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Dive into the research topics where Francisco Fatela is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco Fatela.


Marine Micropaleontology | 2002

Confidence limits of species proportions in microfossil assemblages

Francisco Fatela; Rui Taborda

Abstract We analyzed the confidence limits of benthic foraminiferal counts obtained from fossil deep-sea assemblages to figure out the optimum number of specimens needed for a reliable interpretation of species proportions. Precision and reliability are analyzed by calculating the binomial confidence limits. We demonstrate that in studies based on the interpretation of the proportional distribution of only the dominant taxa, counts of as low as 100 specimens are sufficient. Studies, however, that aim to investigate species diversity patterns usually require higher counts. Generally, we suggest that percent abundance given in micropaleontological studies should include the binomial error estimate.


The Holocene | 2012

A tsunami record in the sedimentary archive of the central Algarve coast, Portugal: Characterizing sediment, reconstructing sources and inundation paths

Pedro J.M. Costa; César Andrade; M. C. Freitas; Maria Alexandra Oliveira; Vera Lopes; Alastair G. Dawson; João Moreno; Francisco Fatela; J.-M. Jouanneau

This study describes sedimentation associated with the tsunami generated by the Lisbon earthquake of ad 1755. It is argued here that the tsunami deposited a sand sheet across the Lagoa dos Salgados (central Algarve, Portugal), that is intercalated with late-Holocene estuarine/lagoonal sediments. A wide range of proxies (sedimentological, exoscopic and palaeontological) are used to establish the provenance of the sandy material as well as to constrain the age of the deposit. Stratigraphic criteria are used to distinguish the uniqueness of the event layer. Exoscopic and textural analysis suggest that the source of the event deposit is mainly the dune, beach and underlying layer. Micropalaentological analysis (Foraminifera) indicates a conspicuous increase in diversity and dominance of marine species within the event sediment sheet. The spatial characteristics of the tsunami layer suggests that the barrier prevented widespread overtopping by the incoming tsunami allowing inference of c. 10 m as maximum height at the coast; they also indicate the inlet as the preferential route for both water and sediment transported inland. Dating results (14C, 210Pb and 137Cs) allow extrapolation of an age of deposition compatible with the ad 1755 Lisbon earthquake and tsunami, the most devastating event that affected this coastal area in historical times. Correlations with similar deposits detected in nearby lowlands strengthen the argument that the tsunami sediment layer represents a marker horizon in the coastal stratigraphy along the Portuguese Algarve coast. The stratigraphic uniqueness of this event might have implications in the establishment of millennial scale recurrence intervals for this type of high-energy marine inundation.


The Holocene | 2013

Lateglacial and Holocene coastal evolution in the Minho estuary (N Portugal): Implications for understanding sea-level changes in Atlantic Iberia

Eduardo Leorri; Francisco Fatela; Teresa Drago; Sarah L. Bradley; João Moreno; Alejandro Cearreta

The absence of accurate sea-level index points in SW Europe has long precluded the development of Holocene sea-level curves and the correct understanding of tectonic activity. In order to understand the coastal evolution and the major drivers in the Minho area, Portugal, we have combined micropaleontological and sedimentological data, where the chronological framework is provided by 13 radiocarbon ages. The stratigraphic reconstruction is in agreement with regional models of evolution and provides new sea-level index points that support a regional isostatic model producing the first complete Holocene sea-level curve from this area. Field data and model reconstructions present a good agreement for the region considered and vertical land movement estimates derived from the isostatic model are in agreement with GPS vertical velocities. At regional scale, our results support a north–south trend for SW Europe, where isostatic rebound seems to be minimized in the south of the Iberian Peninsula while local factors (sedimentation, local geomorphology, etc.) tend to dominate during the late Holocene. This newly produced sea-level curve has helped to improve isostatic model predictions and provide pre-anthropogenic sea-level rise rates against which modern rates can be compared.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Bromine enrichment in marsh sediments as a marker of environmental changes driven by Grand Solar Minima and anthropogenic activity (Caminha, NW of Portugal)

João Moreno; Francisco Fatela; Eduardo Leorri; M.F. Araújo; F. Moreno; J.M. de la Rosa; M. C. Freitas; Teresa Maria Fernandes Valente; D. R. Corbett

A sediment core collected in Caminha tidal marsh, NW Portugal, was used to assess bromine (Br) signal over the last ca. 1,700 years. The Br temporal variability reflects its close relationship with soil/sediment organic matter (OM) and also alterations in Br biogeochemical recycling in marsh environment. The highest Br enrichment in sediments was found during the Maunder Solar Minimum, a major solar event characterized by lower irradiance (TSI) and temperature, increased cloudiness and albedo. The obtained results suggest that those climate-induced changes weakened the natural mechanisms that promote Br biochemical transformations, driven by both living plants metabolism and plant litter degradation, with the ensuing generation of volatile methyl bromide (CH3Br). It seems that the prevailing climate conditions during the Maunder favoured the retention of more Br in marsh ecosystem, ultimately decreasing the biogenic Br emissions to the atmosphere. During the 20th century, the Br pattern in sediments appears to mirror likewise anthropogenic sources. The significant correlation (p<0.05) between Br/OM ratios and Pb contents in sediments after 1934 suggests a common source. This is most probably related with the rise, massive consumption and prohibition of leaded gasoline, where ethylene dibromide was added as lead scavenger to antiknock mixtures. More regionally, the concerted use of flame retardants on forest fire management, covering the 1980s through mid-1990s in the north of Portugal and Galicia, could be responsible for the observed increase of sediment Br (relatively to Pb) pool of this tidal marsh. Although man-made brominated compounds are being phased-out since the inception of the 1992 Montreal Protocol, the Caminha tidal marsh sedimentary record showed that Br levels only started to decline after 2002.


Hydrobiologia | 2007

Occurrence of calcareous foraminifera and calcite- carbonate equilibrium conditions - a case study in Minho/Coura estuary (Northern Portugal)

João Moreno; Teresa Maria Fernandes Valente; Filipa Moreno; Francisco Fatela; Lúcia Guise; C. Patinha

The Minho/Coura estuary, northern Portugal, has been studied for the influence of hydrochemical and geochemical parameters on living (Rose Bengal stained) foraminiferal assemblages. Our previous works showed a prevalence of agglutinated species in the inner estuary and tidal marsh and significant abundance of calcareous species only in the estuary mouth. The new results clarify syndepositional aspects of the calcareous species related to calcite dissolution, such as thin tests that frequently lack the carbonate layer and show typical destruction features. Sites from the estuary mouth, tidal marsh and river were sampled, under Spring and Autumn conditions, in order to describe physical-chemical features and to allow the geochemical modelling of the solution in which calcification occurs. In particular, the chemical equilibrium regarding calcite was evaluated from the saturation index (SI). Such modelling suggests strongly undersaturated conditions at the majority of the sampling sites, in both sampling periods. The water quality data revealed strong spatial and temporal variability, mainly in the tidal marsh environment, and also the existence of a stressed medium regarding calcite saturation state. The observed geochemical trends provide a plausible explanation for (1) the scarcity and distribution of living calcareous foraminifera in the Minho/Coura estuary and (2) the destruction features observed in the carbonate tests.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Bromine soil/sediment enrichment in tidal salt marshes as a potential indicator of climate changes driven by solar activity: New insights from W coast Portuguese estuaries.

João Moreno; Francisco Fatela; Eduardo Leorri; Filipa Moreno; M. C. Freitas; Teresa Maria Fernandes Valente; M.F. Araújo; Juan J. Gomez-Navarro; Lúcia Guise; William H. Blake

This paper aims at providing insight about bromine (Br) cycle in four Portuguese estuaries: Minho, Lima (in the NW coast) and Sado, Mira (in the SW coast). The focus is on their tidal marsh environments, quite distinct with regard to key biophysicochemical attributes. Regardless of the primary bromide (Br-) common natural source, i.e., seawater, the NW marshes present relatively higher surface soil/sediment Br concentrations than the ones from SW coast. This happens in close connection with organic matter (OM) content, and is controlled by their main climatic contexts. Yet, the anthropogenic impact on Br concentrations cannot be discarded. Regarding [Br] spatial patterns across the marshes, the results show a general increase from tidal flat toward high marsh. Maxima [Br] occur in the upper driftline zone, at transition from highest low marsh to high marsh, recognized as a privileged setting for OM accumulation. Based on the discovery of OM ubiquitous bromination in marine and transitional environments, it is assumed that this Br occurs mainly as organobromine. Analysis of two dated sediment cores indicates that, despite having the same age (AD ~1300), the Caminha salt marsh (Minho estuary) evidences higher Br enrichment than the Casa Branca salt marsh (Mira estuary). This is related to a greater Br storage ability, which is linked to OM build-up and rate dynamics under different climate scenarios. Both cores evidence a fairly similar temporal Br enrichment pattern, and may be interpreted in light of the sun-climate coupling. Thereby, most of the well-known Grand Solar Minima during the Little Ice Age appear to have left an imprint on these marshes, supported by higher [Br] in soils/sediments. Besides climate changes driven by solar activity and impacting marsh Br biogeodynamics, those Br enrichment peaks might also reflect inputs of enhanced volcanic activity covarying with Grand Solar Minima.


Journal of Micropalaeontology | 2017

Cyprideis torosa (Jones, 1850) in mainland Portugal: what do we know?

Maria Cristina Cabral; Francisco Fatela; Vera Lopes; M. C. Freitas; César Andrade

The distribution of Recent and Holocene Cyprideis torosa (Jones, 1850) from brackish estuaries and lagoons of mainland Portugal is presented; older Cenozoic C. torosa are also briefly mentioned. Around 550 specimens were found alive, in Melides lagoon (456) and salt marshes from large estuaries (90). Thousands of empty valves and carapaces, with different ornamentation, were found in the lagoon, the estuaries and in Holocene samples from boreholes, in the latter with higher concentration in sediments deposited in lagoons. The modern C. torosa was found living mainly in Melides lagoon, associated with brackish and freshwater ostracod species, in soft mud or muddy sand sediments from quiet zones, with salinities from 4.1 to 15.1; it is also found in soft mud to muddy sand sediments whose interstitial waters have salinities from 19.0 to 34.1, on salt marshes (tidal flat and low marsh) of large estuaries, similar to lagoons, in low hydrodynamic areas, together with other brackish ostracods. The main parameters controlling the distribution of C. torosa appear to be the substrate, water dynamics and emersion time, whereas water chemistry is more related to the morphology of valves. In general, C. torosa presents the same ecological characteristics in the Holocene and in modern times.


Quaternary International | 2010

Distribution of foraminifera in salt marshes along the Atlantic coast of SW Europe: tools to reconstruct past sea-level variations.

Eduardo Leorri; W. Roland Gehrels; Benjamin P. Horton; Francisco Fatela; Alejandro Cearreta


Marine Micropaleontology | 2009

Environmental constraints of foraminiferal assemblages distribution across a brackish tidal marsh (Caminha, NW Portugal)

Francisco Fatela; João Moreno; Filipa Moreno; M. Fátima Araújo; Teresa Maria Fernandes Valente; Carlos Antunes; Rui Taborda; César Andrade; Teresa Drago


Quaternary Geochronology | 2010

Optical dating of clastic deposits generated by an extreme marine coastal flood: the 1755 tsunami deposits in the Algarve (Portugal)

Pedro P. Cunha; Jan-Pieter Buylaert; Andrew S. Murray; César Andrade; M. C. Freitas; Francisco Fatela; José Munhá; A. A. Martins; Saiko Sugisaki

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Eduardo Leorri

East Carolina University

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M.F. Araújo

Instituto Superior Técnico

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Reide Corbett

East Carolina University

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