Emmanuelle Vennin

Emmanuelle Vennin
University of Burgundy | UB · Unité Mixte de Recherche Biogéosciences

Professor

About

192
Publications
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3,814
Citations
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January 2005 - present
University of Burgundy
Position
  • Professor (Full)

Publications

Publications (192)
Article
The sequence stratigraphic framework of initiation and growth of carbonates in environments impacted by siliciclastic inputs is highly variable because of the biogenic nature of the sedimentary production and its sensitivity to environmental conditions. Using panorama interpretations, logging, and characterization of benthic communities, the mixed...
Article
Full-text available
Carbonate mud is crucial in the global carbon cycle and serves as a key sedimentary archive for paleoclimate reconstruction. Understanding the mechanisms behind its formation is crucial for explaining long-term carbon storage, including atmospheric carbon dioxide transfer to the hydrosphere and variations in mud production over geological timescale...
Article
Full-text available
Extracellular polymeric substances (EPSs) are an important organic carbon reservoir in many pelagic and benthic environments. The production of EPS is intimately associated with the growth of phyto- and picoplankton. EPS plays a critical role in carbonate precipitation through the binding of cations and by acting as a nucleation site for minerals....
Preprint
Full-text available
Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) are an important organic carbon reservoir in many pelagic and benthic environments. The production of EPS is intimately associated with the growth of phyto- and picoplankton. EPS plays a critical role in carbonate precipitation through the binding of cations and by acting as a nucleation site for minerals. L...
Article
The nitrogen isotopic composition of organic matter is controlled by metabolic activity and redox speciation and has therefore largely been used to uncover the early evolution of life and ocean oxygenation. Specifically, positive δ15 N values found in well-preserved sedimentary rocks are often interpreted as reflecting the stability of a nitrate po...
Article
Full-text available
The Great Basin included several lacustrine systems that accommodated extensive carbonate buildups: the Lahontan on the western side (dating back to 48 kyr cal BP) and the Bonneville (from 30 to 11.5 kyr cal BP) and Great Salt Lake (starting 11.5 kyr cal BP) on the eastern side of the basin. The eastern lakes show a transition from freshwater to hy...
Article
Full-text available
The early evolutionary and much of the extinction history of marine animals is thought to be driven by changes in dissolved oxygen concentrations ([O2]) in the ocean1–3. In turn, [O2] is widely assumed to be dominated by the geological history of atmospheric oxygen (pO2)4,5. Here, by contrast, we show by means of a series of Earth system model expe...
Poster
Full-text available
Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) are complex macromolecules involved in different processes such as biofilm formation and mineral precipitation. EPS is produced during microbial growth, and the amount and the proprieties depend on environmental conditions, such as nutrients, light, and pH. Excessive production of EPS can occur during phytop...
Article
Full-text available
We document an upper upper Albian (Mortoniceras rostratum Zone) cephalopod assemblage from Clansayes (Drôme, south-eastern France). Although fossils are rare in local exposures and in the single sampled level, a decade of intensive fossil collecting yielded 290 ammonite and 5 nautilid specimens. In total, we describe 1 spe- cies of nautilid and 24...
Article
Full-text available
The role of culture conditions on the production of exopolymeric substances (EPS) by Synechococcus strain PCC7942 was investigated. Carbonate mineral precipitation in these EPS was assessed in forced precipitation experiments. Cultures were grown in HEPES-buffered medium and non-buffered medium. The pH of buffered medium remained constant at 7.5, b...
Article
Full-text available
Interpreting the paleoecosystems of ancient microbialites relies on our understanding of how modern microbialites form in relation with the bio-physico-chemical conditions of their environment. In this study, we investigated the formation of modern carbonate microbialites in the hydrothermal system of La Salsa in Laguna Pastos Grandes (Bolivia), wh...
Article
Full-text available
The mass extinction characterizing the Permian/Triassic boundary (PTB; ~ 252 Ma) corresponds to a major faunal shift between the Palaeozoic and the Modern evolutionary fauna. The temporal, spatial, environmental, and ecological dynamics of the associated biotic recovery remain highly debated, partly due to the scarce, or poorly-known, Early Triassi...
Preprint
Full-text available
The early evolutionary and much of the extinction history of marine animals, is thought to be driven by changes in dissolved oxygen concentrations ([O 2 ]) in the ocean1–3. In turn, [O 2] is widely assumed to be dominated by the geological history of atmospheric oxygen ( p O 2 )4,5. Here, in contrast, we show via a series of Earth system model expe...
Article
Full-text available
The Limagne Basin (Massif Central, France) originated during a major, European-scale, extensive event (European Cenozoic Rift System), which led to the formation of several rift systems in the foreland of the Alps between the Upper Eocene and Pliocene. A fluvio-lacustrine system emplaced in the basin and resulted in a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic...
Article
Full-text available
The late Smithian extinction represents a major event within the Early Triassic. This event generally corresponds to a succession of two, possibly three successively less diverse, cosmopolitan ammonoid assemblages, which when present, provide a robust biostratigraphic framework and precise correlations at different spatial scales. In the western US...
Article
Full-text available
The Salazac locality (Gard, southeastern France) is renowned for the richness of its cephalopod fauna (especially ammonites) from the Mortoniceras fallax Zone (uppermost Albian, Lower Cretaceous). However, most ammonite species have paradoxically been scarcely illustrated up to now. Furthermore, the rare assessments of ammonite taxonomic diversity...
Conference Paper
Cyanobacteria are major contributors to precipitation of minerals forming biogenic carbonates. The photosynthetic activity of cyanobacteria increases pH, favoring CaCO3 precipitation. These phototrophs produce copious amounts of exopolymeric substances (EPS) with a strong binding capacity for cations such as Ca2+. Environmental conditions (e.g., pH...
Article
Coarse-grained sediments deposited in high-energy environments are usually considered unfavorable to the preservation of fossil tracks. Here we report dinosaur footprints showing good physical preservation, despite being found in coarse-grained sandstones of alluvial origin from the Upper Triassic of Ardèche, southeastern France. The ichnoassemblag...
Article
Full-text available
Laguna Pastos Grandes (Bolivia), nesting in a volcanic caldera, is a large, palustrine-to-lacustrine system fed by meteoric and hydrothermal calco-carbonic fluids. These different fluid inputs favor a complex mosaic of depositional environments, including hydrothermal springs, pools, and an ephemeral lake, producing abundant present-day carbonates...
Article
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The earliest evidence of life captured in lithified microbial mats (microbialites) predates the onset of oxygen production and yet, modern oxygenic mats are often studied as analogs based on their morphological similarity and their sedimentological and biogeochemical context. Despite their structural similarity to fossil microbialites, the presence...
Article
Full-text available
Intracratonic basins tend to subside much longer than the timescale predicted by thermal relaxation of the lithosphere. Many hypotheses have been suggested to explain their longevity, yet few have been tested using quantitative thermo-mechanical numerical models, which capture the dynamic of the lithosphere. Lithospheric-scale geodynamic modelling...
Article
New Smithian (Early Triassic) ammonoid assemblages were sampled near the Utah/Arizona border. They provide several spatiotemporal constraints on the regional Sinbad Formation showing that the extent of the Smithian sea in the southwestern-most part of the western USA basin is larger than previously expected, reaching northern Arizona and an area ju...
Article
The first step of ice-sheet build-up on Antarctica at the Eocene-Oligocene boundary was followed by a phase of climate instability culminating during the Miocene with a warming event called the Middle Miocene Climate Optimum (MMCO), that ended with a marked cooling phase identified as the Middle Miocene Climate Transition (MMCT). While numerous ben...
Article
Full-text available
The Messinian microbialites of the Terminal Carbonate Complex (TCC) from the Neogene basins of southeastern Spain show both diversified morphologies and an excellent preservation of primary microbial microstructures. Their stratigraphic architecture, fabric (micro-, meso-, and macro-fabric), and mineralogical composition were investigated in eight...
Article
In continental volcanic settings, abundant carbonate precipitation can occur with atypical facies compared to marine settings. The (bio-)chemical processes responsible for their development and early diagenesis are typically complex and not fully understood. In the Bolivian Altiplano, Laguna Pastos Grandes hosts a 40-km² carbonate platform with a g...
Article
Full-text available
The southern part of the tropical Cayo Coco Island (Cuba) hosts a complex, highly evaporative and marine-fed lagoonal network. In the easternmost lagoon of this network, hypersaline conditions favour the development of complex sedimentary microbial ecosystems within the water column at the bottom water-sediment interface and on the shore. Some of t...
Preprint
Full-text available
In continental volcanic settings, abundant carbonate precipitation can occur with atypical facies compared with those of marine settings. The (bio-)chemical processes responsible for their development and early diagenesis are typically complex and not fully understood. In the Bolivian Altiplano, Laguna Pastos Grandes hosts a 40-km2 carbonate platfo...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
In modern examples of well-developed microbial-dominated deposits associated with metazoan organisms can be currently found in various environments including but not restricted to lagoons in Polynesia (Sprachta et al., 2001), the warm water of the Cuba (e.g., Bouton et al., 2016; Pace et al., 2018), the hypersaline lakes of the Great Salt Lake (USA...
Article
Most source‐to‐sink studies typically focus on the dynamics of clastic sediments and consider erosion, transport and deposition of sediment particles as the sole contributors. Although often neglected, dissolved solids produced by weathering processes contribute significantly in the sedimentary dynamics of basins, supporting chemical and/or biologi...
Article
The Early Triassic is generally portrayed as a time of various, high ecological stresses leading to a delayed biotic recovery after the devastating end-Permian mass extinction. This interval is notably characterized by repeated biotic crises (e.g., during the late Smithian), large-scale fluctuations of the global carbon, nitrogen and sulfur cycles...
Article
Full-text available
: Mixed cyanobacteria-dominated biofilms, enriched from a tributary of the Mérantaise (France) were used to conduct laboratory experiments in order to understand the relationship between the morphology of carbonate precipitates and the biological activity (e.g., cyanobacterial exopolymeric substances (EPS) production, photosynthetic pH increases)....
Article
Full-text available
The lacustrine-to-palustrine Pastos Grandes Laguna (Bolivia) is located in a volcanic caldera fed by active hot springs, with a carbonate crust extending over 40 km2. An integrated approach based on geology and hydrochemistry was used to characterize La Salsa, one of its hydrothermal systems, composed of a flat mound with a hydrothermal discharge....
Article
Full-text available
The relationship between environmental conditions and the development, mineralization and preservation of modern tufa microbialites was investigated in a 1.1 km long freshwater stream in Villiers-le-Bâcle, a tributary of Mérantaise river. Detailed mapping of the tufa microbialite distribution combined with sedimentological, petrographical and miner...
Article
A new, diverse and complex Early Triassic assemblage was recently discovered west of the town of Paris, Idaho (Bear Lake County), USA. This assemblage has been coined the Paris Biota. Dated earliest Spathian (Olenekian), the Paris Biota provides further evidence that the biotic recovery from the end-Permian mass extinction was well underway ca. 1.5...
Article
After the end-Permian crisis and the extinction of their four Paleozoic subclasses, crinoids rapidly recovered. This group is classically believed to have radiated from a small surviving clade and to have diversified during the Middle and Upper Triassic from two lineages. Nevertheless, recent findings suggested that several lineages of crinoids had...
Article
Full-text available
The Paleozoic intracratonic North African Platform is characterized by an association of arches (ridges, domes, swells, or paleo-highs) and low subsidence rate syncline basins of different wavelengths (75–620 km). The Reggane, Ahnet, Mouydir and Illizi basins are successively delimited from east to west by the Amguid El Biod, Arak-Foum Belrem, and...
Article
Full-text available
The volcanic crater lake of Dziani Dzaha in Mayotte is studied to constrain the geochemical settings and the diagenetic processes at the origin of Mg‐phyllosilicates associated with carbonate rocks. The Dziani Dzaha is characterized by intense primary productivity, volcanic gases bubbling in three locations and a volcanic catchment of phonolitic/al...
Article
Full-text available
In modern stromatolites, mineralization results from a complex interplay between microbial metabolisms, the organic matrix, and environmental parameters. Here, we combined biogeochemical, mineralogical, and microscopic analyses with measurements of metabolic activity to characterize the mineralization processes and products in an emergent (<18 mont...
Article
Full-text available
The Paleozoic intracratonic North African Platform is characterized by an association of arches (ridges, domes, swells or paleo-highs) and low subsidence rate syncline basins of different wavelengths (75–620 km). The structural framework of the platform results from the accretion of Archean and Proterozoic terranes during the Pan-African orogeny (7...
Article
Full-text available
We present the first quantitative palaeobiogeographical analysis in terms of distribution and abundance of Early Triassic ammonoids from the western USA basin during the Smithian, c. 1 myr after the Permian–Triassic boundary mass extinction. The faunal dataset consists of a taxonomically homogenized compilation of spatial and temporal occurrences a...
Article
Full-text available
We describe an Olenekian (Early Triassic) “fossil squid” belonging to the oldest complex Mesozoic marine biota collected in the Lower Shale unit of the Lower Triassic Thaynes Group in Idaho, USA. The studied specimen shows a tapered structure embedded in a cylindrical soft body. Morphological, ultrastructural and geochemical features of the specime...
Article
Full-text available
The Bonneville Basin is a continental lacustrine system accommodating extensive microbial carbonate deposits corresponding to two distinct phases: the deep Lake Bonneville (30,000 to 11,500 ¹⁴C BP) and the shallow Great Salt Lake (since 11,500 ¹⁴C BP). A characterization of these microbial deposits and their associated sediments provides insights i...
Article
The Limagne Basin (French Massif Central) is an extensive continental lacustrine system accommodating microbial and metazoan buildups from Chattian to Aquitanian age. A description of these buildups and their associated biotic components in Grand Gandaillat and Crechy quarries provides insights into their spatio-temporal distribution patterns. Flat...
Article
Recurrent microbialite proliferations during the Early Triassic are usually explained by ecological relaxation and abnormal oceanic conditions. Most Early Triassic microbialites are described as single or multiple lithological units without detailed ecological information about lateral and coeval fossiliferous deposits. Exposed rocks along Workman...
Article
The Early Triassic biotic recovery following the end-Permian mass extinction is well documented in the Smithian–Spathian Thaynes Group of the western USA basin. This sedimentary succession is commonly interpreted as recording harsh conditions of various shallow marine environments where microbial structures flourished. However, recent studies quest...
Article
Full-text available
Continental environments are very sensitive to climatic variations. A unique opportunity to study the climate changes around the Oligocene/Miocene boundary is offered by the Limagne graben Basin (France) where this stage boundary is well constrained by fossils. Indeed, some localities of the Limagne Graben Basin are so rich in mammal remains that t...
Poster
Full-text available
Important and recurrent perturbations of the carbon isotope signals are recorded during the Early Triassic, in the aftermath of the end-Permian mass extinction (~252 Ma). These perturbations, among the largest observed throughout the Phanerozoic, are most notably represented by a globally recognized couplet of a negative and a positive excursions,...
Poster
Full-text available
In the aftermath of the end-Permian mass extinction (~252 Ma), the Early Triassic Sonoma Foreland Basin (SFB) provides excellent sedimentary and fossil records to describe and understand the Early Triassic biotic recovery. Nevertheless, despite its importance, this basin is still poorly constrained and its controlling factors rather unclear. A new...
Article
Full-text available
Cold climate carbonates can be used as paleoclimatic proxies. The mineralogy and isotopic composition of subglacially precipitated carbonate crusts (SPCCs) provide insights into the subglacial conditions and processes occurring at the meltwater-basement rock interface of glaciers. This study documents such crusts discovered on the lee side of a gne...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
The Early Triassic is generally portrayed as a time of high ecological stress leading to a delayed biotic recovery in the aftermath of the devastating end-Permian mass extinction. This interval is also characterized by repeated large-scale fluctuations of the global carbon, nitrogen and sulfur cycles, associated with harsh marine conditions includi...