International audienceMollusc death assemblages were recovered in 98 subtidal sampling stations on the seafloor of the shallow Pertuis Charentais Sea (Atlantic coast of France). Taxonomic composition and spatial distribution of death assemblages were investigated, as well as their response to sediment grain size (field data), bottom shear stress (coupled tide and wave hydrodynamic modelling), and sediment budget (bathymetric difference map). Results showed that molluscs are likely to be reliable paleoenvironmental indicators since death assemblages were able to acquire ecological changes within years (decadal-scale taphonomic inertia), and live–dead agreement inferred from existing data on living benthic communities was high, except close t...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Reef-associated sediments accumulate over time recording the history of biological communities. The ...
International audienceDuring the Late Holocene, the rate of sea level rise decreased and climate cha...
Coarse-grained chenier ridges contain abundant mollusc shells that help to reconstruct the evolution...
Molluscan live-dead fidelity studies investigate the influences of anthropogenic activities on marin...
Molluscan benthic assemblages provide unique opportunities for understanding both spatial and tempor...
The agreement between the death (DA) and the living (LA) molluscs assemblages is analyzed in an infr...
Death assemblages that occupy the upper tens of centimeters of sediment in shallow-marine settings a...
Taphonomic data can be applied to problems in paleoenvironmental analysis, stratigraphy and paleobio...
Rates of burial and transport of molluscan remains are essentially unknown for deeper continental sh...
Typescript (photocopy).The formation of the death assemblage from the living benthic community was s...
International audienceCoastal barriers represent around 15% of the world’s oceanic shorelines, occur...
Molluscan benthic assemblages provide unique opportunities for understanding both spatial and tempor...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Reef-associated sediments accumulate over time recording the history of biological communities. The ...
International audienceDuring the Late Holocene, the rate of sea level rise decreased and climate cha...
Coarse-grained chenier ridges contain abundant mollusc shells that help to reconstruct the evolution...
Molluscan live-dead fidelity studies investigate the influences of anthropogenic activities on marin...
Molluscan benthic assemblages provide unique opportunities for understanding both spatial and tempor...
The agreement between the death (DA) and the living (LA) molluscs assemblages is analyzed in an infr...
Death assemblages that occupy the upper tens of centimeters of sediment in shallow-marine settings a...
Taphonomic data can be applied to problems in paleoenvironmental analysis, stratigraphy and paleobio...
Rates of burial and transport of molluscan remains are essentially unknown for deeper continental sh...
Typescript (photocopy).The formation of the death assemblage from the living benthic community was s...
International audienceCoastal barriers represent around 15% of the world’s oceanic shorelines, occur...
Molluscan benthic assemblages provide unique opportunities for understanding both spatial and tempor...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages of 428 individually dated shells representing fo...
Reef-associated sediments accumulate over time recording the history of biological communities. The ...