Small topographical variations controlling trace maker community: Combining palaeo- and neoichnological data at the Porcupine Abyssal Plain
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Míguez Salas, Olmo; Rodríguez Tovar, Francisco J.; Dorador Rodríguez, Javier; J. Bett, Brian; S.J. Charidemou, Miros; M. Durden, JenniferEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Ichnology Deep sea Seafloor heterogeneity
Date
2024-10-02Referencia bibliográfica
Miguez Salas, O. et. al. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 655 (2024) 112524. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2024.112524]
Sponsorship
TED2021-131697B-C22 (MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033); UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), through the Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science project (NE/R015953/1); Margarita Salas Fellowship from the Ministry of Spain and EU Next Generations projects; Contract RYC2021-032385-I, by the MCIN/AEI/10.130 39/501100011033and the EU “NextGenerationEU, PRTR”.Abstract
Ichnological research has generally assumed that abyssal plains are dominated by quiescent, homogenous
environmental conditions. Thus, deep-sea trace fossil assemblage changes have been usually linked to significant
spatial and temporal environmental variations. Here, we conducted a comparative ichnological analysis between
a small abyssal hill (50 m elevation) and the surrounding abyssal plain; this modest bathymetric variation is
known to generate substantial environmental heterogeneity for the benthic fauna community of the Porcupine
Abyssal Plain (c. 4850 m depth), Northeast Atlantic. Based on X-ray data from a 5 × 5 core grid emplaced in two
box cores, we compared hill and plain bioturbational sedimentary structures, including trace fossil assemblages
(e.g., ichnotaxonomy) and biodeformational structures (e.g., mixed-layer depth). We observed that
topographically-enhanced near-bottom currents over the hill likely produce significant changes in depositional
dynamics and sediment properties (e.g., grain size, organic matter content and degradation), and control specificities
of bioturbational sedimentary structures (e.g., trace fossils, mixed layer attributes such as thickness,
mottled background, discrete traces). Palaeoichnological data suggested that the abyssal plain had experienced
consistent conditions during the last thousands of years while the abyssal hill recorded improving environmental
conditions for the trace maker community. Our results highlight the complexity of the deep-sea environment,
demonstrating that small changes in bioturbated sedimentary assemblages appear even within the same box core
(m-scale), and that substantial changes can occur due to environmental heterogeneity (e.g., subtle topographic
variations) at the local scale (km-scale). Considering the vast global extent of abyssal hill terrain, we suggest that
their influence on the bioturbational sedimentary record may be significantly under-appreciated and require
more attention in palaeoenvironmental reconstructions.