How tiny foraminifera can play a massive role in understanding past climates

Geology Today Pub Date : 2025-03-19 DOI:10.1111/gto.12510
James Barnet
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Abstract

Foraminifera comprise a group of heterotrophic zooplankton, which inhabit all depths within the world's oceans from the sunlit surface ocean to the depths of the abyssal plains. Many species build a shell of calcium carbonate (predominantly calcite), which records vital geochemical information from the oceans as it grows. Studies based on microscopic foraminifera are often at the forefront of pioneering research by palaeoclimatologists into Cretaceous–Cenozoic climates. In this feature, I summarize how foraminifera are obtained from the deep ocean and describe how rapidly evolving planktic foraminifera species can be used to date marine sediments. I then explain how benthic foraminifera can be used to reconstruct high-resolution long-term climate records, focusing on the use of stable oxygen isotopes to elucidate deep ocean temperatures from the greenhouse climate of the late Paleocene–early Eocene.

Abstract Image

微小的有孔虫如何在理解过去的气候中发挥巨大作用
有孔虫包括一组异养浮游动物,它们栖息在世界海洋的所有深处,从阳光照射的海洋表面到深海平原的深处。许多物种形成了碳酸钙(主要是方解石)的外壳,它记录了海洋生长过程中重要的地球化学信息。基于微观有孔虫的研究通常是古气候学家对白垩纪-新生代气候的开创性研究的前沿。在这个专题中,我总结了如何从深海中获得有孔虫,并描述了如何快速进化的浮游有孔虫物种可以用来确定海洋沉积物的年代。然后,我解释了底栖有孔虫如何用于重建高分辨率的长期气候记录,重点是使用稳定的氧同位素来阐明古新世晚期至始新世早期温室气候的深海温度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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