Reconstructing Earth's Climate Through Marine Microfossils

Pelagic Research Institute advances paleoclimate science by studying the microscopic organisms preserved in deep-sea sediments. Their shells record millions of years of ocean temperature, chemistry, and circulation patterns.

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Featured Research

Proboscia Truncata

Examining morphological variation and biostratigraphic distribution in deep-sea sediment cores from multiple ocean basins.

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Taurocusporites Segmentatus

Analyzing stable isotope signatures and trace element ratios to reconstruct paleoenvironmental conditions.

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Areosphaeridium Arcuatum

Investigating species assemblage changes across major climate transitions in the geological record.

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Chrysocapsa Epiphytica

Developing refined taxonomic criteria through scanning electron microscopy and morphometric analysis.

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Duplicisporites Granulatus

Calibrating geochemical proxies against modern oceanographic observations for improved paleoclimate estimates.

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Labrapollis Labraferus

Documenting geographic distribution patterns and their relationship to sea surface temperature gradients.

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About Pelagic Research Institute

Pelagic Research Institute is a collaborative network of scientists studying microscopic fossils preserved in ocean sediments. Our work focuses on foraminifera, diatoms, radiolarians, and coccolithophores — organisms whose calcium carbonate and silica shells accumulate on the seafloor, creating a detailed archive of past ocean conditions.

By combining traditional micropaleontological techniques with modern geochemical analysis, we reconstruct sea surface temperatures, deep-water circulation patterns, and atmospheric CO₂ concentrations spanning millions of years of Earth history.

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Research Areas

  • Paleoceanographic proxies
  • Biostratigraphy
  • Isotope geochemistry
  • Species taxonomy
  • Sediment core analysis