Fossil molluscs from borehole Hollum (Ameland, the Netherlands) constrain three successive Quaternary interglacial marine intervals in the southern North Sea Basin

  • Tom Meijer Rammekens 36, 1823 HHAlkmaar, the Netherlands; and Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P.O. Box 9517, 2300 RALeiden, the Netherlands
  • Ronald Pouwer Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P.O. Box 9517, 2300 RALeiden, the Netherlands
  • Piet Cleveringa Clarissenhof 15, 1115CADuivendrecht, the Netherlands
  • Hein de Wolf Arendsweg 187, 1944JD Beverwijk, the Netherlands
  • Freek S. Busschers TNO – Geological Survey of the Netherlands, Princetonlaan 6, 3584 CBUtrecht, the Netherlands
  • Frank P. Wesselingh Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P.O. Box 9517, 2300 RALeiden, the Netherlands; and Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, Princetonlaan 8a, 3584 CBUtrecht, the Netherlands https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3655-0701
Keywords: Late Pleistocene, Middle Pleistocene, Holocene, Mollusca, northern Netherlands, stratigraphy

Abstract

When dealing with stratigraphic successions in marginal basin settings, the geological record is often fragmented due to erosion and reworking processes. The North Sea Basin is an example: it has a fragmented Quaternary record; in particular, Middle Pleistocene intervals are poorly known. As a result, we have little insight into climate, marine environmental conditions and biodiversity in this period. Here we describe and discuss a succession of three interglacial marine mollusc-bearing intervals in a borehole from Ameland in the northern Netherlands (borehole B01H0189 near Hollum). These intervals are attributed to marine isotope stages MIS7, MIS5e and MIS1. The Holocene Celtic type of faunas (interval 0–26.24 m below surface (b.s.)) and Eemian Lusitanian type of faunas (26.24–30.40 m b.s.) are well-known from previous research. The newly reported MIS7 Oostermeer fauna (32.80–39.00 m b.s.) represents mostly full marine settings between storm wave base and fair-weather wave base. In composition and diversity, the MIS7 and MIS1 faunas strongly resemble and differ from the MIS5e fauna. This is the first well-documented record of three stacked marine interglacial assemblages from the southern North Sea Basin at one location. This new record enables us to make complete marine faunal characterisations of successive interglacial periods. Key implications for southern North Sea stratigraphy and palaeogeography are the resemblance of marine faunas and conditions in MIS7 and MIS1, the presence of a relatively warm latest MIS6 freshwater interval and confirmation and characterisation of the warm Eemian interval north of the classical type area.

Published
2021-05-07
How to Cite
Meijer , T., Pouwer , R., Cleveringa , P., de Wolf , H., Busschers , F. S., & Wesselingh , F. P. (2021). Fossil molluscs from borehole Hollum (Ameland, the Netherlands) constrain three successive Quaternary interglacial marine intervals in the southern North Sea Basin. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, 100. https://doi.org/10.1017/njg.2021.2
Section
Regular paper