FORAMINIFERAN

fərămˌənĭfˈərən, common name for members of the class Foraminifera, large, shelled ameboid protozoans belonging to the phylum Sarcodina. Most foraminiferan shells are calcareous, but some are siliceous, and others are built of sand grains. Initially, the shell contains a single chamber, and new chambers are added in a characteristic linear, spiral, or concentric series as the organism grows. Some shells reach several inches in diameter, but most species are less than a millimeter in diameter. Long, branching extensions of the cell (pseudopodia) reach from openings in the shell and fuse together to form a net in which plankton organisms are trapped. The net may cover an area 10 times the diameter of the shell, and crustaceans of 1 in. (2.5 cm) or more long may be caught by these much smaller protozoans.

A few foraminiferans live in freshwater or brackish water, but the majority are marine. They are found in all seas at all depths and are extremely abundant. Foraminiferans may be red, brown, or white in color. About 30 pelagic species live in the open sea, the most important belonging to the genus Globigerina.

Foraminiferans live near the water surface when young, but gravitate downward with age. When the animals die, the shells drop to the bottom, forming "globigerina ooze." Such ooze constitutes about half the sediments found on the roughly 50 million sq mi (130 million sq km) of ocean bottom that is covered with sediment in warm and tropical seas. Similar deposits in the past have contributed heavily to the formation of sedimentary rock, and the study of fossil foraminiferans has been extremely important in recognizing geological strata and for dating deposits. Layers of limestone or chalk, such as are found in Dover, England, and in Alabama and Mississippi, solidified from similar deposits of ooze in ancient seas. Foraminiferan fossils have been particularly useful in locating domes where petroleum deposits occur. Limestone used in some Egyptian pyramids contains skeletons of foraminiferans, especially of nummulites, which have coin-shaped skeletons.

Foraminiferans are classified in the phylum Sarcodina, class Granuloreticulosa.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Foraminiferan  - 22 results

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...Culver 1993; Wilson and Norris 2001). Foraminiferan tests are abundant and widespread in...stratigraphic purposes. The quality of the foraminiferan fossil record is particularly good...problems. Obtaining large amounts of foraminiferan DNA is hindered by their slow growth...
ic: benthic foraminiferan ratio curve (figure 12.3...The curve of planktonic: benthic foraminiferan ratios, a paleobathymetric proxy...upper bathyal, implied by benthic foraminiferan assemblages of the studied section...
...and also digest algal cells. Foraminiferan amoebae float or attach to objects...several unicellular red algae. One foraminiferan may associate with different algae, sometimes simultaneously. Foraminiferan algae are enclosed in vacuoles...
...generally agreed that the shell here referred to was that of a Foraminiferan, but different writers have interpreted its species variously...Scheme V, Fig. X had previously described and figured a foraminiferan shell -- probably Botalia -- which he had discovered in...
...Figure 3.3. Estimated diversification functions for two foraminiferan clades during the Neogene using linear A and nonlinear B...species number. To examine the nature of p S for the two foraminiferan clades, we plotted values of r against S. Although the...
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journal articles on: Foraminiferan  - 7 results

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...the Oligocene is defined by the extinction of the planktic foraminiferan Hantkenina (Berggren et al. 1995), which predated shifts...Oligocene boundary based on the extinction of the planktic foraminiferan Hantkenina (Berggren et al. 1995). The oxygen isotope...
...burrowed omission surfaces. The abundance of the large foraminiferan Nummulites, which housed symbiotic zooxanthellae, is evidence...macrofauna is characteristically marine, evidence from the low foraminiferan diversity (Murray Wright 1974) and oxygen isotope data...
...derived. (v) Abraded fragments of the large distinctive foraminiferan Nummulites laevigatus are found rarely in the lower 10 rn...could perhaps be demonstrated by biostratigraphical study of foraminiferan assemblages in soft flint pebbles (cf. Curry 1964, 1987...
...Kucera et al. 2005a) indicate cooling within the tropics during the LGM mostly between 0 and 3.5 C based on planktonic foraminiferan assemblages (Barrows Juggins 2005) and foraminiferal Mg/Ca ratios (Barker et al. 2005), but up to 5 C if based on...
...pointing to the occurrence of several palaeosols at the boundary interval and the insufficient resolution of conodont- or foraminiferan-based biostratigraphic schemes to establish the temporal significance of these diastems (Riley et al. 1994; Riley 1998...
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magazine articles on: Foraminiferan  - 1 result

 
 
...Manganese dioxide (MnO.sub.2) Barium sulfate (BaSO.sub.4) MINERAL PROTOCTISTA Calcium carbonate Amoeba and foraminiferan (CaCO.sub.3) shells Calcium phosphate (CAPO.sub.4) Silica (SiO.sub.2) Diatom and radiolarian shells...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Foraminiferan  - 1 result

 
 
FORAMINIFERAN f ram nif r n, common name for members...belonging to the phylum Sarcodina. Most foraminiferan shells are calcareous, but some are...deposits of ooze in ancient seas. Foraminiferan fossils have been particularly useful...


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