
| Our emphasis in faculty specialties has been
increasingly on quantitative aspects of micropaleontology,
paleoecology/paleoenvironmental analysis, paleo-oceanography, and stratigraphy.
Our research/instructional faculty in these areas includes Anthony J. Arnold,
William C. Parker, and Sherwood W. Wise . The FSU Antarctic Marine Geology Research
Facility and Core Library is a strong adjunct of the research program. Many of the
other faculty at FSU are "soft-rock oriented", and interact with the paleontology
group.
Foraminifera
Calcareous Nannofossils
Evolutionary Paleoecology
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| Dr. Arnold and his students are actively involved in research in two broad areas of foraminiferal research. The first is the distribution, diversity, and paleoecology of benthic foraminifera. Dr. Arnold's planktonic foraminiferal studies emphasize evolutionary lineage studies, macroevolutionary analysis, and light isotope work. | |
| This program emphasizes the use of multivariate statistical techniques to explore and quantify the ecologic relationships among extinct groups of organisms, and to attempt to relate these relationships to their evolutionary history. | |
| Calcareous nannofossils are produced by planktonic algae and are the primary constituents of deep sea calcareous oozes and chalks. We use quantitative methods and other means to refine biostratigraphic zonation, their correlations with chemo- and paleomagneto-stratigraphy, taxonomy and evolutionary trends, and to reconstruct paleoclimates and paleo-oceanographic histories. |