2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105246
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What happened to the organic matter from the Upper Cretaceous succession in Guatemala, Central America?

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Bottom water oxygenation may, however, be an important factor controlling the local palynological record (e.g., Pross 2001;Zonneveld et al 1997). Prolonged exposure of deposited organic matter to oxygen may cause intra-and/or post-depositional oxidation, resulting in the aerobic degradation of palynomorphs (e.g., Zonneveld et al 1997Zonneveld et al , 2008Radmacher and Uchman 2020;Radmacher et al 2021). While the benthic foraminifera recovered from the present material are indicative of a highly oxygenated environment, aerobic degradation of palynomorphs was most likely not an important consideration.…”
Section: An Oligotrophic Continental Shelf Settingmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…Bottom water oxygenation may, however, be an important factor controlling the local palynological record (e.g., Pross 2001;Zonneveld et al 1997). Prolonged exposure of deposited organic matter to oxygen may cause intra-and/or post-depositional oxidation, resulting in the aerobic degradation of palynomorphs (e.g., Zonneveld et al 1997Zonneveld et al , 2008Radmacher and Uchman 2020;Radmacher et al 2021). While the benthic foraminifera recovered from the present material are indicative of a highly oxygenated environment, aerobic degradation of palynomorphs was most likely not an important consideration.…”
Section: An Oligotrophic Continental Shelf Settingmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…The lack of any physical signs of reduced sedimentation rates (e.g., glauconite, hardgrounds, fossil accumulations) suggests a relatively high sedimenta-tion rate that hindered sediment oxygen penetration, thus impeding organic matter degradation (Zonneveld et al 1997). Additionally, aerobic degradation would have resulted in the oxidation of translucent woody material and its transformation into opaque phytoclasts, leading to the dominance of the latter in microscopic plant debris assemblages (e.g., Tyson 1993;Radmacher et al 2021); this is not observed here. The scarcity of organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts is even more surprising, considering that the other microplankton groups (calcareous nannofossils and foraminifers) are well represented.…”
Section: An Oligotrophic Continental Shelf Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%