A refugium for charophytes during the maximum post-Palaeozoic sea-level highstand in the Turonian of Tarragona (Catalonia, Spain)

dc.contributor.author Martín-Closas, Carles ca
dc.contributor.author Vicedo, Vicent ca
dc.contributor.author Bover-Arnal, Telm ca
dc.contributor.other Consorci del Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona ca
dc.coverage.spatial Europa ca
dc.coverage.spatial Tarragona (Catalunya) ca
dc.coverage.spatial Espanya ca
dc.coverage.spatial Europe en
dc.coverage.spatial Tarragona (Catalonia) en
dc.coverage.spatial Spain en
dc.coverage.spatial Europa es
dc.coverage.spatial Tarragona (Cataluña) es
dc.coverage.spatial España es
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-05T12:59:27Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-05T12:59:27Z
dc.date.issued 2025-06-04
dc.description.abstract During the Cenomanian–Turonian interval, Europe was largely submerged under a shallow tropical sea within the Cretaceous Tethyan Archipelago. Non-marine lacustrine habitats were limited to a few coastal lakes on the islands. This study reports an island refugium for charophytes in Upper Cretaceous Tarragona located at the palaeo-shores of the former Ebro Massif. The Upper Cretaceous of Tarragona comprises three carbonate formations that record a Cenomanian–Turonian transgressive-regressive sequence. This sequence is represented by a shallow marine platform to pelagic facies at the base, overlain by lacustrine and palustrine facies at the top. These non-marine deposits are newly attributed to the Turonian, based on the stratigraphic context and the presence of the species Atopochara trivolvis var. multivolvis. In addition to this dominant species, the charophyte assemblage contains a clavatoroidean species, represented by the thallus Munieria grambastii forma sarda, and is associated with freshwater gastropods. A. trivolvis var. multivolvis had a wide distribution in the Northern Hemisphere at a palaeolatitude of around 40ºN, occurring in the United States, Spain, France, and Armenia. The European localities suggest that the island charophyte flora in the Cretaceous Tethyan Archipelago was an impoverished version of the pre-high stand Early Cretaceous flora, which was dominated by clavatoraceans. This contrasts with coeval floras from the mainland (Chinese and Argentinian basins), where Turonian charophyte communities were diverse and already dominated by modern characean genera. The island lakes acted as refugia for the last clavatoracean-dominated charophyte communities before their complete replacement by modern characean communities during the latest Cretaceous. ca
dc.description.abstract info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion ca
dc.description.abstract During the Cenomanian–Turonian interval, Europe was largely submerged under a shallow tropical sea within the Cretaceous Tethyan Archipelago. Non-marine lacustrine habitats were limited to a few coastal lakes on the islands. This study reports an island refugium for charophytes in Upper Cretaceous Tarragona located at the palaeo-shores of the former Ebro Massif. The Upper Cretaceous of Tarragona comprises three carbonate formations that record a Cenomanian–Turonian transgressive-regressive sequence. This sequence is represented by a shallow marine platform to pelagic facies at the base, overlain by lacustrine and palustrine facies at the top. These non-marine deposits are newly attributed to the Turonian, based on the stratigraphic context and the presence of the species Atopochara trivolvis var. multivolvis. In addition to this dominant species, the charophyte assemblage contains a clavatoroidean species, represented by the thallus Munieria grambastii forma sarda, and is associated with freshwater gastropods. A. trivolvis var. multivolvis had a wide distribution in the Northern Hemisphere at a palaeolatitude of around 40ºN, occurring in the United States, Spain, France, and Armenia. The European localities suggest that the island charophyte flora in the Cretaceous Tethyan Archipelago was an impoverished version of the pre-high stand Early Cretaceous flora, which was dominated by clavatoraceans. This contrasts with coeval floras from the mainland (Chinese and Argentinian basins), where Turonian charophyte communities were diverse and already dominated by modern characean genera. The island lakes acted as refugia for the last clavatoracean-dominated charophyte communities before their complete replacement by modern characean communities during the latest Cretaceous. en
dc.description.abstract info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion en
dc.description.abstract During the Cenomanian–Turonian interval, Europe was largely submerged under a shallow tropical sea within the Cretaceous Tethyan Archipelago. Non-marine lacustrine habitats were limited to a few coastal lakes on the islands. This study reports an island refugium for charophytes in Upper Cretaceous Tarragona located at the palaeo-shores of the former Ebro Massif. The Upper Cretaceous of Tarragona comprises three carbonate formations that record a Cenomanian–Turonian transgressive-regressive sequence. This sequence is represented by a shallow marine platform to pelagic facies at the base, overlain by lacustrine and palustrine facies at the top. These non-marine deposits are newly attributed to the Turonian, based on the stratigraphic context and the presence of the species Atopochara trivolvis var. multivolvis. In addition to this dominant species, the charophyte assemblage contains a clavatoroidean species, represented by the thallus Munieria grambastii forma sarda, and is associated with freshwater gastropods. A. trivolvis var. multivolvis had a wide distribution in the Northern Hemisphere at a palaeolatitude of around 40ºN, occurring in the United States, Spain, France, and Armenia. The European localities suggest that the island charophyte flora in the Cretaceous Tethyan Archipelago was an impoverished version of the pre-high stand Early Cretaceous flora, which was dominated by clavatoraceans. This contrasts with coeval floras from the mainland (Chinese and Argentinian basins), where Turonian charophyte communities were diverse and already dominated by modern characean genera. The island lakes acted as refugia for the last clavatoracean-dominated charophyte communities before their complete replacement by modern characean communities during the latest Cretaceous. es
dc.description.abstract info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion es
dc.format application/pdf ca
dc.format.extent 19 p. ca
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/2072/484470
dc.identifier.citation Geologica Acta, vol. 23, núm. 11 (2025), p. 1-19 ca
dc.identifier.entitat consorcis ca
dc.identifier.other https://doi.org/10.1344/GeologicaActa2025.23.11 ca
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11703/142862
dc.language eng ca
dc.provenance Recercat (Dipòsit de la Recerca de Catalunya) ca
dc.rights L'accés als continguts d'aquest document queda condicionat a l'acceptació de les condicions d'ús establertes per la següent llicència Creative Commons:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
dc.rights.accessrights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess ca
dc.rights.notes © C. Martín-Closas, D. Albalat, F. Colombo, M. Vilà, A. Vicente, À. Ossó, V. Vicedo, T. Bover-Arnal, 2025 ca
dc.rights.notes Attribution 4.0 International ca
dc.rights.notes http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ca
dc.subject Cretaci ca
dc.subject Bioestratigrafia ca
dc.subject Caròfits fòssils ca
dc.subject Cretaceous Period en
dc.subject Stratigraphic paleontology en
dc.subject Fossil charophytes en
dc.subject Cretácico es
dc.subject Paleontologia estratigràfica es
dc.subject Carófitas fósiles es
dc.subject.category Ciència i tecnologia ca
dc.subject.forma articles ca
dc.title A refugium for charophytes during the maximum post-Palaeozoic sea-level highstand in the Turonian of Tarragona (Catalonia, Spain) ca
dc.type text ca
dc.type.driver info:eu-repo/semantics/article ca
metadadalocal.dependencia 8008920

Apareix a les col·leccions

Fitxers