Abstract
A quantitative analysis is presented of benthic foraminifera from 25 samples of the Miocene and Pliocene section of DSDP Site 116 (eastern margin of the Hatton-Rockall Basin in the northeast Atlantic). Taxonomic turnover was gradual; however, abundance changes (dominance) were dramatic. During the early Middle Miocene, a major abundance change occurred to an assemblage dominated by modem taxa. This change can be associated with major stable isotopic changes documented at this time, and suggests a benthic foraminiferal response to a major reorganization of oceanic circulation. The causes of subsequent assemblage dominance fluctuations are more ambiguous; an increase in the Uvigerina fauna in the Early Pliocene may be associated with more negative 63'C values and a decreased contrast in 1'3C between the Atlantic and Pacific, the latter possibly indicative of reduced circulation in this part of the Atlantic.
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