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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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2021
Bright, J., Ebert C., KOSNIK M. A. T. T. H. E. W. A., Southon J. R., Whitacre K., Albano P. G., Flores C., Frazer T. K., Hua Q., Kowalewski M., Martinelli J. C., Oakley D., Parker W. G., Retelle M., RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O., Rivadeneira M. M., Scarponi D., Yanes Y., Zuschin M., & KAUFMAN D. A. R. R. E. L. L. S. (2021).  COMPARING DIRECT CARBONATE AND STANDARD GRAPHITE 14C DETERMINATIONS OF BIOGENIC CARBONATES. Radiocarbon. 1-17., 2021: Cambridge University Press AbstractWebsite

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The direct carbonate procedure for accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon (AMS 14C) dating of submilligram samples of biogenic carbonate without graphitization is becoming widely used in a variety of studies. We compare the results of 153 paired direct carbonate and standard graphite 14C determinations on single specimens of an assortment of biogenic carbonates. A reduced major axis regression shows a strong relationship between direct carbonate and graphite percent Modern Carbon (pMC) values (m = 0.996; 95% CI [0.991–1.001]). An analysis of differences and a 95% confidence interval on pMC values reveals that there is no significant difference between direct carbonate and graphite pMC values for 76% of analyzed specimens, although variation in direct carbonate pMC is underestimated. The difference between the two methods is typically within 2 pMC, with 61% of direct carbonate pMC measurements being higher than their paired graphite counterpart. Of the 36 specimens that did yield significant differences, all but three missed the 95% significance threshold by 1.2 pMC or less. These results show that direct carbonate 14C dating of biogenic carbonates is a cost-effective and efficient complement to standard graphite 14C dating.

2020
Erthal, F., & RITTER M. A. T. I. A. S. D. O. N. A. S. C. I. M. E. N. T. O. (2020).  Taphonomy of Recent Bioclastic Deposits from the Southern Brazil Shelf: Stratigraphic Potential. (Martínez, Sergio, Rojas, Alejandra, Cabrera, Fernanda, Ed.).Actualistic Taphonomy in South America. 1 - 16., 2020, Cham: Springer International Publishing Abstract

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In the Southern Brazil ShelfSouthern Brazil Shelf (SBS), surface bioclastic concentrationsBioclastic concentrations are associated with putative paleo-shorelines formed where wave ravinement surfaces are probably present. From the late Last Glacial Maximum, the SBS can be considered a sediment-starved passive margin continental shelf, with its morphostructural development fairly known. There, fourteen molluscan shell samples from near shelf-break deposits (“distal shell-rich”), eleven from proximal, low depth bioclastic deposits (“proximal shell-rich”) and ten samples from sandy substrate (“shell-poor”) were evaluated for taphonomic damage accordingly to updated protocols. Multivariate statistical analysis showed significant differences between the three groups of shelly samples. Low-intensity damage states (such as natural bright and ornamentation) dominate samples from the distal shell-rich deposit, whereas the inverse occurs in the proximal deposit (samples from the shell-poor locations present an intermediate damage pattern). This pattern is consistent either with onlap/toplap and backlap shell bedShell bed formation, according to characteristics determined in the literature. The condition of these three areas may reflect degrees of exposure at the taphonomically-active zone, the magnitude of time averagingTime-averaging and duration of shell accumulation, and even the lack of shelf accommodation space, which in turn is related to glacioeustatic sea-level oscillations.

2017
do Ritter, M. N., Erthal F., Matthew K. A., Coimbra J. C., Coimbra J. C., Kaufman D. S., & Kowalewski M. (2017).  {QUANTITATIVE} {ESTIMATES} {OF} {TIME}-{AVERAGING} {IN} {MOLLUSK} {DEATH} {ASSEMBLAGES} {ON} {THE} {SOUTHERN} {BRAZILIAN} {SHELF}. : Geological Society of America Abstract

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Agostini, V. O., Nascimento Ritter M. D., Macedo A. J., Muxagata E., & Erthal F. (2017).  What determines sclerobiont colonization on marine mollusk shells?. PLoS ONE. 12, , Number 9: Public Library of Science AbstractWebsite

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Empty mollusk shells may act as colonization surfaces for sclerobionts depending on the physical, chemical, and biological attributes of the shells. However, the main factors that can affect the establishment of an organism on hard substrates and the colonization patterns on modern and time-averaged shells remain unclear. Using experimental and field approaches, we compared sclerobiont (i.e., bacteria and invertebrate) colonization patterns on the exposed shells (internal and external sides) of three bivalve species (Anadara brasiliana, Mactra isabelleana, and Amarilladesma mactroides) with different external shell textures. In addition, we evaluated the influence of the host characteristics (mode of life, body size, color alteration, external and internal ornamentation and mineralogy) of sclerobionts on dead mollusk shells (bivalve and gastropod) collected from the Southern Brazilian coast. Finally, we compared field observations with experiments to evaluate how the biological signs of the present-day invertebrate settlements are preserved in molluscan death assemblages (incipient fossil record) in a subtropical shallow coastal setting. The results enhance our understanding of sclerobiont colonization over modern and paleoecology perspectives. The data suggest that sclerobiont settlement is enhanced by (i) high(er) biofilm bacteria density, which is more attracted to surfaces with high ornamentation; (ii) heterogeneous internal and external shell surface; (iii) shallow infaunal or attached epifaunal life modes; (iv) colorful or post-mortem oxidized shell surfaces; (v) shell size (<50 mm2 or >1,351 mm2); and (vi) calcitic mineralogy. Although the biofilm bacteria density, shell size, and texture are considered the most important factors, the effects of other covarying attributes should also be considered. We observed a similar pattern of sclerobiont colonization frequency over modern and paleoecology perspectives, with an increase of invertebrates occurring on textured bivalve shells. This study demonstrates how bacterial biofilms may influence sclerobiont colonization on biological hosts (mollusks), and shows how ecological relationships in marine organisms may be relevant for interpreting the fossil record of sclerobionts relationships in marine organisms may be relevant for interpreting the fossil record of sclerobionts. © 2017 Ochi Agostini et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

2016
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).  El sesgo del operador en la replicabilidad de los estudios tafonómicos comparativos. Revista Brasileira de Paleontologia. 19, 449–464., jan, Number 3: Sociedade Brasileira de Paleontologia AbstractWebsite

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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

cited By 4

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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.