1000 resultados para 108-661
Resumo:
Ocean Drilling Program Site 658 at 21°N off northwest Africa has a high sedimentation rate and a high concentration of pollen grains and is thus very suitable for detailed pollen analysis. The time scale for the upper 100 m (the last 670 k.y.) of Site 658 is based on biostratigraphic data and isotope stratigraphy. The pollen record has been divided into 34 zones. These are classified into 7 zone types covering a range from very arid to rather humid conditions. The sequence shows a long-term climatic decline: strong glacial stages were found only after 480 k.y. and strong interglacial stages only before 280 k.y. The Site 658 record correlates well with a terrestrial sequence from northern Greece, although both records differ in their response to global climatic change. Spectral analysis shows a 100- and a 42-k.y. period in the curves of pollen brought in by the northwest trade winds and only a 42-k.y. period in the curves of pollen mostly transported by the African Easterly Jet. A 31-k.y. period is found in the curves for Ephedra and Chenopodiaceae-Amaranthaceae. In addition, Ephedra shows a 54-k.y. period.
Resumo:
The book is devoted to study of diagenetic changes of organic matter and mineral part of sediments and interstitial waters of the Pacific Ocean due to physical-chemical and microbiological processes. Microbiological studies deal with different groups of bacteria. Regularities of quantitative distribution and the role of microorganisms in geochemical processes are under consideration. Geochemical studies highlight redox processes of the early stages of sediment diagenesis, alterations of interstitial waters, regularities of variations in chemical composition of iron-manganese nodules.
Resumo:
In order to provide information on the degree of alteration of the very young basaltic basement drilled on Leg 65 in the mouth of the Gulf of California, we have measured the oxygen isotopic composition of whole rocks and mineral separates. Considerable data already exist for older ocean crust, in particular for the deep holes drilled in the Atlantic Ocean on Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Legs 37, 45, 46, and 51-53. These data indicate that in all of these holes, which include crust as young as 3.5 m.y. old, a significant amount of alteration has taken place as the result of low-temperature interaction between basalt and seawater (cf. Muehlenbachs, 1977, 1980; Hoernes et al., 1978; Friedrichsen and Hoernes, 1980). It is therefore of interest to determine whether Leg 65 crust, which is only 0.5 to 1.5 m.y. old, has experienced a similar degree of alteration.