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New Radiolarian Palaeoclimatic Index in the Plio-Pleistocene of the Southern Ocean

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Abstract

PLIOCENE-PLEISTOCENE palaeoclimatic investigations in the Southern Ocean have been carried out using five groups of microfossils: foraminifera1,2, calcareous nannofossils3, Radiolaria4–9, diatoms10, and silicoflagellates11. Radiolarian methods are particularly valuable in higher latitudes where carbonate sediments are susceptible to dissolution even in relatively shallow waters12,13. Established radiolarian techniques are based on oscillations of cold-water (Antarctic) relative to warmer-water radiolarian assemblages, established by determining their distribution in Recent sediments relative to the Antarctic Convergence (Polar Front)4. The cold-water assemblage used in these palaeotemperature determinations consists of eight species, whereas the warm-water assemblage consists of nine species4,9. Of the several dozen species known in Southern Ocean Quaternary sediments, these seventeen species represent more than 75% of the individuals4.

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KEANY, J. New Radiolarian Palaeoclimatic Index in the Plio-Pleistocene of the Southern Ocean. Nature 246, 139–141 (1973). https://doi.org/10.1038/246139a0

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