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Main Authors: Zhou, Zengyuan, Shi, Yubo, Yan, Tianhao, Wang, Xianfeng
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Biology 2026
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42274479/
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author Zhou, Zengyuan
Shi, Yubo
Yan, Tianhao
Wang, Xianfeng
author_facet Zhou, Zengyuan
Shi, Yubo
Yan, Tianhao
Wang, Xianfeng
Zhou, Zengyuan
Shi, Yubo
Yan, Tianhao
Wang, Xianfeng
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Tracing Marine Algal and Terrestrial Plant Inputs During Cenozoic Marine Incursions in the Northern Central Myanmar Basin: A Biomarker Perspective. Zhou, Zengyuan Shi, Yubo Yan, Tianhao Wang, Xianfeng Marine incursions can profoundly alter biological input and environmental conditions in transitional sedimentary basins, yet their ecological effects remain insufficiently understood in the northern Central Myanmar Basin (CMB). Here, we investigate Upper Cretaceous to Eocene mudrocks from the northern CMB using integrated organic biomarker and elemental geochemical analyses to reconstruct biological precursors, depositional environments, and ecosystem responses during seawater incursions. The biomarker assemblages, including n-alkanes, isoprenoids, tricyclic terpanes, and C-C regular steranes, indicate persistent mixed inputs of marine algal organic matter and terrestrial higher-plant debris. In particular, the upward increase in C steranes from the Upper Cretaceous to the Eocene suggests a progressive strengthening of terrestrial input through time. Elemental proxies, including Sr/Ba, Th/U, Y/Ho, (Zn + Ni)/(Ga × 5), Sr/Cu, Rb/Sr, and V/(V + Ni), indicate that deposition occurred under marine-influenced, brackish to locally saline, warm-humid, and predominantly weakly reducing to reducing conditions. We interpret these patterns as evidence that marine incursions reorganized habitat conditions and biological input in a near-equatorial transitional ecosystem. The increasing contribution of terrestrial biomass was likely linked to the progressive uplift and exhumation of the Indo-Burman Ranges, which expanded exposed land area and enhanced the supply of land-derived organic matter to the basin. These results provide a biomarker-based perspective on how marine incursions and paleogeographic reorganization jointly shaped ecosystem dynamics and organic-matter preservation in the northern CMB.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_42274479
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language en
publishDate 2026
publisher Biology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Tracing Marine Algal and Terrestrial Plant Inputs During Cenozoic Marine Incursions in the Northern Central Myanmar Basin: A Biomarker Perspective.
Zhou, Zengyuan
Shi, Yubo
Yan, Tianhao
Wang, Xianfeng
Tracing Marine Algal and Terrestrial Plant Inputs During Cenozoic Marine Incursions in the Northern Central Myanmar Basin: A Biomarker Perspective. Zhou, Zengyuan Shi, Yubo Yan, Tianhao Wang, Xianfeng Marine incursions can profoundly alter biological input and environmental conditions in transitional sedimentary basins, yet their ecological effects remain insufficiently understood in the northern Central Myanmar Basin (CMB). Here, we investigate Upper Cretaceous to Eocene mudrocks from the northern CMB using integrated organic biomarker and elemental geochemical analyses to reconstruct biological precursors, depositional environments, and ecosystem responses during seawater incursions. The biomarker assemblages, including n-alkanes, isoprenoids, tricyclic terpanes, and C-C regular steranes, indicate persistent mixed inputs of marine algal organic matter and terrestrial higher-plant debris. In particular, the upward increase in C steranes from the Upper Cretaceous to the Eocene suggests a progressive strengthening of terrestrial input through time. Elemental proxies, including Sr/Ba, Th/U, Y/Ho, (Zn + Ni)/(Ga × 5), Sr/Cu, Rb/Sr, and V/(V + Ni), indicate that deposition occurred under marine-influenced, brackish to locally saline, warm-humid, and predominantly weakly reducing to reducing conditions. We interpret these patterns as evidence that marine incursions reorganized habitat conditions and biological input in a near-equatorial transitional ecosystem. The increasing contribution of terrestrial biomass was likely linked to the progressive uplift and exhumation of the Indo-Burman Ranges, which expanded exposed land area and enhanced the supply of land-derived organic matter to the basin. These results provide a biomarker-based perspective on how marine incursions and paleogeographic reorganization jointly shaped ecosystem dynamics and organic-matter preservation in the northern CMB.
title Tracing Marine Algal and Terrestrial Plant Inputs During Cenozoic Marine Incursions in the Northern Central Myanmar Basin: A Biomarker Perspective.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42274479/