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Comparative quality and fidelity of deep-sea and land-based: Nannofossil records

Abstract:
Variation in sampling intensity of the geological record has long been suspected to distort our view of the history of life. When the taxonomic diversity of the same widespread group of marine nannoplankton (coccolithophorids) is estimated conventionally and separately from published land and deep-sea fossil records, the two curves are very different: they track sampling intensities from their respective rock records more closely than they do each other. However, when sampling intensity is corrected for, using two recently developed independent techniques, a common underlying signal emerges from the two records. This shows diversity rising steadily throughout the Mesozoic with a marked drop after the Cretaceous (64-58 Ma), and a long-term decline beginning in the Late Eocene and extending to the Early Miocene. We conclude that the observable fossil record is strongly shaped by sampling bias, and that this is a signifi cant confounding factor for biodiversity analysis. Furthermore, based on currently available sources, we find that the raw deep-sea record is a worse estimator of diversity than the land-based record. © 2012 Geological Society of America.

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Publisher copy:
10.1130/G32561.1

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Journal:
Geology More from this journal
Volume:
40
Issue:
2
Pages:
155-158
Publication date:
2012-02-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1943-2682
ISSN:
0091-7613


Language:
English
Pubs id:
pubs:343304
UUID:
uuid:084adbfe-d130-4e47-bc5e-1330e7ffcc24
Local pid:
pubs:343304
Source identifiers:
343304
Deposit date:
2013-11-16
ARK identifier:

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