Affiliation:
1. Institute of Geological Sciences Jagiellonian University in Krakow Krakow Poland
2. Department of Earth Sciences “Ardito Desio” University of Milan Milan Italy
3. Department of Geology University of Vienna Vienna Austria
4. Institute for Geosciences University of Mainz Mainz Germany
Abstract
AbstractThe periodicity of the mutual position of celestial bodies in the Earth‐Moon‐Sun system is crucial to the functioning of life on Earth. Biological rhythms affect most of the processes inside organisms, and some can be recorded in skeletal remains, allowing one to reconstruct the cycles that occur in nature deep in time. In the present study, we have used ultra‐high‐resolution elemental ratio scans of Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Mn/Ca from the fossil, ca. 70 Ma old inoceramid bivalve Inoceramus (Platyceramus) salisburgensis from deep aphotic water and identified a clear regularity of repetition of the geochemical signal every of ~0.006 mm. We estimate that the shell accretion rate is on average ~0.4 cm of shell thickness per lunar year. Visible light–dark lamination, interpreted as a seasonal signal corresponding to the semilunar‐related cycle, gives a rough shell age estimate and growth rate for this large bivalve species supported by a dual feeding strategy. We recognize a biological clock that follows either a semilunar (model A) or a tidal (model B) cycle. This cycle of tidal dominance seems to fit better considering the biological behaviour of I. (P.) salisburgensis, including the estimated age and growth rate of the studied specimens. We interpret that the major control in such deep‐sea environment, well below the photic zone and storm wave base, was due to barotropic tidal forces, thus changing the water pressure.
Funder
Narodowe Centrum Nauki
Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1 articles.
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