Palaeoenvironmental dynamics of Holocene shoreface bryoliths from the southern coast of Brazil

Frederico Tapajós de Souza Tâmega*, Paula Spotorno-Oliveira, Paula Dentzien-Dias, Francisco Sekiguchi Buchmann, Leandro Manzoni Vieira, Kita Macario, Merinda Nash, Renato Bastos Guimarães, Heitor Francischini, Davide Bassi

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    6 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Beds of free-living coated nodules (coralline algae, bryozoans, acervulinid foraminifera) create shallow-water carbonate biogenic benthic habitats, which are sensitive to human disturbance and slow to recover. Holocene bryoliths, ranging from sub-spheroidal, sub-discoidal to sub-ellipsoidal in shape, were found scattered in the foredunes in ca. 30-km stretch along the Hermenegildo and Concheiros do Albardão beaches on the southernmost coast of Brazil (Santa Vitória do Palmar municipality, Rio Grande do Sul State). The dominating bryozoan species forming the bryolith is Biflustra holocenica Vieira, Spotorno-Oliveira and Tâmega sp. nov. The inner bryolith arrangement, generally asymmetrical, shows multilamellar and circumrotatory growth of colonies that envelop the bivalve Ostrea puelchana. Bryozoans and subordinate corals characterize the outer bryolith surfaces. The ichnogenera Gastrochaenolites (made by the boring bivalve Lithophaga patagonica) and Caulostrepsis occur throughout the bryoliths, from the inner part up to the outer surface. The studied bryoliths, originated in a shoreface setting at ca. 7910–7620 cal. yr BP and during subsequent storm waves, were resedimented onto the foreshore and foredunes (to ca. 5700 cal. yr BP) where the bryoliths were finally fossilized.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)662-675
    Number of pages14
    JournalHolocene
    Volume29
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2019

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Palaeoenvironmental dynamics of Holocene shoreface bryoliths from the southern coast of Brazil'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this