Bruce W. Hayward
University of Auckland
167 Papers
1.3K Citations
Bruce W. Hayward is an academic researcher from University of Auckland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Foraminifera & Holocene. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 158 publications. Previous affiliations of Bruce W. Hayward include St. John's University.
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Papers
The Early Pliocene re-colonisation of the deep Mediterranean Sea by benthic foraminifera and their pulsed Late Pliocene–Middle Pleistocene decline
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the Mediterranean seafloor benthic foraminifera during the Late Pliocene-Middle Pleistocene period and found that only 50% of these (44 species) were present in the Mediterranean Sea.
Ecological and evolutionary consequences of benthic community stasis in the very deep sea (>1500 m)
TL;DR: A measure of between-sample within-community diversity (β1H) is used to examine benthic foraminiferal diversity between 333 stations within 49 communties from New Zealand, the South Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico, the Norwegian Sea, and the Arctic to explain why the total number of species is greater at shallower depths.
Tidal range of marsh foraminifera for determining former sea-level heights in New Zealand
TL;DR: In this paper, live and total foraminiferal faunas in samples from six transects through marsh environments at Kaipara Harbour, Miranda, and Pauatahanui Inlet, New Zealand (two transsects each), show the presence of a distinctive high tidal species association that has potential for the recognition of former sea-level heights from late Quaternary deposits.
Foraminiferal evidence for the provenance and flow history of turbidity currents triggered by the 2016 Kaikōura Earthquake, New Zealand
TL;DR: In this paper , foraminiferal samples from the 2016 turbidites from 17 canyon and channel cores were used to investigate the source histories of these submarine gravity flows, and two ordinations (PCA, PCO) based on these parameters are used to infer provenance and flow history.
“monospecific” and near-monospecific benthic foraminiferal faunas, new zealand
TL;DR: In New Zealand, 13 benthic foraminiferal species dominate modern near-monospecific faunas (dead fauna with > 80% of one species in >63-μm samples) as discussed by the authors.