269 resultados para EUKARYOTIC INITIATION-FACTOR-2-ALPHA
Resumo:
Site 672 is located on the Atlantic abyssal plain to the east of the Lesser Antilles forearc region. It serves as a stratigraphic reference section for sediments entering the Barbados accretionary prism. A relatively complete Pliocene through lower Pleistocene section was recovered from Site 672 that contains a moderately well-preserved population of benthic foraminifers. Q-mode factor analysis of the benthic population data identified three Pliocene-Pleistocene assemblages that inhabited this site. The Factor 1 fauna, characterized by Nuttallides umboniferus, is commonly associated with the presence of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW). The Factor 2 assemblage is characterized by Globocassidulina subglobosa, Epistominella exigua, and a combined category of unilocular species. The Factor 3 assemblage is characterized by Epistominella exigua, and Planulina wuellerstorfi. The Factor 2 and 3 faunas are associated with bottom water significantly warmer than that preferred by the Factor 1 assemblage. The distribution of these assemblages has been used to distinguish three climatic intervals in the abyssal environment during the Pliocene-Pleistocene. An early Pliocene warm interval occurred from the Ceratolithus rugosus Subzone to the middle of the Discoaster tamalis Subzone. The upper Pliocene is characterized by oscillations between the Factor 1 and Factor 2 assemblages, which suggests climatic deterioration and increased pulses of AABW flow. The persistence of an essentially modern (Factor 1) fauna throughout the early Pleistocene suggests full glacial development at both poles and a substantial volume of AABW production.
Resumo:
Growth rates of nine ferromanganese nodules collected from the Southeast Pacific were estimated using the alpha radiogpaphic technigue. Growth rates range from 1 to 16 mm per million years. In three nodules measurements were made on two opposite sides; two of them showed no growth in one of measured directions during the last 300 ky, whereas in the third nodule growth rates on the opposite sides differ by factor 2. Average sedimentation rate of deposits underlying the nodules estimated by the radiocarbon and excess 230Th methods, were 4 mm/1000 years with rather minor variations. Difference between sedimentation rates and nodule growth rates is caused by activity of benthic fauna, as suggested by inversion of radiocarbon dates with depth.