323 resultados para 86-579A
(Table 3) Distribution of diatoms in Pliocene sediments of DSDP Hole 86-580 in the Northwest Pacific
Resumo:
We have obtained a detailed carbon-isotope stratigraphy of the Paleocene sections recovered from Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Holes 577 and 577A. This 13C record is useful in stratigraphically correlating the two holes and in interpreting the magnetostratigraphic data. Comparison with the published data for Site 527 (Southeast Atlantic Ocean) shows that 13C stratigraphy is also valuable for long-distance correlation.
Resumo:
Extension of the 10Be geochronology for deep-sea sediments beyond the limit of late Pliocene age found in published works has been attempted. The results obtained on sediments from Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Sites 576 and 578 of Leg 86 suggest the feasibility of dating sediments as old as 12 to 15 m.y. At both sites, there have been large changes in sedimentation rate, with the Pleistocene sediments accumulating several times faster than those of the Pliocene, which in turn were deposited several times more rapidly than the late Miocene sediments. The Pleistocene-Pliocene section is considerably thicker in Hole 578 than in Hole 576B: the respective depths for the 7 m.y. time boundary in the two holes are about 125 and about 25 m. These 10Be-based age estimates are in agreement with the paleomagnetic stratigraphies established for the two sites. The suggested enhancement in the oceanic deposition of 10Be before 7 to 9 m.y. ago, as noticed in manganese crusts, has found tentative support from the present sedimentary records. A preliminary search for 10Be production variation during a geomagnetic field reversal has been conducted. In Hole 578, an enhanced 10Be concentration is found in a sample close to the Brunhes/Matuyama reversal boundary. More detailed and systematic measurements are required to confirm this observation, which bears on the detailed behavior of the geomagnetic field during the reversal.
Resumo:
The recovery from the North Atlantic (Site 611) of a continuous Pleistocene sedimentary record with a siliceous microfaunal component made it possible to compare the high-latitude abundance pattern of the radiolarian species Cycladophora davisiana in the Atlantic with that produced from analyses of a high-latitude record (Site 580) from the northwest Pacific. Previous studies had shown that the late Pleistocene (0-0.45 Ma) abundance variations of this species in these high-latitude regions were similar. Cycladophora davisiana maxima in the North Atlantic record reach abundance levels three to four times higher than C. davisiana maxima registered in sediments from the northwest Pacific site. This difference in magnitude of abundance peaks is most likely an effect of the more northerly location of Site 611 (53°N) compared with that of Site 580 (42°N), since high-latitude time-slice studies have shown a direct relationship between increasing latitude and C. davisiana abundance. Discontinuous preservation of radiolarians in sediments from North Atlantic Site 611 allows only tentative correlation of the North Atlantic and northwest Pacific C. davisiana abundance curves. These correlations are confined to those portions of the cores where ages are tightly constrained by magnetic boundaries, and to intervals with comparable sedimentation rates.
Resumo:
The mass-accumulation rate and grain size of the total eolian component of North Pacific pelagic clays at Deep Sea Drilling Project Sites 576 and 578 have been used to evaluate changes in eolian sedimentation and the intensity of atmospheric circulation that have occurred during the past 70 m.y. Eolian deposition, an indicator of source area aridity, was low in the Paleocene, Eocene, and Oligocene, apparently reflecting the humid environments of that time as well as the lack of glacial erosion products. A general increase in eoiian accumulation in the Miocene apparently reflects the relative increase in global aridity during the latter part of the Cenozoic. A dramatic increase in eolian accumulation rates in the Pliocene reflects the increased aridity and availability of glacial erosion products associated with Northern Hemisphere glaciation 2.5 m.y. ago. Eolian grain size, an indicator of wind intensity, suggests that Late Cretaceous wind strength was comparable to present-day wind strength. A sharp decrease in eolian grain size across the Paleocene/Eocene boundary is not readily interpreted, but may indicate a significant reduction in the intensity of atmospheric circulation at that time. Fine eolian grain size and low accumulation rates in the Eocene and early Oligocene are in agreement with low early Tertiary thermal gradients and less vigorous atmospheric circulation. Large increases in grain size during the Oligocene, mid-to-late Miocene, and Pliocene appear to be a response to steepening thermal gradients resulting from increasing polar isolation.