Articles | Volume 44, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/jm-44-431-2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/jm-44-431-2025
Research article
 | 
03 Nov 2025
Research article |  | 03 Nov 2025

A high-resolution late Paleocene–early Eocene organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst zonation of the United States Atlantic Coastal Plain

Mei Nelissen, Appy Sluijs, Debra A. Willard, and Henk Brinkhuis

Viewed

Total article views: 300 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
HTML PDF XML Total Supplement BibTeX EndNote
235 50 15 300 17 15 13
  • HTML: 235
  • PDF: 50
  • XML: 15
  • Total: 300
  • Supplement: 17
  • BibTeX: 15
  • EndNote: 13
Views and downloads (calculated since 03 Nov 2025)
Cumulative views and downloads (calculated since 03 Nov 2025)

Viewed (geographical distribution)

Total article views: 294 (including HTML, PDF, and XML) Thereof 294 with geography defined and 0 with unknown origin.
Country # Views %
  • 1
1
 
 
 
 
Latest update: 26 Nov 2025
Download
Short summary
We studied a short-lived episode of major warming ~56 million years ago, often seen as a past analogue for modern climate change. We developed a scheme to correlate biological signals from this warming period across six sediment cores from the US East Coast. Based on the occurrences and distribution of organic remains of planktonic microfossils, we can correlate events in time, allowing detailed reconstructions of how climate and environments changed regionally during this extreme warming.
Share