Check out our latest #preprint in which we use a combination of #clumped and #oxygen #isotope measurements to reconstruct extreme summer temperatures experienced by #fossil #rudist bivalves from the Late #Cretaceous in Oman. All feedback is welcome!
https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-2308/
Living on the edge: Response of rudist bivalves (Hippuritida) to hot and highly seasonal climate in the low-latitude Saiwan site, Oman

Abstract. Earth’s climate history serves as a natural laboratory for testing the effect of warm climates on the biosphere. The Cretaceous period featured a prolonged greenhouse climate characterized by higher-than-modern atmospheric CO2 concentrations and mostly ice-free poles. In such a climate, shallow seas in low latitudes probably became very hot, especially during the summers. At the same time, life seems to have thrived there in reef-like ecosystems built by rudists, an extinct group of bivalve molluscs. To test the seasonal temperature variability in this greenhouse period, and whether temperature extremes exceed the maximum tolerable temperatures of modern marine molluscs, we discuss a detailed sclerochronological (incrementally sampled) dataset of seasonal scale variability in shell chemistry from fossil rudist (Torreites sanchezi and Vaccinites vesiculosus) and oyster (Oscillopha figari) shells from the late Campanian (75-million-year-old) low latitude (3° S paleolatitude) Saiwan site in present-day Oman. We combine trace element data and microscopy to screen fossil shells for diagenesis, before sampling well-preserved sections of a Torreites sanchezi rudist specimen for clumped isotope analysis. Based on this specimen alone, we identify a strong seasonal variability in temperature of 19.2 ± 3.8 °C to 44.2 ± 4.0 °C in the seawater at the Saiwan site. The oxygen isotopic composition of the seawater (δ18Osw) varied from -4.62 ± 0.86 ‰ VSMOW in winter to +0.86 ± 1.6 ‰ VSMOW in summer. We use this information in combination with age modelling to infer temperature seasonality from incrementally sampled oxygen isotope profiles sourced from the literature, sampling multiple shells and species in the assemblage. We find that, on average, the Saiwan seawater experienced strong seasonal fluctuations in monthly temperature (18.7 ± 3.8 to 42.6 ± 4.0 °C seasonal range) and water isotopic composition (-4.33 ± 0.86 to 0.59 ± 1.03 ‰ VSMOW). The latter would strongly bias the interpretation of stable oxygen isotopes in shell carbonate without independent control on either temperature or seawater composition. Combining our seasonal temperature estimates with shell chronologies based on seasonal cyclicity in stable isotope records and daily variability in trace element data, we show that T. sanchezi rudists record temperatures during the hottest periods of the year as well as during the winters, which were characterized by cooler temperatures and enhanced influx of freshwater. Both O. figari and V. vesiculosus plausibly stopped growing during these seasonal extremes. This study aims to demonstrate how high-resolution geochemical records through fossil mollusc shells can shed light on the variability in past warm ecosystems and open the discussion about the limits of life in the shallow marine realm during greenhouse climates. Future work should apply the clumped isotope paleothermometer on incrementally sampled bio-archives to explore the upper-temperature limits experienced by calcifiers in different environments throughout geological history.

the rudist is
the spiciest clam
that's why
he's shaped
like a trash can

the soul of
Oscar the Grouch
underneath
the Western
Interior Sea

Tylosaurus
shook his head
and swam away
and he'd say
"I can't believe
how rude
that clam
was to me
"
beneath
the Western
Interior Sea

#clam
#rudist
#WesternInteriorSea
#mosasaur
#fossils
#poetry
#fossilFriday
#fossilFridayOneDayEarly

The most recent Common Descent podcast is a good introduction to the #Mesozoic #Marine #Revolution:
https://commondescentpodcast.com/2023/09/16/episode-174-the-mesozoic-marine-revolution/

naturally, #clams are involved, both in their numbers, and in all the boring things that eat clams. : )

footnote: it baffles me that #rudist clams are so rarely compared to trash cans, but actually, a lot of them do resemble indoor trash cans. #Oscar the Grouch would fit in one nicely. And he was the rudist.

#snails

Episode 174 – The Mesozoic Marine Revolution

Listen to Episode 174 on PodBean, YouTube, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts! The seas of the Paleozoic Era were quite different from today, and between them, there was a gr…

The Common Descent Podcast