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Dive into the research topics where Lorenzo Angeletti is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorenzo Angeletti.


Journal of Cave and Karst Studies | 2012

DROWNED KARST LANDSCAPE OFFSHORE THE APULIAN MARGIN (SOUTHERN ADRIATIC SEA, ITALY)

Marco Taviani; Lorenzo Angeletti; Elisabetta Campiani; Alessandro Ceregato; Federica Foglini; Vittorio Maselli; Michele Morsilli; Mario Parise; Fabio Trincardi

The south Adriatic shelf offshore of the predominently carbonate Apulian coast is characterized by a peculiar rough topography interpreted as relic karst formed at a time of lower sea level. The study area covers a surface of about 220 km, with depths ranging from 50 to 105 m. The most relevant and diagnostic features are circular depressions a few tens to 150 m in diameter and 0.50 to 20 m deep thought to be dolines at various stages of evolution. The major doline, Oyster Pit, has its top at about 50 m water depth and is 20 m deep. It is partly filled with sediments redeposited by episodic mass failure from the doline’s flank. Bedrock samples from the study area document that Plio-Pleistocene calcarenites, tentatively correlated with the Calcarenite di Gravina Fm, are a prime candidate for the carbonate rocks involved in the karstification, although the presence of other units, such as the Peschici or Maiolica Fms, is not excluded. The area containing this subaerial karst landscape was submerged about 12,500 years ago as a result of the postglacial transgression over the continental shelf.


Journal of Paleontology | 2011

Chemosynthetic Bivalves of the Family Solemyidae (Bivalvia, Protobranchia) in the Neogene of the Mediterranean Basin

Marco Taviani; Lorenzo Angeletti; Alessandro Ceregato

Abstract The Mediterranean area is the locus of a variety of deep-sea chemosynthetic environments that have been exploited by bivalves of the family Solemyidae during Cenozoic to present time. Large solemyids represented by the Solemya doderleini group were widely distributed in Neogene deep-sea reducing habitats, including cold vent hydrocarbon sites. Based upon the diagnostic structure of the ligament, Solemya doderleini (Mayer), 1861 and S. subquadrata (Foresti), 1879 are moved to the genus Acharax Dall, 1908. After the Messinian Salinity Crisis Acharax doderleini re-colonized deep-sea sulphide environments up to the Pliocene at least. At present, Acharax occurs in similar settings in the adjacent eastern Atlantic Ocean. Thus far, large solemyids are not documented from the present deep Mediterranean Sea in spite of a vast number of seep and reducing habitats with chemosynthetic biota, especially concentrated in its Eastern basin. Promisingly, however, a single live juvenile specimen of Solemyidae has been recently found at bathyal depth associated with a pockmark in the Nile Deep Sea Fan.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2016

Late quaternary coastal landscape morphology and evolution of the Maltese Islands (Mediterranean Sea) reconstructed from high-resolution seafloor data

Federica Foglini; Mariacristina Prampolini; Aaron Micallef; Lorenzo Angeletti; Vittoria Vandelli; Alan Deidun; Mauro Soldati; Marco Taviani

Abstract The current strong motivation to explore those traces of the archaeological and prehistoric human heritage that presently lie submerged on the continental shelf requires large-scale and precise underwater mapping. One Mediterranean sector deserving particular attention is the Sicily Channel, which is critical for a better understanding of the Africa–Europe migratory routes and early civilization patterns due to its large expanses of shallow seabed that were partially or totally exposed at times of lower relative sea levels. We have focused our attention on the submerged continental margin of the Maltese archipelago. A detailed bathymetric map is here presented, and is discussed in terms of features interpretable as former subaerial landforms and inundated by sea-level rise following the Last Glacial Maximum lowstand at approximately –130 m. Our datasets combine multibeam surveys, Light Detection And Ranging (LiDAR)-derived digital terrain models (DTMs), Chirp sub-bottom profiler records and bottom samples acquired between 2009 and 2012. The main features identified are former river incisions, alluvial plains, karst landscapes (sinkholes, limestone plateaus), slide deposits and palaeoshorelines. This study provides a detailed topographical reconstruction of the palaeolandscape of this key region that is relevant to any future archaeological exploration of the Maltese offshore area.


Italian Journal of Zoology | 2015

First report of live deep-water cnidarian assemblages from the Malta Escarpment

Lorenzo Angeletti; Ariadna Mechó; C. Doya; Aaron Micallef; Veerle A.I. Huvenne; Aggeliki Georgiopoulou; Marco Taviani

Abstract A recent geo-marine survey of the Malta Escarpment revealed for the first time the existence of live cnidarian assemblages at about 300 m depth. These associations have been observed by means of a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) during surveys carried out on the upper part of the Malta Escarpment. The assemblages established on hard bedrock were chiefly composed of the antipatharian Leiopathes glaberrima. The Malta Escarpment is known to have been successfully colonised by deep-water scleractinian assemblages until the last glacial age. However, no living specimens had been observed, and only specimens of dead but relatively fresh Dendrophyllia cornigera had been reported. This area of the Mediterranean Sea, which connects the deep Ionian basin to the western Mediterranean, is largely unknown and in clear need of thorough exploration.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Diversity and Distribution of Prokaryotes within a Shallow-Water Pockmark Field

Donato Giovannelli; Giuseppe d'Errico; Federica Fiorentino; Daniele Fattorini; Francesco Regoli; Lorenzo Angeletti; Tatjana Bakran-Petricioli; Costantino Vetriani; Mustafa Yücel; Marco Taviani; Elena Manini

Pockmarks are crater-like depression on the seafloor associated with hydrocarbon ascent through muddy sediments in continental shelves around the world. In this study, we examine the diversity and distribution of benthic microbial communities at shallow-water pockmarks adjacent to the Middle Adriatic Ridge. We integrate microbial diversity data with characterization of local hydrocarbons concentrations and sediment geochemistry. Our results suggest these pockmarks are enriched in sedimentary hydrocarbons, and host a microbial community dominated by Bacteria, even in deeper sediment layers. Pockmark sediments showed higher prokaryotic abundance and biomass than surrounding sediments, potentially due to the increased availability of organic matter and higher concentrations of hydrocarbons linked to pockmark activity. Prokaryotic diversity analyses showed that the microbial communities of these shallow-water pockmarks are unique, and comprised phylotypes associated with the cycling of sulfur and nitrate compounds, as well as numerous know hydrocarbon degraders. Altogether, this study suggests that shallow-water pockmark habitats enhance the diversity of the benthic prokaryotic biosphere by providing specialized environmental niches.


Stratigraphy | 2008

The Trave section (Monte dei Corvi, Ancona, Central Italy): an integrated paleontological study of the Messinian deposits

Silvia Maria Iaccarino; Adele Bertini; Agata Di Stefano; Luciana Ferraro; Rocco Gennari; Francesco Grossi; Fabrizio Lirer; Vinicio Manzi; Elena Menichetti; Marianna Ricci Lucchi; Marco Taviani; Gioconda Sturiale; Lorenzo Angeletti


Marine Geology | 2013

The submerged paleolandscape of the Maltese Islands: Morphology, evolution and relation to Quaternary environmental change

Aaron Micallef; Federica Foglini; Tim Le Bas; Lorenzo Angeletti; Vittorio Maselli; Alessandro Pasuto; Marco Taviani


Mediterranean Marine Science | 2013

New deep-water cnidarian sites in the southern Adriatic Sea

Lorenzo Angeletti; Marco Taviani; Simonepietro Canese; Federica Foglini; Francesco Mastrototaro; A. Argnani; Fabio Trincardi; Tatjana Bakran-Petricioli; Alessandro Ceregato; G. Chimienti; Vesna Mačić; A. Poliseno


Facies | 2011

Pleistocene to Recent scleractinian deep-water corals and coral facies in the Eastern Mediterranean

Marco Taviani; Agostina Vertino; M. López Correa; Alessandra Savini; B. De Mol; Alessandro Remia; P. Montagna; Lorenzo Angeletti; Helmut Zibrowius; Tiago Marcos Alves; M. Salomidi; B. Ritt; Pierre Henry


Biogeosciences | 2013

The Gela Basin pockmark field in the strait of Sicily (Mediterranean Sea): chemosymbiotic faunal and carbonate signatures of postglacial to modern cold seepage

Marco Taviani; Lorenzo Angeletti; Alessandro Ceregato; Federica Foglini; C. Froglia; Fabio Trincardi

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Marco Taviani

National Research Council

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Fabio Trincardi

National Research Council

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Marco Taviani

National Research Council

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André Freiwald

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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