Difference between revisions of "Agglutinated microfossils"

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Although they are sometimes useful in age determination, agglutinated foraminifera are especially valuable as paleoenvironmental indicators because they are particularly characteristic of very shallow marine to brackish environments and very deep marine environments. Recent studies by Alve and Murray<ref name=ch17r2>Alve, E., Murray, J., W., 1995, Experiments to determine the origin and palaeoenviron-mental significance of agglutinated foraminiferal assemblages, in Kaminski, M., A., Geroch, S., Gasiński, M., A., eds., Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera: Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 3, p. 1–11.</ref> and Kaminski and Kuhnt<ref name=ch17r50>Kaminski, M., A., Kuhnt, W., 1995, Tubular agglutinated foraminifera as indicators of organic carbon flux, in Kaminski, M., A., Geroch, S., Gasiński, M., A., eds., Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera: Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 3, p. 141–144.</ref> suggest they may be useful in interpreting other paleoenvironments as well. Agglutinated foraminifera are the dominant and distinctive microfauna in Cretaceous and Tertiary flysch facies.
 
Although they are sometimes useful in age determination, agglutinated foraminifera are especially valuable as paleoenvironmental indicators because they are particularly characteristic of very shallow marine to brackish environments and very deep marine environments. Recent studies by Alve and Murray<ref name=ch17r2>Alve, E., Murray, J., W., 1995, Experiments to determine the origin and palaeoenviron-mental significance of agglutinated foraminiferal assemblages, in Kaminski, M., A., Geroch, S., Gasiński, M., A., eds., Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera: Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 3, p. 1–11.</ref> and Kaminski and Kuhnt<ref name=ch17r50>Kaminski, M., A., Kuhnt, W., 1995, Tubular agglutinated foraminifera as indicators of organic carbon flux, in Kaminski, M., A., Geroch, S., Gasiński, M., A., eds., Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera: Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 3, p. 141–144.</ref> suggest they may be useful in interpreting other paleoenvironments as well. Agglutinated foraminifera are the dominant and distinctive microfauna in Cretaceous and Tertiary flysch facies.
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[[file:applied-paleontology_fig17-4.png|left|thumb|{{figure number|1}}See text for explanation.]]
  
 
The color of agglutinated foraminifera has recently been shown to alter irreversibly with heating, both naturally within buried sediments and experimentally (see “Thermal Maturation”).
 
The color of agglutinated foraminifera has recently been shown to alter irreversibly with heating, both naturally within buried sediments and experimentally (see “Thermal Maturation”).
  
The illustration below shows some typical agglutinated foraminifera.
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[[:file:applied-paleontology_fig17-4.png|Figure 1]] shows some typical agglutinated foraminifera.
 
 
[[file:applied-paleontology_fig17-4.png|thumb|{{figure number|17-4}}See text for explanation.]]
 
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 20:34, 21 January 2014

Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps
Series Treatise in Petroleum Geology
Part Predicting the occurrence of oil and gas traps
Chapter Applied paleontology
Author Robert L. Fleisher, H. Richard Lane
Link Web page
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Agglutinated, or arenaceous, microfossils have tests (shells) constructed from sedimentary particles bound together by organic, calcareous, siliceous, or ferruginous cement. There is only one type of stratigraphically significant agglutinated microfossil: agglutinated, or arenaceous, foraminifera.

Agglutinated foraminifera

Agglutinated foraminifera are benthic microfossils found in rocks of Cambrian through Holocene age and in most marine and brackish environments, particularly in clastic facies. They construct their tests by gluing sedimentary grains together, in contrast to the other types of foraminifera, which secrete their tests. The sedimentary particles used by these forms may include silt or sand grains, glauconite, sponge spicules, or even other foraminiferal tests. Some species are highly selective in the material used and in its arrangement.

Although they are sometimes useful in age determination, agglutinated foraminifera are especially valuable as paleoenvironmental indicators because they are particularly characteristic of very shallow marine to brackish environments and very deep marine environments. Recent studies by Alve and Murray[1] and Kaminski and Kuhnt[2] suggest they may be useful in interpreting other paleoenvironments as well. Agglutinated foraminifera are the dominant and distinctive microfauna in Cretaceous and Tertiary flysch facies.

Figure 1 See text for explanation.

The color of agglutinated foraminifera has recently been shown to alter irreversibly with heating, both naturally within buried sediments and experimentally (see “Thermal Maturation”).

Figure 1 shows some typical agglutinated foraminifera.

See also

References

  1. Alve, E., Murray, J., W., 1995, Experiments to determine the origin and palaeoenviron-mental significance of agglutinated foraminiferal assemblages, in Kaminski, M., A., Geroch, S., Gasiński, M., A., eds., Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera: Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 3, p. 1–11.
  2. Kaminski, M., A., Kuhnt, W., 1995, Tubular agglutinated foraminifera as indicators of organic carbon flux, in Kaminski, M., A., Geroch, S., Gasiński, M., A., eds., Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera: Grzybowski Foundation Special Publication 3, p. 141–144.

External links

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