Grow your YouTube channel like a PRO with a free tool
Get Free YouTube Subscribers, Views and Likes

Palaeontology of the Cretaceous Chalk

Follow
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology

Dr. Jon Noad, University of Alberta, talks about the palaeontology of the Cretaceous chalk seas.

Chalk seas covered much of the Late Cretaceous world. The White Cliffs of Dover in the United Kingdom are one of the world’s most recognizable remnants of these oceans. Chalk is composed primarily of tiny coccolithophores, tiny circular discs formed as plankton that disintegrated after death. After they died, coccolithophores settled on the floor of the seabed as a thick ooze, forming this Cretaceous chalk.

Fossils in the Cretaceous chalk are often perfectly preserved in the very finegrained sediment; due to this exceptional preservation, researchers are able to study their morphology (form). Many of the inhabitants appear to show adaptations to living in the soft conditions of the seabed. There are a number of theories suggesting that many organisms evolved odd features to adapt to the living conditions of the chalky seabed.

In this presentation, Dr. Noad discusses the form and shape of the organisms found in the Cretaceous chalk and the various styles of preservation.

Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology Speaker Series 2018

posted by akhubekecg