Abstract

Cretaceous brachiopods (Moutonithyris dutempleana) and belemnites (Neohibolites minimus) from the (Albian) Hunstanton Red Chalk Formation (Hunstanton, UK) were isotopically analysed with the aim of identifying palaeoecological and palaeotemperature trends. Shell preservation was assessed via thin section petrography and geochemical analyses. Oxygen isotopic compositions (and corresponding temperature interpretations) of well-preserved belemnites are similar in comparison to the brachiopod shells. Assuming calcite precipitation in isotopic equilibrium, they are interpreted to have occupied the same or similar warm (15–19°C) shallow marine environment. Further, these findings indicate that the belemnites mineralised in relatively warm waters and not in deep and cool waters as suggested for some belemnite species. The isotope data are thus inconsistent with the belemnites being associated with a cool water pulse, contrasting with events associated with the Cenomanian chalks. A difference δ13C between the belemnites and brachiopods is interpreted to originate from differences in metabolic rates.

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