Olivier Moine
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Olivier Moine.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Olivier Moine; Pierre Antoine; Christine Hatte; Amaëlle Landais; Jérôme Mathieu; Charlotte Prud’homme; Denis-Didier Rousseau
Significance Last Glacial millennial-timescale warming phases well-recorded in Greenland ice cores are relevant across the Northern Hemisphere. However, dating limitations in loess deposits inhibited characterizing their impact on the European Great Plain. Here, the radiocarbon dating of a large set of earthworm calcite granule samples from the Nussloch reference loess sequence (Rhine Valley, Germany) led to a straightforward chronological distinction of all soil horizons. Resulting correlations with Greenland interstadials between 50 and 20 ka also revealed more complex climate dynamics than interpreted from Greenland δ18O records. This study is a fundamental contribution to understanding links between mid- and high-latitude climate changes and their spatial and temporal impact on paleoenvironments and prehistoric population settlement in Europe. The characterization of Last Glacial millennial-timescale warming phases, known as interstadials or Dansgaard–Oeschger events, requires precise chronologies for the study of paleoclimate records. On the European continent, such chronologies are only available for several Last Glacial pollen and rare speleothem archives principally located in the Mediterranean domain. Farther north, in continental lowlands, numerous high-resolution records of loess and paleosols sequences show a consistent environmental response to stadial–interstadial cycles. However, the limited precision and accuracy of luminescence dating methods commonly used in loess deposits preclude exact correlations of paleosol horizons with Greenland interstadials. To overcome this problem, a radiocarbon dating protocol has been developed to date earthworm calcite granules from the reference loess sequence of Nussloch (Germany). Its application yields a consistent radiocarbon chronology of all soil horizons formed between 47 and 20 ka and unambiguously shows the correlation of every Greenland interstadial identified in isotope records with specific soil horizons. Furthermore, eight additional minor soil horizons dated between 27.5 and 21 ka only correlate with minor decreases in Greenland dust records. This dating strategy reveals the high sensitivity of loess paleoenvironments to Northern Hemisphere climate changes. A connection between loess sedimentation rate, Fennoscandian ice sheet dynamics, and sea level changes is proposed. The chronological improvements enabled by the radiocarbon “earthworm clock” thus strongly enhance our understanding of loess records to a better perception of the impact of Last Glacial climate changes on European paleoenvironments.
Evolutionary Ecology | 2014
Armelle Ansart; Annie Guiller; Olivier Moine; Marie-Claire Martin; Luc Madec
Body water is a major element of the cold-hardiness strategies observed in ectothermic animals, in particular in freezing avoidant species for which body ice formation is lethal. Here, we investigate the relationships, in terrestrial snails, between the temperature of crystallisation (Tc) and body water (water mass and water content), shell shape, geographic and climatic distribution, taking into account phylogenetic inertia. Phylogenetic relationships among 31 species from 13 different families of terrestrial Gastropods were studied using 28S rRNA nuclear and COI mitochondrial sequence data, together with species-specific traits. Our results provide evidence for clear relationships between Tc and absolute/relative body water: smaller species with lower water content tended to be characterized by colder temperatures of crystallisation, although some exceptions were noticeable. Environmental conditions do not appear to affect Tc significantly, as well as shell shape which is however correlated with water content. This study confirmed that supercooling ability in land snails is size-constrained, with consequences on cold-hardiness strategies.
PeerJ | 2017
Philip D. Mannion; Ronan Allain; Olivier Moine
Brachiosauridae is a clade of titanosauriform sauropod dinosaurs that includes the well-known Late Jurassic taxa Brachiosaurus and Giraffatitan. However, there is disagreement over the brachiosaurid affinities of most other taxa, and little consensus regarding the clade’s composition or inter-relationships. An unnamed partial sauropod skeleton was collected from middle–late Oxfordian (early Late Jurassic) deposits in Damparis, in the Jura department of eastern France, in 1934. Since its brief description in 1943, this specimen has been informally known in the literature as the ‘Damparis sauropod’ and ‘French Bothriospondylus’, and has been considered a brachiosaurid by most authors. If correctly identified, this would make the specimen the earliest known titanosauriform. Coupled with its relatively complete nature and the rarity of Oxfordian sauropod remains in general, this is an important specimen for understanding the early evolution of Titanosauriformes. Full preparation and description of this specimen, known from teeth, vertebrae and most of the appendicular skeleton of a single individual, recognises it as a distinct taxon: Vouivria damparisensis gen. et sp. nov. Phylogenetic analysis of a data matrix comprising 77 taxa (including all putative brachiosaurids) scored for 416 characters recovers a fairly well resolved Brachiosauridae. Vouivria is a basal brachiosaurid, confirming its status as the stratigraphically oldest known titanosauriform. Brachiosauridae consists of a paraphyletic array of Late Jurassic forms, with Europasaurus, Vouivria and Brachiosaurus recovered as successively more nested genera that lie outside of a clade comprising (Giraffatitan + Sonorasaurus) + (Lusotitan + (Cedarosaurus + Venenosaurus)). Abydosaurus forms an unresolved polytomy with the latter five taxa. The Early Cretaceous South American sauropod Padillasaurus was previously regarded as a brachiosaurid, but is here placed within Somphospondyli. A recent study contended that a number of characters used in a previous iteration of this data matrix are ‘biologically related’, and thus should be excluded from phylogenetic analysis. We demonstrate that almost all of these characters show variation between taxa, and implementation of sensitivity analyses, in which these characters are excluded, has no effect on tree topology or resolution. We argue that where there is morphological variation, this should be captured, rather than ignored. Unambiguous brachiosaurid remains are known only from the USA, western Europe and Africa, and the clade spanned the Late Jurassic through to the late Albian/early Cenomanian, with the last known occurrences all from the USA. Regardless of whether their absence from the Cretaceous of Europe, as well as other regions entirely, reflects regional extinctions and genuine absences, or sampling artefacts, brachiosaurids appear to have become globally extinct by the earliest Late Cretaceous.
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2009
Pierre Antoine; Denis-Didier Rousseau; Olivier Moine; Stéphane Kunesch; Christine Hatté; Andreas Lang; Hélène Tissoux; Ludwig Zöller
Quaternary International | 2009
Pierre Antoine; Denis-Didier Rousseau; Markus Fuchs; Christine Hatté; Caroline Gauthier; Slobodan B. Marković; Mladjen Jovanović; Tivadar Gaudenyi; Olivier Moine; Julien Rossignol
Quaternary Science Reviews | 2013
Pierre Antoine; Denis-Didier Rousseau; Jean-Philippe Degeai; Olivier Moine; Sebastian Kreutzer; Markus Fuchs; Christine Hatté; Caroline Gauthier; Jiri Svoboda; Lenka Lisá
Quaternary Research | 2008
Olivier Moine; Denis-Didier Rousseau; Pierre Antoine
Climate of The Past | 2013
Christine Hatté; Christopher S. Gauthier; Denis-Didier Rousseau; Pierre Antoine; Markus Fuchs; F. Lagroix; Slobodan B. Marković; Olivier Moine; Adriana Sima
Climate of The Past | 2010
Denis-Didier Rousseau; Pierre Antoine; Natalia N. Gerasimenko; Adriana Sima; Markus Fuchs; Christine Hatté; Olivier Moine; Ludwig Zoeller
Boreas | 2014
Pascal Bertran; Eric Andrieux; Pierre Antoine; Sylvie Coutard; Laurent Deschodt; Philippe Gardère; Marion Hernandez; Claude Legentil; Arnaud Lenoble; Morgane Liard; Norbert Mercier; Olivier Moine; Luca Sitzia; Brigitte Van Vliet-Lanoë