912 resultados para Prairie States Forestry Project (U.S.)


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Samples from the upper Oligocene and lower Miocene of Holes 515B (Brazil Basin) and 516F (Rio Grande Rise) were examined for fossil marine diatom content. The preservation of the diatoms was poor and the species diversity low in both holes. However, it was possible to zone portions of the intervals studied using the zonation proposed by Gombos and Ciesielski (1983), which is based, as far as possible, on common and robust species. Thus, the interval in Hole 515B represented by Cores 515B-15 and 515B-16 is assigned to the Coscinodiscus rhombicus Zone and the interval represented by Cores 515B-17 through 515B-44 is assigned to the Rocella gelida Zone. The C. rhombicus Zone is early Miocene in age and the R. gelida Zone is late Oligocene to early Miocene in age. In Hole 516F the interval represented by Cores 516F-6 through 516F-10 is assigned to the R. gelida Zone Gate Oligocene to early Miocene), and the interval represented by Cores 516F-11 through 516F-15 is assigned to the Triceratium groningensis Zone (late Oligocene). Two new fossil diatom taxa are defined herein: Coscinodiscus lewisianus Greville f. concavus n. f. and Rocella semigelida n. sp.

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Leg 58 successfully recovered basalt at Sites 442, 443, and 444, in the Shikoku Basin, and at Site 446 in the Daito Basin. Only at Site 442 did penetration reach unequivocal oceanic layer 2; at the other sites, only off-axis sills and flows were sampled. Petrographic observations indicate that back-arc basalts from the Shikoku Basin, with the exception of the kaersutite-bearing upper sill at Site 444, are mineralogically similar to basalts being erupted at normal mid-ocean ridges. However, the Shikoku Basin basalts are commonly very vesicular, indicating a high volatile content in the magmas. Site 446 in the Daito Basin penetrated a succession of 23 sills which include both kaersutite-bearing and kaersutite-free basalt varieties. A total of 187 samples from the four sites has been analyzed for major and trace elements using X-ray-fluorescence techniques. Chemically, the basalts from Sites 442 and 443 and the lower sill of Site 444 are subalkaline tholeiites and resemble N-type ocean-ridge basalts found along the East Pacific Rise and at 22° N on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR), although they are not quite as depleted in certain hygromagmatophile (HYG) elements. They do not show any chemical affinities with island-arc tholeiites. The basalts from Site 446 and from the upper sill at Site 444 show alkaline and tholeiitic tendencies, and are enriched in the more-HYG elements; they chemically resemble enriched or E-type basalts and their differentiates found along sections of the MAR (e.g., 45°N) and on ocean islands (e.g., Iceland and the Azores). Most of the intra-site variation may be attributed to crystal settling within individual massive flows and sills, to high-level fractional crystallization in sub-ridge magma chambers, or, where there is evidence of a long period of magmatic quiescence between units, to batch partial melting. However, the basalts from Sites 442 and 443 and from the lower sill at Site 444 cannot easily be related to those from Site 446 and the upper sill at Site 444, and it is possible that the different basalt types were derived from chemically distinct mantle sources. From comparison of the Leg 58 data with those already available for other intra-oceanic back-arc basins, it appears that the mantle sources giving rise to back-arc-basin basalts are chemically as diverse as those for mid-ocean ridges. In addition, the high vesicularity of the Shikoku Basin basalts supports previous observations that the mantle source of back-arc-basin basalts may be contaminated by a hydrous component from the adjacent subduction zone.

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Microprobe mineral compositions of olivine, plagioclase, clinopyroxene, chrome spinel, ilmenite, and titanomagnetite are presented for 7 samples from 4 flows of hawaiite and one flow of tholeiitic basalt from Hole 430A at Ojin Seamount, 4 samples from 3 flows of alkalic basalt from Hole 432A at Nintoku Seamount, and 29 samples from 2 flows of alkalic basalt and 24 flows of tholeiitic basalt from Holes 433A, 433B, and 433C at Suiko Seamount. The four hawaiite flows from Hole 430A on Ojin Seamount have nearly identical mineralogy. The plagioclase phenocrysts and calculated equilibrium olivine appear to have crystallized at about 1175°C; the groundmass plagioclase crystallized from about 1135° to 1010°C; and the Fe-Ti oxides equilibrated at temperatures from 1000°C to 720°C under oxygen fugacities of 10**-11 to 10**-17. The single tholeiitic flow contains glomerocrysts of plagioclase (An80 to An65) and clinopyroxene (Wo43En46Fsn to Wo42En45Fs13). The plagioclase phenocrysts give calculated temperatures as high as 1400°C, indicating that they were not equilibrated with a magma having the bulk rock composition. The plagioclase groundmass crystallized at 1120° to 1070°C, and the Fe-Ti oxides equilibrated at 1070° to 930°C under oxygen fugacities of 10**-10 to 10**-12. Using mineral compositions of Hawaiian basalts as a guide, we infer that the hawaiite flows were erupted during the post-caldera alkalic eruptive stage and the tholeiite was erupted during the shield-building or caldera collapse stage. The three alkalic basalt flows from Hole 432A on Nintoku Seamount have similar mineralogy, although Flow Units 1 and 2 contain much more abundant plagioclase phenocrysts. The groundmass plagioclase crystallized at temperatures between 1175° and 1000°C. The olivine and plagioclase phenocrysts do not appear to be in equilibrium with the enclosing magmas. The mineral compositions suggest that these samples are intermediate between alkalic basalt and hawaiite; they probably erupted during the post-caldera alkalic stage of eruption. The two analyzed alkalic basalt flows are the two youngest flows recovered at Holes 433A, 433B, and 433C. Flow Unit 1 contains abundant sector-zoned clinopyroxene, and Flow Unit 2 contains rare kink-banded olivine xenocrysts. The plagioclase phenocrysts yield calculated temperatures of 1440° to 1250°C, indicating that they are probably not cognate. Calculated-equilibrium olivine indicates crystallization of olivine at about 1170°C. The Fe-Ti oxides equilibrated at temperatures of 1140° to 870°C under oxygen fugacities of 10**-9 to 10**-14. The groundmass plagioclase crystallized at temperatures of 1178° to 1035 °C. The mineral compositions indicate that these alkalic basalts erupted during the post-caldera alkalic eruptive stage. The 24 analyzed tholeiitic basalts are subdivided on the basis of phenocryst abundances into olivine tholeiites, plagioclase tholeiites, and tholeiites. The crystallization sequence appears to have been chrome spinel, olivine, plagioclase, and clinopyroxene as phenocryst phases, followed by and overlapping with groundmass crystallization of plagioclase (1180° to 920°C), clinopyroxene, and Fe-Ti oxides (1140° to 670°C). At least three flows contain pigeonite. The mineral compositions indicate that all the samples from Flow Unit 4 downward are tholeiitic basalts, although Flow Unit 64 has mineral compositions transitional to those in alkalic basalts.

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Shear-wave and compressional-wave velocities of 26 basalt samples collected at Site 504 during Deep Sea Drilling Project Legs 69 and 70 were measured at elevated confining pressures. The young basalts have higher velocities than average DSDP basalts, because of their lack of alteration. Measurements of sample porosity are combined with laboratory and in situ velocity measurements to yield estimates of total crustal porosity: 13% at the top of Layer 2, and very low porosity below a depth of 2.0 km.

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