The El'gygytgyn Scientific Drilling Project – conquering Arctic challenges through continental drilling.
Co-authored with Melles M., Brigham-Grette J., Minyuk P., Koeberl C., Andreev A., Cook, T., Fedorov G., Gebhardt C., Haltia-Hovi E., Kukkonen M., Nowaczyk N., Schwamborn G., Wennrich V. & El'gygytgyn Scientific Party (2011).
Between October 2008 and May 2009, the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) co-sponsored a... more Between October 2008 and May 2009, the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) co-sponsored a campaign at Lake El ́gygytgyn, located in a 3.6-Ma-old meteorite impact crater in northeastern Siberia. Drilling targets included three holes in the center of the 170-m-deep lake, utilizing the lake ice cover as a drilling platform, plus one hole close to the shore in the western lake catchment. At the lake’s center. the entire 315-m-thick lake sediment succession was penetrated. The sediments lack any hiatuses (i.e., no evidence of basin glaciation or desicca- tion), and their composition reflects the regional climatic and environmental history with great sensitivity. Hence, the record provides the first comprehensive and widely time- continuous insights into the evolution of the terrestrial Arctic since mid-Pliocene times. This is particularly true for the lowermost 40 meters and uppermost 150 meters of the sequence, which were drilled with almost 100% recovery and likely reflect the initial lake stage during the Pliocene and the last ~2.9 Ma, respectively. Nearly 200 meters of under- lying rock were also recovered; these cores consist of an almost complete section of the various types of impact brec- cias including broken and fractured volcanic basement rocks and associated melt clasts. The investigation of this core sequence promises new information concerning the El ́gygytgyn impact event, including the composition and nature of the meteorite, the energy released, and the shock behavior of the volcanic basement rocks. Complementary information on the regional environmental history, including the permafrost history and lake-level fluctuations, is being developed from a 142-m-long drill core recovered from the permafrost deposits in the lake catchment. This core con- sists of gravelly and sandy alluvial fan deposits in ice-rich permafrost, presumably comprising a discontinuous record of both Quaternary and Pliocene deposits.
Belemnite extinction and the origin of modern cephalopods 35 m.y. prior to the Cretaceous−Paleogene event
by Yasuhiro Iba
Iba, Y., Mutterlose, J., Tanabe, K., Sano, S., Misaki, A., Terabe, K.,
2011, Belemnite extinction and the origin of modern cephalopods 35 m.y. prior to the Cretaceous-Paleogene event. Geology, vol.39, p.483-486.
Belemnites, a very successful group of Mesozoic cephalopods, fl ourished in Cretaceous oceans until the... more
Belemnites, a very successful group of Mesozoic cephalopods, fl ourished in Cretaceous oceans until the Cretaceous−Paleogene event, when they became globally extinct. Following this event the modern types of cephalopods (squids, cuttlefi sh, octopus) radiated in the Cenozoic in all oceans. In the North Pacifi c, however, a turnover from belemnites to the modern types of cephalopods ~35 m.y. before the Cretaceous−Paleogene event documents a more complex evolutionary history of cephalopods than previously thought. Here we show that the modern types of cephalopods originated and prospered throughout the Late Cretaceous in the North Pacifi c. The mid-Cretaceous cephalopod turnover was caused by cooling and the closure of the Bering Strait, which led to a subsequent faunal isolation of this area. In the Late Cretaceous the former niches of the fast-swimming belemnites were taken over by the
modern types of cephalopods, which evolved endemically. The Cretaceous−Paleogene event only allowed the modern types of cephalopods to spread globally and to take over the niches
previously held by belemnites.
