, Enrico, Iliopoulos, George, Antonarakou, Assimina, Kontakiotis, George, Besiou, Evangelia, Zarkogiannis, Stergios D, Harzhauser, Mathias, Sierro, Francisco Javier, Camerlenghi, Angelo, García-Castellanos, Daniel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Messinian salinity crisis and its precursor events have been the greatest environmental perturbation of the Mediterranean Sea to date, offering an opportunity to study the response of marine ecosystems to extreme hydrological change and a large-scale biological invasion. The restriction of the marine connection between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean resulted in stratification of the water column and high-amplitude variations in seawater temperature and salinity already from the early Messinian. Here, we present a unified and revised marine fossil record of the Mediterranean (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13358435, Agiadi et al., 2024) that covers the Tortonian stage, the pre-evaporitic Messinian stage, and the Zanclean stage and encompasses 23 032 occurrences of calcareous nannoplankton, dinoflagellates, foraminifera, corals, ostracods, bryozoans, echinoids, mollusks, fishes, and marine mammals. This record adheres to the FAIR principles, is updated in terms of taxonomy, and follows the currently accepted stratigraphic framework. Based on this record, knowledge gaps are identified, which are due to spatiotemporal inconsistencies in sampling effort and the distribution of sedimentary facies, as well as the inherent differences in the preservation potential between the groups. Additionally, sampling bias in old records may have distorted the record in favor of larger, more impressive taxa within groups. This record is now ready to be used to answer both geological and biological questions about the Mediterranean Sea and beyond and is amendable when new fossil data are brought to light.
ISSN:1866-3516
1866-3508
1866-3516
DOI:10.5194/essd-16-4767-2024