1000 resultados para Project Mercury (U.S.)


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Two ash horizons have been identified in Hole 549, one in the upper Paleocene (basal NP9), the other in the upper Eocene (NP18); both are mixed lithic crystal tuffs of rhyolitic composition. These tuffs are absent in Hole 550 owing to unconformities, but the basal Eocene (NP10) of Hole 550 includes a series of over 50 thin bentonite layers. Intermediate plagioclase associated with these bentonites indicates that the original ash was of basaltic to andesitic composition. The bentonites are absent in Hole 549, probably because of an unconformity, but they have been identified in Hole 401 (Leg 48, Bay of Biscay). Two of the pyroclastic phases can be matched with phases previously reported for the North Sea Basin. The bentonites of Site 550 are probably equivalent to the widespread "ash series" of northwestern Europe, which may therefore be regarded as being lower Eocene in terms of Martini's calcareous nannoplankton zonation.

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Thirty-one core-catcher samples from the middle Eocene to middle Miocene at Site 608 and 13 core-catcher samples from the lower to middle Miocene of Site 610 have been examined for planktonic foraminifers. Stratigraphic ranges have been established at both sites and the sequence divided into zones. Zonal markers and other datum events are correlated with the most recent time scale.

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The late Quaternary sequence off eastern South Island, New Zealand, consists of ~100 m of alternating bluish gray pelagic oozes and greenish gray hemipelagic oozes that extend uninterruptedly back to the Brunhes/Matuyama boundary (0.73 m.y.). A very high resolution (~2400 yr.) record of sediment texture, calcium carbonate content, and planktonic and benthic foraminiferal oxygen and carbon isotope composition demonstrates an in-phase cyclical fluctuation between the sedimentary parameters that closely correspond to the pelagic-hemipelagic sedimentation cycles and the isotope composition. Pelagic oozes, formed during interglacial periods of high eustatic sea level, are characterized by calcareous microfossils, relative enrichment in sand and clay sizes, high carbonate contents, reduced delta18O values, and increased delta13C values. Hemipelagic oozes, associated with glacial episodes and lowered eustatic sea level, include common terrigenous material and siliceous microfossils, are enriched in silt sizes, have low carbonate contents, high delta18O values, and low delta13C values. The history of alpine glaciations and associated erosion of the South Island of New Zealand, as expressed by the appearance of hemipelagic oozes, can be correlated directly with the major fluctuations of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets as expressed by the influence of eustatic sea-level changes on the oxygen isotope composition of both planktonic and benthic foraminifers. This high-accumulation-rate record contains conspicuous intervals of highfrequency, high-amplitude isotope variability including the presence of multiple glacial/interglacial intervals within single isotope stages, and offers one of the best sections cored to date for detailed study of the evolution and history of climate change over the last 0.75 m.y.