Bulletin of the Geological Survey of Japan Top Page
Bulletin of the Geological Survey of Japan Vol.59 No.7/8 (2008)
Cover photograph | Table of Contents | Abstract
Special Issue: Selected papers of 9th ICPNS ( International Congress on Pacific Neogene Stratigraphy).
Cover photograph
Plant megafossils from the Lower Miocene of the Joban area, Northeast Japan.
The upper Lower Miocene Nakayama Formation of the Joban area abundantly yields plant megafossils deposited during the Mid-Neogene Climatic Optimum. The photographs show the occurrence of plant megafossils in one of these localities in a floodplain deposit. Plant megafossils from the muddy facies (left) were generally preserved in a flat-lying manner, and composed of a few dominant species that represent a local riparian community. Whereas, those from the sandy facies (right), often preserved in a curled or folded condition, included various species that had been accumulated from the lowland vegetation around the site of deposition.
(Photo and caption: Atsushi Yabe)
Table of Contents
Title | Author | |
---|---|---|
Preface | Kenshiro Ogasawara, Louie Marincovich Jr, Kazuhiko Kano and Yukio Yanagisawa (299) | 59_07_01.pdf [1 MB] |
Article | ||
Biogeographic reconstructions for the North Pacific Oligocene shelf zones: comparison of “warm” Eocene and “cold” Oligocene | Yuri B. Gladenkov (301-307) | 59_07_02.pdf [1 MB] |
The North Pacific advanced Oligocene to lower Miocene diatom stratigraphy. | Andrey Yu. Gladenkov (309-318) | 59_07_03.pdf [1 MB] |
Asymmetrical condition of the Bogor Basin (West Jawa, Indonesia) during the Middle-Miocene to Pliocene based on taphonomic study of shellbed and its sequence architecture. | Aswan, Emmy Suparka, Sonia Rijani, Dessy Sundari and Emma Yan Patriani (319-325) | 59_07_04.pdf [1 MB] |
Paleaogeography and Climatic Change recorded on Viviparidae Carbon and Oxygen Isotope in Mae Moh Coal Mine, Northern Thailand. | Benjavun Ratanasthien, Isao Takashima and Osamu Matsubaya (328-338) | 59_07_05.pdf [2 MB] |
Magnitude of Middle Miocene warming in North Pacific high latitudes: stable isotope evidence from Kaneharaia (Bivalvia, Dosiniinae). | Anton Oleinik, Louie Marincovich, Jr, Konstantin B. Barinov, and Peter K. Swart (339-353) | 59_07_06.pdf [1 MB] |
Cenozoic molluscan faunas and climatic changes in the northern Pacific related to Pacific gateways: review and perspective. | Kenshiro Ogasawara, Masanobu Takano, Hideo Nagato and Takanori Nakano (355-364) | 59_07_07.pdf [1 MB] |
Paleogene molluscan biogeography of the northwestern Pacific: Relationship between the formation of the Central Japan Province and the opening of the Shikoku Basin. | Yutaka Honda (365-368) | 59_07_08.pdf [1 MB] |
Eocene ostracode assemblages with Robertsonites from Hokkaido and their implications for the paleobiogeography of Northwestern Pacific. | Tatsuhiko Yamaguchi and Hiroshi Kurita (369-384) | 59_07_09.pdf [2 MB] |
Bioerosive structures formed by Miocene rock-boring bivalves in Hokkaido, Japan. | Akihiko Suzuki and Nobuhide Hiranaka (385-395) | 59_07_10.pdf [2 MB] |
Early Miocene terrestrial climate inferred from plant megafossil assemblages of the Joban and Soma areas, Northeast Honshu, Japan. | Atsushi Yabe (397-413) | 59_07_11.pdf [4 MB] |
Numerical age of the planktonic foraminiferal zonal boundary between N.15 and N.16 in the mid-latitude northwest Pacific region. | Hiroki Hayashi and Masaki Takahashi (415-422) | 59_07_12.pdf [1 MB] |
Chronological data for the Middle Miocene to Pliocene sequence around the southwestern Sendai Plain, with special reference to the uplift history of the Ou Backbone Range. | Osamu Fujiwara, Yukio Yanagisawa, Toshiaki Irizuki, Masanori Shimamoto, Hiroki Hayashi, Tohru Danhara, Keisuke Fuse and Hideki Iwano (423-438) | 59_07_13.pdf [4 MB] |
Abstract
Biogeographic reconstructions for the North Pacific Oligocene shelf zones: comparison of “warm” Eocene and “cold” Oligocene.
Yuri B. Gladenkov
Recent investigations in Kamchatka and Sakhalin in the active transitional zone from the Pacific Ocean to the Asian Continent have led to a new generation of Cenozoic stratigraphic schemes. Several regional stages recording distinctive phases of regional development and different biotic and abiotic events have been recognized. The following regional stages were distinguished in Kamchatka: the Yuzhno-Il’ pinskii (Paleocene), Kylanskii, Kilakirnunskii, Gailkhavilanskii (Eocene), and the Aluginskii (Oligocene). All of them contain planktonic and benthic foraminifers, mollusks, macroflora, and diatoms. Therefore, standard stages and zones can be outlined there. The Paleocene and Eocene zones were established by means of planktonic foraminifers, and the Oligocene zones by diatoms. In addition, provincial zones based on benthic assemblages were recognized, which can be used for regional correlations. Recently some new data on magnetostratigraphy and biomarkers became available. The regional stages were also characterized in terms of lithology with outlining sedimentary cycles. In the warm Eocene conditions, carbonate plankton, warm-water mollusks, and paratropical flora were spread over the entire North Pacific, whereas a cold-water (boreal type) biota was formed during the Oligocene and the warmwater associations migrated southward. So, the main biotic differentiation took place during Eocene to Oligocene.
The North Pacific advanced Oligocene to lower Miocene diatom stratigraphy.
Andrey Yu. Gladenkov
The current state of the North Pacific Oligocene and lower Miocene diatom stratigraphy is reviewed and its significant progress of the past 10-15 years is detailed. Biostratigraphic research in the region of the last decade demonstrates a real efficiency of the Oligocene to early Miocene diatom zonation based mainly on the materials from deep-sea cores. Significance of diatom zonation and its application for dating and subdivision of the Oligocene and lower Miocene sequences which previously proved difficult are discussed. The possibility of application of the oceanic zonation in studies of onshore stratigraphic sequences is emphasized. It is shown that in the North Pacific diatoms representing siliceous microplankton are the best biostratigraphic tool for age determination and correlation of the Oligocene and lower Miocene marine sediments lacking calcareous planktonic microfossils. Compilation of available diatom data from different localities allows a new correlation scheme to be proposed for the North Pacific Oligocene and lower Miocene.
Asymmetrical condition of the Bogor Basin (West Jawa, Indonesia) during the Middle-Miocene to Pliocene based on taphonomic study of shellbed and its sequence architecture.
Aswan, Emmy Suparka, Sonia Rijani, Dessy Sundari and Emma Yan Patriani
Examples of lithology, fossils and taphonomic features of shellbeds and intervening less-fossiliferous intervals are presented from two Middle Miocene to Pliocene successions of the Bogor Basin in West Jawa, Indonesia: the Nyalindung Formation in the Sukabumi area which was deposited in the western part of the basin and the Kaliwangu Formation in the Sumedang area, which is the eastern extent of sediments in the basin. As for Miocene to Pliocene 6th order depositional sequences, the two successions contain a variety of shellbeds which are often associated with surfaces or intervals that are characterized by sedimentary condensation, omission or erosion (e.g., sequence boundaries, ravinement surfaces, downlap surfaces and condensed sections). Stratigraphic patterns in the shellbeds tend to be similar and repetitive within a basin with respect to position and age. For example, shellbeds formed in the context of toplap are common only in the Nyalindung Formation, and are characterized by thicker units of trangressive systems tracts (TST) and thin units of highstand systems tracts (HST). In contrast, sedimentary cycles from the eastern part of the basin in the Kaliwangu Formation can be recognized as formed under conditions of marine backlap and downlap, where the TST units are thin but the HST units are thicker. Such contrasting cycle architectures are interpreted to reflect an asymmetrical shelf depositional setting between the western and eastern edges of the Bogor Basin since Miocene to Pliocene time.
Paleaogeography and Climatic Change recorded on Viviparidae Carbon and Oxygen Isotope in Mae Moh Coal Mine, Northern Thailand.
Benjavun Ratanasthien, Isao Takashima and Osamu Matsubaya
Viviparidae fossil collected from the R-, Q-, and K-coal zones of the Mae Moh coal mine, northern Thailand were analyzed for 13Carbon and 18Oxygen isotopes at Akita University, Japan. The result reveals that Viviparidae of the lower part of the coal mine contribute much heavier carbon isotopes than the upper part. The results revealed that Viviparidae shell 13C values are between 3.52 to 6.92 ‰ PDB in the R-coal zone, between 4.17 to 5.77 ‰ PDB in the Q-coal zone and between 1.41 to 1.34 ‰ PDB in the K-coal zone. For oxygen isotopes the lower part of the basin showed heavier isotopes than the upper part, where the 18O values are between -3.15 to -5.10 ‰ PDB in the R-coal zone, between -4.19 to -6.04 ‰ PDB in the Q-coal zone, and between -7.05 to -8.04 ‰ PDB in the K-coal zone. The isotope valued of Viviparidae shells collected in the Kew Lom reservoir in the Lampang area yielded 13C values between - 11.01 to -12.19 ‰ PDB and the 18O ‰ value between -6.64 to -7.04 ‰ PDB. The isotopic results of Viviparidae fossil shells from Mae Moh basin show the gradually change from the R-coal zone to the Q-, and the K-coal zone and significantly different from the Recent Viviparidae in the area. The heavy carbon isotopes in the R-coal zone could imply a much cooler climate than during the Q- and K-coal zone depositing period and the area were more close to the sea. The climatic condition during the Q- and K-coal zone depositing period was warmer and at a geographically higher elevation or latitude than during depositing the R-coal zone. The changing records in Mae Moh coal field are confirmed by temperate fossils in the other Oligocene to Lower Miocene basins in Northern Thailand. The change to a more tropical climate could have occurred during the Middle Miocene period, as indicated by paleomagnetic age dating in the K- and Q-coal zone. The northward movement of the Australian-Indian plate and collision with the Eurasian plate are suspected to be the main cause of the change.
Magnitude of Middle Miocene warming in North Pacific high latitudes: stable isotope evidence from Kaneharaia (Bivalvia, Dosiniinae).
Anton Oleinik, Louie Marincovich, Jr, Konstantin B. Barinov, and Peter K. Swart
The Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO) at ~ 16 Ma was the warmest interval during the Neogene. The peak of the MMCO in the North Pacific is marked by the appearance of the bivalve genus Kaneharaia (Bivalvia, Dosiniinae) in the high-latitude regions of Kamchatka and Alaska (55 - 65°N). Specimens of Kaneharaia sp. were collected from two early middle Miocene high-latitude localities in the North Pacific - the Sea urchin Horizon of northwestern Kamchatka and the Narrow Cape Formation of Alaska. Middle Miocene Kaneharaia specimens were incrementally sampled for oxygen and carbon stable isotope records of seasonality. Results were compared with stable isotope profiles constructed for two Recent species of Dosinia from subtropical waters. Assuming a constant seawater δ18O of -1.5 ‰ (Lear et al., 2000), including latitudinal correction (Zachos et al., 1994), oxygen isotope data yield mean annual temperatures of 19.3°C and 23.5°C and a mean annual range of temperatures of 19.8°C and 11.0°C for Alaska and Kamchatka, respectively. These temperature ranges are comparable to those of modern subtropical (40°N) mixed-layer waters, which implies significant warming episodes at high North Pacific latitudes during the peak of the MMCO. The variations in isotopic composition and inferred temperature ranges, as well as patterns of stratigraphic occurrence, imply that warm surface waters of the MMCO were not persistently present in high North Pacific latitudes, as they were at low latitudes. Instead, relatively short-term incursions of warm surface waters from the subtropical western Pacific episodically introduced warm-water mollusks into this generally cooler region.
Cenozoic molluscan faunas and climatic changes in the northern Pacific related to Pacific gateways: review and perspective.
Kenshiro Ogasawara, Masanobu Takano, Hideo Nagato and Takanori Nakano
Through the scientific results of IGCP Project 355, which studied Pacific gateways, the timing of onset or closure of each gateway has been defined. Some geological and paleontological events recognized in local areas took place as a result of gateway events. For instance, the appearance of siliceous biomarkers during the earliest Miocene in Sakhalin, northwestern Pacific, is coeval with the opening of Drake Passage during the earliest Miocene (23 Ma), and the invasion event of Hataiarca, an extinct Miocene bivalve, at 16.4 Ma in the Japanese Islands, is coeval with the closure of the Indonesian seaway. This closure indicates the first distinct appearance of the paleo-Kuroshio Current around the Philippine Islands. Japanese Paleogene faunas have been compiled recently from the biochronological aspect, and Miocene molluscan faunas are now divided into the subtropical Akeyo-Kunugidaira fauna (20-16.4 Ma), the tropical and/or subtropical Yatsuo-Kadonosawa fauna (16.4-15.3 Ma), the subtropical and/or warm temperate Moniwa fauna (15.3-15 Ma), the warm-temperate Older Shiobara-Yama fauna (15-11 Ma) and the mildtemperate and/or cool-temperate Younger Shiobara-Yama fauna (11-5.3 Ma). These faunas can be considered as responses to stepwise cooling stages from tropical to cool-temperate realms, respectively. Opening and closure of the Bering Strait during the Neogene was recently precisely redefined using diatom biochronology and fossil records of the bivalve Astarte. However, sea-water cooling is obvious after 6 Ma in high-latitude areas and tends to remain distinct until 2.5 Ma. The modern sub-arctic cold water-mass may have first appeared around 1 Ma as indicated by the first fossil record of the Chlamys islandica group in Hokkaido, Japan.
It is important to consider that some kinds of geological events recognized in a local and/or regional area might have taken place in response to global events. In addition, the precise age determination of related geological events is very important for the consideration of the cause and effect of events.
Paleogene molluscan biogeography of the northwestern Pacific: Relationship between the formation of the Central Japan Province and the opening of the Shikoku Basin.
Yutaka Honda
The Central Japan Province, which is one of the Paleogene molluscan biogeographic provinces in the northwestern Pacific, was formed in the Oligocene between the North Japan-Western Okhotsk and Taiwan-South Japan Provinces. Besides Asagai-Poronaian mollusks of the North Japan-Western Okhotsk Province, there are many endemic species in the Central Japan Province, including Lima sameshimai, Adulomya chitanii, Saxolucina matsushitai, Conchocele nakazawai, Pitar hataii, P. kotoi, P. murotensis, and Emarginula tokuyamai. Paleogene mollusks along the Pacific side of Shizuoka, the Kii Peninsula and Shikoku Island (in the Shimanto Belt) belong to the Central Japan Province. In contrast to the Nichinan Group (Oligocene to earliest early Miocene) of the Miyazaki area of southeastern Kyushu, the Shimanto Belt contains the Oligocene Ashiya fauna of northern Kyushu. The molluscan fauna of the Nichinan Group is therefore assigned to the Taiwan-South Japan Province. The boundary between the Central Japan and Taiwan-South Japan Provinces is located near to the northernmost Kyushu-Palau Ridge, on the western margin of the Shikoku Basin. This ridge has probably been the border that defines the boundary between the Central Japan and Taiwan-South Japan provinces. The formation of the Central Japan Province is closely related to the rifting and opening of the Shikoku Basin.
Eocene ostracode assemblages with Robertsonites from Hokkaido and their implications for the paleobiogeography of Northwestern Pacific.
Tatsuhiko Yamaguchi and Hiroshi Kurita
We report on Eocene ostracode species from Hokkaido, northern Japan for the first time and discuss their paleobiogeographic implications. Five species were found in the lower part of the Sankebetsu Formation in the Haboro area, and the Akabira and Ashibetsu Formations in the Yubari area, central Hokkaido. The ostracode assemblages are characterized by Robertsonites, a circumpolar Arctic genus of the modern fauna. This finding marks the southernmost occurrence of the Eocene record of the genus, as well as the oldest occurrence. As the characteristics of the Eocene Hokkaido fauna are similar to those of the modern-day fauna in the Seto Inland Sea, a contrast in species composition is observed between the Seto Inland Sea and Kyushu. This contrast is attributable to differences in sea temperature. Five species are described, including Robertsonites ashibetsuensis sp. nov.
Bioerosive structures formed by Miocene rock-boring bivalves in Hokkaido, Japan.
Akihiko Suzuki and Nobuhide Hiranaka
Fossilized rock-boring bivalves and associated borings in the Miocene Sankebetsu Formation in northern Hokkaido, Japan, are useful for reconstructing paleoenvironmental changes. The sediments are typical of shallow-marine facies in Hokkaido, and are rich in rock-boring bivalve traces. The Miocene host formation (Sankebetsu Formation, 23-19 Ma) unconformably overlies an earlier Eocene formation (Sakasagawa Formation). The inferred paleoenvironmental changes associated with deposition of the Miocene Sankebetsu Formation at the study locality started with development of a wave-cut bench of stiff mud or soft rock that was extensively bored by the rock-boring bivalve Platyodon nipponica to form unnamed ichnofossils. The bench was subsequently covered by sediments associated with a transgression and were gradually lithified. A later regression lead to the development of new bench of hard rock that was bored by the rock-boring bivalve Penitella kotakae to form the boring ichnofossil identified as Gastrochaenolites turbinatus. Finally, the new bench was covered by sediments during a major transgression, forming a shoreface environment characterized by storm-generated shell beds. The analysis of bioerosion on marine rocky surfaces is a useful tool for interpreting geological episodes such as relative oscillations of sea level, erosion/sedimentation rates, and the intensity of physical disturbance.
Early Miocene terrestrial climate inferred from plant megafossil assemblages of the Joban and Soma areas, Northeast Honshu, Japan.
Atsushi Yabe
Five Early Miocene plant megafossil assemblages from two separate sequences in the Joban and Soma areas on the Pacific side of Northeast Japan, which are interpreted to have accumulated from vegetation in near-sea coastal lowland, are analyzed to discuss the temporal change of floral composition and causal change in terrestrial climate. The Mixed Northern Hardwood forest characterized by various species of deciduous woody dicotyledons and deciduous and evergreen conifers in Stage I (ca. 23.4 Ma) shifted gradually to a Mixed Broad-leaved deciduous forest (Stage II: ca. 21 Ma), a Mixed Broad-leaved Evergreen and Deciduous forest (Stage III: ca. 20 Ma) and a Notophyllous Broad-leaved Evergreen forest (Stages IV and V: ca. 16-17 Ma) with an appearance and subsequent increase in evergreen and deciduous species that favors warmer climatic conditions, and a decrease of taxa which inhabited cooler climates. These changes reflect an increase in mean annual temperature in the first half of the period and a decrease in mean annual range of temperature in the latter half, which were caused by mitigation of winter coldness. A quantitative analysis of mean annual temperature based on the leaf margin analysis also revealed a clear trend of increasing temperature. An abrupt change in temperature observed at the transition from Stages I to III, and warm climate during Stages IV to V can be correlated with the periods influenced by subtropical to tropical shallow-marine climate. A comparison between terrestrial and shallow-marine climates in the Joban and Soma areas probably indicates a synchronous response to climate change occurred during the Early Miocene.
Numerical age of the planktonic foraminiferal zonal boundary between N.15 and N.16 in the mid-latitude northwest Pacific region.
Hiroki Hayashi and Masaki Takahash
The first occurrence of the planktonic foraminiferal species Neogloboquadrina acostaensis, which defines the zonal boundary between zones N.15 and N.16, was precisely determined just above the KT-1 Tuff in the lower part of the Kubota Formation in the Tanagura area, Northeast Japan. According to radiometric ages of the KT-1 Tuff, this biohorizon is estimated at 10.6 Ma. Compiling deep-sea drilling data demonstrates that the biohorizon as synchronous at least in the mid-latitudes.
Chronological data for the Middle Miocene to Pliocene sequence around the southwestern Sendai Plain, with special reference to the uplift history of the Ou Backbone Range.
Osamu Fujiwara, Yukio Yanagisawa, Toshiaki Irizuki, Masanori Shimamoto, Hiroki Hayashi, Tohru Danhara, Keisuke Fuse and Hideki Iwano
Middle Miocene to Pliocene chronostratigraphic data were obtained from three sections on the southwestern margin of the Sendai Plain, northeast Japan. In this tectonically active area, we newly infer the numerical age of the coastal sedimentary sequence on the basis of 27 fission track ages in combination with planktonic foraminiferal and diatom analyses. The Hatatate Formation cropping out along the Natori-gawa Section approximately ranges from 13 Ma to 11.5 Ma in age. The Tsunaki Formation ranges from 10 Ma to 8.3 Ma, and the basal part of the Nashino Formation is assigned to 6.4 Ma. Four major unconformities were recognized in the Middle Miocene to Pliocene sequence in the study area from a compilation of chronological data: ca. 9 Ma, 6.4Ma, latest Miocene, and 3.5Ma, respectively. The oldest unconformity was newly identified in this study. Formative timings of these unconformities correlate well with the uplift history of the Ou Backbone range reconstructed by Nakajima et al. (2006). These data provide a restriction to reconstruct the uplift history of the Northeast Honshu Arc.
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