Abstract

The δ18O record of well-preserved shells of the inoceramid Inoceramus hercules from the Úpohlavy working quarry (Czech Republic) provides an insight into the climate variability in the late Turonian benthic environment of the Bohemian Cretaceous Basin. Similar to modern bivalves, this inoceramid species built its shell near equilibrium with the oxygen isotope value of the ambient water. Due to the nearly year-round shell growth, sequentially sampled δ18O values allowed to estimate the narrowest sub-annual temperatures fluctuations that prevailed during lifetime of the organisms. In accordance with previous studies, reconstructed temperatures suggest colder water conditions (19.0 ± 0.9 °C) during the earliest late Turonian (coinciding with the Hyphantoceras Event; also known as Hitch Wood Event) than during the later part of the substage (20.9 ± 1.1 °C). Climate warming, however, did not affect the sub-annual temperature fluctuations evenly, but predominantly affected the warmest part of the year (at least +4.0 °C). On the contrary, the coldest recorded temperatures remained more or less invariant, varying not (much) more than +1.0 °C across the studied time interval. The observed changes in the benthic temperature estimates likely reflect shifts in seasonal sea surface temperature amplitudes in response to climate forcing. Given the widespread distribution of I. hercules in the upper Turonian–lower Coniacian hemipelagic strata of Europe, the present study sets the basis for future continent-wide sub-annually-resolved climate reconstructions.

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