104 resultados para 11-98

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Site 634, drilled during ODP Leg 101, was essentially a reoccupation of Site 98, drilled during DSDP Leg 11 (Hollister, Ewing, et al., 1972, doi:10.2973/dsdp.proc.11.1972; Table 1, Fig. 1). At Site 634, the upper 144 m of sediment was washed in an attempt to reach the Upper Cretaceous target horizon in the time remaining for the cruise (Austin, Schlager, et al., 1986, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.101.1986). Figure 2 illustrates the spatial relationship of Site 98 (2750 m water depth) and Site 634 (2835 m water depth), 0.2 nmi to the northwest. Radiolarians were observed in Site 98 samples from 100 to 240 meters below seafloor (mbsf) during Leg 11, but no detailed biostratigraphic analyses were conducted. Thus, Site 98 presented us an opportunity to sample material correlating with the washed section at Site 634. Samples were taken from Cores 101-634A-2R through 101-634A-4R to study radiolarians, but all proved barren, nor were radiolarians observed in shipboard smear slides. A correlation between Sites 98 and 634 (Fig. 2) suggests that these cores represent the same interval as that recovered in Cores 11-98-10 and 11-98-11, which were also barren. These results are presented separately from other Leg 101 radiolarian studies (Palmer, 1988, datasets: doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.743055) because the Site 98 fauna was predominantly Eocene, while other radiolarian assemblages studied were Oligocene and Miocene.

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By analogy with the present-day ocean, primary productivity of paleoceans can be reconstructed using calculations based on content of organic carbon in sediments and their accumulation rates. Results of calculations based on published data show that primary productivity of organic carbon, mass of phosphorus involved in the process, and content of phosphorus in ocean waters were relatively stable during Cenozoic and Late Mesozoic. Prior to precipitation on the seafloor together with biogenic detritus, dissolved phosphorus could repeatedly be involved in the biogeochemical cycle. Therefore, only less than 0.1% of phosphorus is retained in bottom sediments. Bulk phosphorus accumulation rate in ocean sediments is partly consistent with calculated primary productivity. Some epochs of phosphate accumulation also coincide with maxima of primary productivity and minima of the fossilization coefficient of organic carbon. The latter fact can testify to episodes of acceleration of organic matter mineralization and release of phosphorus from sediments leading to increase in the phosphorus reserve in paleoceans and phosphate accumulation in some places.