Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4735239 Proceedings of the Geologists' Association 2006 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Almost 3500 individual occurrences of echinoid have been recorded and correlated against a sequence stratigraphie framework for the entire Cenomanian and basal Turonian from three regions of southern England, representing onshore, mid-shelf and deeper-shelf habitats. There are marked differences in the composition and diversity of faunas both across the shelf at a single time interval and through time at the same locality, driven primarily by factors such as sedimentary facies, which are controlled by changing sea-levels. The ranges of individual taxa expand and contract across the shelf as sea-levels change. In mid-shelf environments more onshore taxa appear only near sequence bases, at times of lowest sea-level, while those from more outer shelf settings are found during highstand intervals, and this creates a cyclical pattern of diversity. By comparison with modern faunas, the Middle and Upper Cenomanian of the Sussex coast is likely to have been deposited in water depths of between 100 m and 150 m and the amplitude of sea-level change appears to increase through the Cenomanian.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology