348 resultados para microfossils
Resumo:
Surveys of the areas surrounding the sites drilled on the Leg 92 19°S transect showed that sedimentation at all except the oldest site is dominated by calcium carbonate deposition. The sediments in the area of the oldest site, west of the Austral Fracture Zone, are being deposited beneath the calcium carbonate compensation depth and are dominated by terrigenous and metal-rich hydrogenous and hydrothermal sediments. The noncarbonate sediments in all of the areas east of the Austral Fracture Zone are dominated by hydrothermal sediment similar in composition to that presently being deposited at the East Pacific Rise. Although no biogenic microfossils were present in smear slides of the sediment, geochemical partitioning suggests that a remnant signal of siliceous biogenic deposition may be preserved, especially in gravity core (GC) 8, which was collected from a high heat flow zone near Site 600. The siliceous sediment may also result from the deposition of amorphous hydrothermal silica from the higher concentrations of pore water SiO2 characteristic of the upwelling waters. Sedimentation on the broad plateaus that characterize each area is quite uniform and suggests that sites on these plateaus will be broadly representative of pelagic sedimentation in the area.
Resumo:
Evolution of approaches and methods for reconstruction of paleoenvironmental conditions from microfossils contained in bottom sediments is assessed. Authors elaborated a new actualistic basis for such reconstructions, consisting of a database on contents of tests of planktonic foraminifers in the surface layer of Atlantic sediments and a package of mathematical tools for computer data processing. Structure of the database is described. It contains data on test contents for 29 species and varieties of planktonic foraminifers in 381 samples. A mathematical model designed for reconstructions is based on factor analysis and multidimensional spline interpolation. The model allows one to deduce Quaternary hydrological parameters (paleotemperature, paleosalinity) for standard hydrological levels down to depth of 250 m for the four seasons of the year. Reconstructions are illustrated by an example of a sedimentary core from the North Atlantic representing a period of 300 ky. During the next to last and the last maxima of continental glaciation (oxygen isotope stages 8, 6, 4, and 2), the subarctic water mass was spread here. Winter and summer surface water temperatures comprised 1-5° and 5-7°C, respectively. During interglacials and in Holocene the conditions were close to present ones: winter and summer surface water temperatures comprised 10-12 and 15-17°C, respectively. Vertical paleohydrological profiles compiled for peaks of climatostratigraphic intervals suggest that during cold intervals water stratification was stronger than during the warm ones. At depth 50 m seasonal salinity oscillations did not exceed 0.4 per mil and commonly salinity was minimum in winter and maximum in summer.
Resumo:
The primary aim of the this investigation was to examine the stability of subtropical sea-surface temperatures and reconstruct the surface-to-benthos thermal gradient. High-resolution stable isotopic analyses (18O and 13C) were conducted on late middle Eocene planktonic and benthic foraminifers recovered from Hole 1051B, Blake Nose, western North Atlantic. The sequence comprises a siliceous nannofossil and foraminifer ooze, with well-preserved calcareous microfossils. Isotopic examination was conducted on the mixed-layer dweller Morozovella spinulosa and the benthic foraminifer Nuttalides truempyi at this subtropical site.
Resumo:
Tropical planktonic foraminifers occur throughout the sequences at all sites of Leg 85, and the standard planktonic foraminiferal zonation of Blow (1969) is applicable to most of the recovered sequences. However, the abundance and state of preservation of foraminifers decline markedly in certain intervals because of the effects of dissolution. Although siliceous microfossils studied on this leg indicate recovery of nearly complete records for the Pleistocene to Oligocene interval, the planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphy is interrupted by strongly dissolved sections at all sites. Particularly, faunas assignable to Zone N7 (early Miocene) and Zone N15-16 (early late Miocene) are almost totally unrecognizable throughout the eastern equatorial Pacific. Well-preserved and diverse planktonic foraminifers occur in the lower middle Miocene, where the evolutionary developments of Orbulina universa d'Orbigny and Globorotalia fohsi Cushman and Ellisor are well represented. The Orbulina first appearance datum is observed to be nearly coincident with the last occurrence level of the diatom Annellus californicus Tempère, thus .establishing an age of 15 Ma for this datum by using the paleomagnetic calibration of the diatom datum. Moderately well-preserved late Eocene planktonic foraminifers occur in the carbonate sediments immediately overlying the basalt basement at Sites 573 and 574. The Eocene-Oligocene faunal transition, however, is masked at both sites by an intercalation of metalliferous layers containing no planktonic foraminifers.
Resumo:
During ODP Leg 123, Sites 765 and 766 were drilled to examine the tectonic evolution, sedimentary history, and paleoceanography of the Argo Abyssal Plain and lower Exmouth Plateau. At each site, the quality of magnetostratigraphic and biostratigraphic records varies because of complicating factors, such as the predominance of turbidites, the presence of condensed horizons, or deposition beneath the CCD. Based primarily on the presence of nannofossils, the base of the sedimentary section at Site 765 was dated as Tithonian. A complete Cretaceous sequence was recovered at this site, although the sedimentation rate varies markedly through the section. The Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary is represented by a condensed horizon. The condensed Cenozoic sequence at Site 765 extends from the upper Paleocene to the lower Miocene. A dramatic increase in sedimentation rate was observed in the lower Miocene, and a 480-m-thick Neogene section is present. The Neogene section is continuous, except for a minor hiatus in the lower Pliocene. The base of the sedimentary section at Site 766 is Valanginian, in agreement with the site's position on marine magnetic anomaly Mil. Valanginian to Barremian sediments are terrigenous, with variable preservation of microfossils, and younger sediments are pelagic, with abundant well-preserved microfossils. Sedimentation rate is highest in the Lower Cretaceous and decreases continually upsection. Upper Cenozoic sediments are condensed, with several hiatuses.
Resumo:
Leg 92 of the Deep Sea Drilling Project cored sediments containing calcareous microfossils at six sites along 19°S latitude in the South Pacific Ocean. Shipboard examination of these sediments revealed planktonic foraminifers of uppermost Oligocene through Pleistocene age that were identified and assigned to biostratigraphic zones according to the tropical zonation scheme of Blow (1969). Preservation of planktonic foraminifers in the sites from Leg 92 has been affected by the position of each site with respect to the lysocline and calcium carbonate compensation depth (CCD) at the time of deposition, depth of burial, and sediment accumulation rate (rate of burial). An additional factor may also be important, especially in the sediments deposited immediately above basement. Evidence of poor preservation in basal sediments of Holes 600C and 601, which have always been shallower than both the lysocline and the CCD, suggests that hydrothermal solutions circulating within young oceanic crust may penetrate the overlying sediments and affect the preservation of calcareous microfossils deposited there.
Resumo:
Site 1143 is located at 9°21.72'N, 113°17.11'E, at a water depth of 2772 m within a basin on the southern continental margin of the South China Sea. Three holes were cored at the site and combined into a composite (spliced) stratigraphic section that documents complete recovery for the upper 190.85 meters composite depth, the interval of advanced piston coring (Wang, Prell, Blum, et al., 2000, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.184.2000; Wang et al., 2001, doi:10.1007/BF02907085). The early Pliocene to Holocene sediment sequence provided abundant and well-preserved calcareous microfossils and offered an excellent opportunity to establish foraminiferal stable isotope records. Here, we present benthic and planktonic d18O and d13C records that cover the last 5 m.y. These data sets will provide an important basis for upcoming studies to generate an orbitally tuned oxygen isotope stratigraphy and examine long- and short-term changes in deep and surface water mass signatures (temperature, salinity, and nutrients) with an average sample spacing of ~2.9 k.y. for the benthic and ~2.6 k.y. for the planktonic records.
Resumo:
A detailed study of chemical composition of bottom sediments along a profile through the Northwest Pacific Basin has allowed to identify and describe four lithofacies types of bottom sediments. Distinguished types of sediments form a genetic series reflecting changing conditions of sedimentation from near-shore to central regions of the ocean. Along the strike of pelagic clays a gradual transition from ash containing clays to zeolite containing clays is established. Ash particles and zeolites have similar forms of occurrence. Together with other data it suggests that zeolites have been formed by diagenetic transformation of rhyolitic glass. Regular changes of CaCO3, amorphous SiO2, Fe and Mn contents in bottom sediments from the coast to the pelagic zone are shown.