359 resultados para 90-592


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Leg 90 of the Deep Sea Drilling Project drilled 18 holes at eight sites (Sites 587-594) on several shallow-water platforms in the southern Coral Sea, Tasman Sea, and southwestern Pacific Ocean. The results from an additional hole (Hole 586B) drilled at Site 586 during Leg 89 are included in this report. Together, these sites form a latitudinal traverse which extends from the equator (Site 586) to 45°S (Site 594) and includes all the major water masses from tropical to subantarctic. Samples recovered at these sites range in age from middle Eocene to late Quaternary. The calcareous nannoplankton biostratigraphy for Leg 90 has divided into two parts: part 1, the Neogene and Quaternary of Sites 586-594. (this chapter); and part 2, the Paleogene of Sites 588, 592, and 593 (Martini, 1986). A slightly modified version of the Martini (1971) standard Tertiary and Quaternary zonation scheme was used to make age determinations on over 700 samples. All of the relevant Neogene and Quaternary zone-defining nannoplankton are present at Sites 586-591 (0°-30°S) but become increasingly rare or are absent at Sites 592-594 (35°-45°S). Species diversity increases southward from the equator (Site 586) and reaches a peak at 20°S (Site 587). A decrease at 25°S (Site 588) and 30°S (Sites 589-591) is followed by an increase in species diversity at 35°S (Site 592). South of 35°S, species diversity again decreases and reaches a low at 45 °S (Site 594). Species diversity for all sites as a group generally increases through the early, middle, and late Miocene, reaches a peak in the early Pliocene, then gradually decreases through the late Pliocene and Quaternary

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Several thin (1-10 cm) megascopic vitric tephras occur in the late Cenozoic calcareous oozes on Lord Howe Rise in the Tasman Sea and off eastern South Island, New Zealand. Of the 18 tephras analyzed 15 are silicic (75-78% SiO2) with abundant clear glass shards and a biotite ± hypersthene ± green hornblende ferromagnesian mineralogy. The Neogene silicic tephras were derived from the now-extinct Coromandel volcanic area in New Zealand, and the Quaternary ones from the presently active Central Volcanic Region of New Zealand. On the basis of glass chemistry and age, several of the Quaternary tephras are probably correlatives, and at least two can be matched to the major on-land Mt. Curl tephra (-0.25 m.y.). The occurrence of correlative silicic tephras both northwest and southeast of New Zealand may result from particularly violent eruptions, the ash below and above an altitude of -20 km being dispersed in opposite directions toward the Pacific Ocean and Tasman Sea, respectively. Ash drifting eastward into the southeasterly trade wind belt off northeastern New Zealand could also be carried into the central and northern Tasman Sea. Three megascopic tephras consist of altered basic shards and common labradorite crystals. They record Neogene explosive basaltic to andesitic activity from nearby ocean island or ridge sources in the Ontong-Java Plateau and Vanuatu regions. The megascopic tephras are a very incomplete and biased record of late Cenozoic explosive volcanism in the southwest Pacific because the innumerable, thin, green argillaceous layers in the cores (Gardner et al., this volume) probably represent devitrified intermediate to basic tephras derived mainly from oceanic arc volcanism along the Pacific/Australia plate boundary. In contrast to the New Zealand-derived silicic glass shards, the preservation potential of these more basic shards in Leg 90 calcareous sediments was low.

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Silicoflagellates are described from Sites 588 (middle Eocene), 591 (middle Miocene to lower Pliocene), and 594 (middle Miocene to Quaternary) in the southwest Pacific. At Sites 591 and 594 a detailed silicoflagellate zonation is possible, although there are some obvious differences arising from the latitudinal position of the sites in the silicoflagellate assemblages. Comparison between the sequences recovered at Sites 591 and 206 (Leg 21) revealed two hiatuses in the latter, but helped to establish a zonation for this area from the lower Miocene to the Pleistocene and a correlation to standard nannoplankton zones. The stratigraphic implications of the taxonomy used by various authors and the species concept presented here are discussed in detail. Special reference is made to types described by Ehrenberg and to later synonyma, because the Ehrenberg collection is the base for all subsequent descriptions and evaluations of silicoflagellate taxa. Two new genera (Neonaviculopsis, Paramesocena), two new subspecies (Dictyocha fibula subsp. asymmetrica, Neonaviculopsis neonautica subsp. praenautica), and three new forms (Dictyocha perlaevis f. pentaradiata, Distephanus speculum subsp. speculum f. nonarius, and Mesocena ? hexalitha f. heptalitha) are described from the southwest Pacific Neogene and Pleistocene. Associated sponge spicules were noted and will be described in detail in a later paper, but some are documented on Plate 13.

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