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2023
Zanchi Watanabe, D. S., Barboza E. G., da Rosa M. L. C. C., Dillenburg S. R., Caron F., RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O., de Bitencourt V. J. B., & Manzolli R. P. (2023).  Geomorfologia e padrões de empilhamento da barreira holocênica no Litoral Norte do Rio Grande do Sul. Revista Brasileira de Geomorfologia. 24, , mar., Number 1 AbstractWebsite

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Schmidt-Neto, H., Horodyski R. S., do Ritter M. N., & Dasgupta S. (2023).  Abandoned Quaternary gastropod shells: Incrustation, bioerosion, and fragmentation approaches. Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 131, 104634. AbstractWebsite

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At the beach, death assemblages are constantly reworked by wind and waves. One of the various consequences of this shore dynamic is the constant burial and exhumation of the shells, making them inappropriate for epibionts. However, some gastropod shells collected in the death assemblages arranged on the foreshore of the coastal plain of south Brazil were hardly encrusted. Olivancillaria urceus corresponds to 48.8% of all encrusted taxa, suggesting that some shell species may play a more striking role than others as available bioclasts. Therefore, the research aims to discuss the taphonomic implications for epibionts and bioerosion in gastropod shells. Abandoned gastropod shells were collected on 27 sites along a 150 km coastal strip in southernmost Brazil. Epibionts and bioerosion traces were identified, and their frequency was calculated considering their abundance, which taxa they occurred in, and their settlement on the different parts of the shells. At least 13 of 21 taxa were colonized by epibionts, of which 97% were by bryozoans. Other epibionts recognized were serpulid tubes, bivalves, and balanids. Fifteen taxa were bioeroded, showing traces made by worms (cf. Caulostrepsis), bryozoans (cf. Pennatichnus), balanids (cf. Rogerella), bivalves (cf. Gastrochaenolites), and sponges (cf. Entobia). The results reached in this survey suggest that the bryozoans have an advantage over other epibionts at colonizing the gastropod shells.

Bocalon, V. L. S., Coimbra J. C., Bauermann S. G., do Ritter M. N., Pivel M. A. G., De Oliveira M. A. T., & de Primam G. L. L. (2023).  Landscape changes in the Campos region, southernmost Brazil, since the early deglaciation based on a multi-proxy analysis of a peat bog. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 623, 111631. AbstractWebsite

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The paleoecological evolution of a peat bog in the Campos region, Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil, was determined based on an integrated study of stratigraphy, palynology, and geochronology. The peat bog is constituted of silty-clay material, with high levels of ash (residue on ignition) and organic matter content that was deposited on a sandy substrate. Palynological analysis show that grassland taxa dominated from the base of the core at the early deglacial (∼17.4 cal kyr B.P.) to the Present. Four pollen zones were identified: CCQ I Zone (3.20 m to 2.50 m), covering the deglaciation (Upper Pleistocene), corresponding to dry climate conditions; CCQ II Zone (2.50 m to 1.60 m, latest deglaciation and Early Holocene), associated with a slightly humid climate; CCQ III Zone (1.60 m to 0.50 m, mid to late Holocene), established under very humid climatic conditions; and CCQ IV Zone (0.50 m to 0.00 m, last ∼500 years), representative of a low-humidity period. The floristic composition of grassland communities observed throughout the drill core is very similar to that found in the region where the municipality of Cacequi is located, in which Poaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Rubiaceae were identified as the most abundant families. Consequently, although in the last ∼17.4 cal kyr B.P. the humidity oscillated, the grassland vegetation remained predominant, although not being represented by the same families, as indicated by changes in the floristic composition among the four pollen zones. Palynological and geochronological data, when compared with other sectors of the Río de la Plata Grasslands, show a predominance of dry conditions over the studied interval. From the early deglacial until the Present, climatic fluctuations shaped the diversity of plant communities and affected the particularities of each sector of the Río de la Plata Grasslands, including the Campos region. High ash content was detected along the core, similar to what occurs with other peatlands already studied in Brazil. In the peat bog analyzed, Poaceae is the predominant family, being known as a major producer of biomineralized structures, which would explain the high ash content recorded.

Saldanha, J. P., Del Mouro L., Horodyski R. S., RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O., & Schmidt-Neto H. (2023).  Taphonomy and paleoecology of the Lontras Shale Lagerstätte: Detailing the warming peak of a Late Paleozoic Ice Age temperate fjord. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 609, 111326. AbstractWebsite

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Fjords are considered biodiversity hotspots and aquatic critical zones, being extremely sensitive to climate change due to close oceanic, terrestrial, and glacial interactions. These ecosystems have received a great deal of attention in research on current and future anthropic impacts. Despite this, there is no analog in the geological record that presents icehouse-greenhouse biological and climatic changes. Here we present an analog, through a detailed taphonomic survey of the Lontras Shale Lagerstätte (Itararé Group, Paraná Basin, Brazil), related to a climatic optimum of the end of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age (Late Pennsylvanian), in which a temperate outer paleofjord with a rich well-preserved biota was installed. In the monotone layers of black shale, we find subtle variations of the dominant skeletal type, rates of fragmentation and disarticulation, and other taphonomic aspects that define distinct taphofacies. Each of them is the result of distinct time-averaging related to mass mortality events, turbidity, and depositional hiatus periods at different scales and intensities, mixing the ecologic census with short-term and long-term within-habitat assemblages. In addition, the rich paleobiota was reconstructed with autochthonous and allochthonous benthic fauna, many marine nektonic organisms, and intense continental contribution of terrestrial bioclasts, that proliferated and were exceptionally preserved by the establishment of an anoxic temperate outer fjord. The taphofacies show an evolution in a high-frequency sequence within a highstand systems tract, linked to climatic improvement. Furthermore, taphonomic detailing can be used as a comparison of deep marine and deep lacustrine taphofacies, in addition to serving as an analog for the short-time scale biological, biogeochemical, climatic, and stratigraphic changes associated with the icehouse–greenhouse transition in the past, present, and future.

2022
Lopes, R. P., do Ritter M. N., Barboza E. G., da Câmara Rosa M. L. C., Dillenburg S. R., & Caron F. (2022).  The influence of coastal evolution on the paleobiogeography of the bivalve Anomalocardia flexuosa (Linné, 1767) along the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. 103662., 2021 AbstractWebsite

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Anomalocardia flexuosa is a bivalve that inhabits shallow, low hydrodynamics coastal environments of normal to brackish salinity, currently distributed from the Caribbean up to the state of Santa Catarina (∼28°S) in southern Brazil, but its fossil record extends along the southwestern Atlantic up to ∼40°S, in Argentina. Its absence in southern coasts today is attributed to ocean water cooling as a result of Middle-Late Holocene changes in relative influence of the warm waters of the Brazil Current and the cold waters of the Malvinas/Falklands Current, but geomorphologic and stratigraphic data suggest that coastal evolution controlled mainly by glacioeustatic-driven oscillations may have also played a role on the shifts of its distribution. Here we review the past and present distribution of A. flexuosa along southern Brazil, establishing a correlation with the Holocene geological history of this area. The Holocene post glacial marine transgression (PMT) produced a large complex of interconnected coastal lagoons landward of sandy barriers stretching from southern Brazil (state of Rio Grande do Sul) to Argentina, creating a corridor that allowed for the southward dispersion of A. flexuosa. The few available numerical ages indicate that A. flexuosa was established in the northern coastal plain of Rio Grande do Sul around ∼7.1 ka BP, and by ∼5.8 ka BP it had reached the southern plain, facilitated by warmer ocean waters than today and the sea-level highstand of 6–5 ka BP. The combination of cooling, sea-level fall that reduced marine influence, and fluvial inputs of freshwater and sediments, converted most of the lagoon complex into smaller isolated freshwater lakes after ∼4 ka BP, leading to the regional extinction of that species. The fossils of A. flexuosa and other tropical mollusks in middle and late Pleistocene interglacial barrier-lagoon coastal deposits along the southwestern Atlantic suggest that their latitudinal distribution shifted cyclically, driven by glacial-interglacial oscillations of sea-level and temperatures. The understanding of the coastal processes that affected the distribution of A. flexuosa may help assessing how mollusks and other marine species respond to environmental forcings related to sea-level oscillations and climate, thus contributing from a paleobiological perspective for conservation and management efforts under present and future scenarios of changes in coastal ecosystems.

2021
Lopes, R. P., Pereira J. C., Caron F., RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O., De Souza M. S., Dillenburg S. R., Barboza E. G., Tatumi S. H., Yee M., Kinoshita A., & Baffa O. (2021).  Late Pleistocene-Holocene fossils from Mirim Lake, southern Brazil, and their paleoenvironmental significance: II – Mollusks. 112, 103546., 2021 AbstractWebsite

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The fossil molluscan assemblages found on the shores of Mirim Lake, in southern Brazil and Uruguay, provide information about the environmental changes and geological evolution of that water body. The storm-generated shell deposits at Latinos Spit on the Brazilian shore are dominated by the estuarine bivalve Erodona mactroides, represented mostly by juveniles, and the gastropod Heleobia australis. Species previously unrecorded in this site include the marine gastropods Cylichnella bidentata, Buccinanops cochlidium and Pachycymbiola brasiliana, and the bivalves Tagelus plebeius, Ostrea puelchana, Crassostrea cf. praia, Mactra isabelleana, Anomalocardia flexuosa and Cyrtopleura costata. The two latter currently inhabit tropical areas to the north of Rio Grande do Sul, and their presence in Mirim Lake indicates average coastal water temperatures about 2–3 °C warmer than today. This condition promoted the precipitation of calcium carbonate from dissolved shells, thus cementing together sand and shells in the form of coquinas. The stratigraphic succession, OSL ages obtained in quartz sand from one coquina, radiocarbon dated shells, and δ13C and δ18O of five E. mactroides and five marine species indicate that Mirim Lake became a brackish lagoon around 7.6 ka ago, in response to the postglacial marine transgression (PMT), followed by fully marine conditions during the sea-level highstand of 6–5 ka BP. Marine influence was reduced after ∼4 ka BP as the result of sea-level fall and the closure of the connection with the ocean, related to the evolution of the sandy barrier that originated the modern shoreline. The environmental changes recorded in Mirim Lake help understand how coastal lagoons and their associated ecosystems respond to sea-level oscillations, which may be relevant to address future responses of these water bodies to the ongoing climate change.

Barboza, E. G., Dillenburg S. R., RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O., Angulo R. J., da Silva A. B., da Camara Rosa M. L. C., Caron F., & de Souza M. C. (2021).  Holocene Sea-Level Changes in Southern Brazil Based on High-Resolution Radar Stratigraphy. Geosciences. 11, , Number 8 AbstractWebsite

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This paper focuses on high-resolution coastal stratigraphy data, which were revealed by the Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) system. Surveys performed with GPR on the surface of prograded barriers reveal patterns of reflections that allow the interpretation of the geometry and stratigraphy of coastal deposits in a continuous mode. At the Curumim prograded barrier in southern Brazil (29°30′ S–49°53′ W), a two-dimensional transverse GPR survey revealed, with high precision, a serial of contacts between aeolian deposits of relict foredunes and relict beach deposits that have a strong correlation with sea level. In a 4 km GPR profile, a total of 24 of these contacts were identified. The high accurate spatial positioning of the contacts combined with Optical Stimulated Luminescence dating resulted in the first confident sea-level curve that tells the history of sea-level changes during the last 7 ka on the southernmost sector of the Brazilian coast. The curve shows that sea-level was still rising before 6 ka BP, with a maximum level of 1.9 m reached close to 5 ka BP; after that, sea-level started to falling slowly until around 4 ka BP when fall accelerated.

2020
Dillenburg, S. R., Barboza E. G., Rosa M. L. C. C., Caron F., Cancelli R., Santos-Fischer C. B., Lopes R. P., & RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O. (2020).  Sedimentary records of Marine Isotopic Stage 3 (MIS 3) in southern Brazil. 40(6), 1099 - 1108., 2020 AbstractWebsite

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In this paper, a reinterpretation of the older 14C ages of the Pleistocene substrate of the Holocene barrier-lagoon system of three coastal localities in southern Brazil is presented (Hermenegildo, Cassino, and Curumim). Sedimentological, geochronological, palynological, and diatom analyses of a sedimentary deposit formed in an estuarine/shallow marine environment are examined. This sedimentary deposit is presently found between 22 and 25 m depth below sea level in the Pinheira coastal plain. Results from all studied sites indicate that the deposit was formed under a former sea level of Marine Isotopic Stage 3 (MIS 3) that may have oscillated in the study region between 5 and 23 m depth below present sea level, from 36.2 to 47.7 ka. These results are reinforced by studies of nearby sites, including southeast Brazil. The Pleistocene substrate of the Holocene lagoonal-barrier system, at depths lower than 5 m below sea level, seems to correspond to sedimentary deposits of the Pleistocene barrier formed during MIS 5, while at depths greater than 5 m below sea level, they might correspond to sedimentary deposits that were formed during the relative high sea levels of MIS 3.

2018
Petró, S. M., Do Nascimento Ritter M., Pivel M. A. G., & Coimbra J. C. (2018).  Surviving in the water column: Defining the taphonomically active zone in pelagic systems. Palaios. 33, 85-93., Number 3: SEPM Society for Sedimentary Geology AbstractWebsite

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The dynamic physical interval where postmortem alteration of biological remains takes place is widely known as the taphonomically active zone (TAZ). In benthic systems, the TAZ is conventionally considered to be delimited by an upper boundary at the sediment-water interface and a lower boundary corresponding roughly to the deepest sediment layer influenced by bioturbation. However, this definition was developed in the context of marine or continental environments inhabited by benthic fauna and disregards the modifications that pelagic remains undergo while sinking through the water column. Indeed, long before the skeletal remains of planktonic organisms reach the sediment-water interface, they may suffer significant taphonomic damage, primarily due to dissolution. The magnitude of dissolution depends on the composition of the skeletal remains, seawater properties, and the nature and intensity of biological processes in the water column. In open ocean environments, siliceous remains (e.g., diatoms, radiolarians) suffer enhanced dissolution in the upper water column, where seawater is undersaturated in silica, whereas pelagic carbonate remains (e.g., foraminifers, coccolithophores) experience higher dissolution below the lysocline (the depth where there is a sharp increase in dissolution rate) until they reach the carbonate compensation depth (CCD), where dissolution is complete. Therefore, we argue that the TAZ concept for pelagic organisms should be extended to include the water column through which they settle after death. Furthermore, the extent of taphonomic damage of pelagic microfossils can be used as a potential proxy for past changes in seawater chemistry and circulation related to oceanographic conditions. © 2018, SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology).

2016
Do Nascimento Ritter, M., De Francesco C. G., Erthal F., Hassan G. S., Tietze E., & Martínez S. A. (2016).  Manifesto of the South American school of (actualistic) taphonomy. Palaios. 31, 20-24., Number 2: SEPM Society for Sedimentary Geology AbstractWebsite

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do Ritter, M. N., Francischini H., Kuhn L. A., Da Luz N. C., Michels F. H., de Morais A. L. M., Paim P. A. V., Xavier P. L. A., & de Francesco C. G. (2016).  {Operator and replicability bias in comparative taphonomic studies}. : PANGAEA Abstract

Supplement to: Ritter, MN et al. (2016): Los sesgos del operador y de la replicabilidad en los estudios tafonómicos comparativos. Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia, 19(3), 449-464, https://doi.org/10.4072/rbp.2016.3.10

The operator effect is a well-known analytical bias already quantified in some taphonomic studies. However, the influence of operator bias in the replicability on taphonomic studies has still not been considered. Here, we quantified for the first time this bias using different multivariate statistical techniques, testing if the operator effect is related to the replicability. We analyzed the results reported by 15 operators working on the same dataset. Each operator analyzed 30 bioclasts (bivalve shells) by site, from a total of five sites, considering the following taphonomic attributes: shell fragmentation, edge rounding, corrasion, bioerosion, and color alteration. The operator effect followed the same pattern reported in previous studies, characterized by a worse correspondence for those attributes having more than two levels of damage categories. However, the effect did not appear to have relation to replicability, because nearly all operators found differences among sites. The binary attribute bioerosion exhibited 83{%} of correspondence among operators, but at the same time, it was the taphonomic attribute that showed the highest dispersion among operators (28{%}). Therefore, we concluded that binary attributes, despite indicating a reduction of the operator effect diminishes replicability, result in different interpretations of concordant data. We found that a variance value of nearly 8{%} among operators was enough to generate a different taphonomic interpretation, in a Q-mode cluster analysis. The results reported here showed that the statistical method employed influences the level of replicability and comparability of a study and that the availability of results may be a valid alternative to reduce bias.