Dataset
OBIS Secretariat Open in mapper Explore occurrences
Paleotsunami deposits are primary source of information on past big tsunami events and thereby are critical for earthquake and tsunami hazard assessment. They usually form sandy layers preserved in coastal sediments that may contain indicators of marine origin such as foraminifera microfossils and the geochemical signal of saltwater. Environmental DNA sequencing of marine species targets in a series of up to about 2000 years old sandy paleotsunami deposits is promising to detect ancient tsunami events even in the absence of microfossil and sedimentological evidence.The DNA content of 10 environmental coastal sediment samples was extacted from paleotsunami deposit and peat layers of a core and additional peat and beach sand surface samples taken from a wetland on eastern Hokkaido Island (Japan) facing the Kuril Trench subduction zone generating frequent large tsunamigenic earthquakes. The 37f hypervariable region of the foraminiferal SSU rDNA was PCR amplified and PCR products were pooled in one library for Illumiona MiSeq sequence and diversity analyses.
Published: September 20, 2022 at 12:42
License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY) 4.0 License
URL: https://hosted-datasets.gbif.org/mgnify/MGYS00004276.zip
Contacts:
University of Geneva
University of Geneva
| Field | Missing | Invalid | |
|---|---|---|---|
| coordinateUncertaintyInMeters | 29 |
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| occurrenceStatus | 29 |
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| scientificNameID | 29 |
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The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.
| Flag | Dropped | Records | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ON_LAND | 29 |
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| NO_MATCH | 1 |
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| WORMS_ANNOTATION_UNRESOLVABLE | 1 |
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