1000 resultados para Project Mercury (U.S.)


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During Leg 41 Neogene sediments were recovered from five sites off northwest Africa. On the Sierra Leone Rise (Site 366), Neogene sediments consist of nanno oozes, nanno chalk, and calcareous clays 230 meters thick, resting conformably on the late Oligocene sediments. The common succession of zones occurs with two hiatuses. The lower gap corresponds to an interval around the lower/middle Miocene boundary (the Praeorbulina glomerosa and Orbulina suturalis-Globorotalia peri-pheroronda zones are absent) and the upper gap coincides with an interval around the middle/upper Miocene boundary (the Sphaeroidinellopsis sub-dehiscens-GIobigerina druryi, Globigerina nepenthes-Globorotalia siakensis and Globorotalia conlinuosa zones are missing). In the Cape Verde Basin (Site 367) deep-water Neogene turbidites (about 200-250 m thick) contain poor fauna of redeposited and sorted Cretaceous, Eocene, Oligocene, and Neogene species. On the Cape Verde Rise (Site 368) the Neogene section starts with slightly calcareous and non-calcareous clays with poor planktonic foraminifers of the lower Miocene. Later on this area was uplifted and clayey sediments have been replaced upsection in order by more shallow-water clayey nanno and nanno-foraminifer oozes and marls and pure calcareous oozes. In the middle Miocene, planktonic foraminifers are still not diverse, but since the level of the Globigerina nepenthes-Globorotalia siakensis Zone, almost all Neogene zones have been traced. The minimum thickness of the Neogene sediments is about 230 meters. On the continental slope off Spanish Sahara (Site 369) monotonous calcareous pelagic sediments of Neogene age (164 m thick) overlie the late Oligocene comformably, or with a small time gap. A set of zones beginning from the Globigerinoides primordis-Globorotaiia kugleri Zone up to the Globorotalia fohsi fohsi Zone has been revealed with a gap corresponding to the Globigerinita stainforthi and the Globigerinatella insueta-Globigerinoides irilobus zones. Above that follow sediments with heterogeneous microfauna which result from redeposition or mixing of sediments during drilling. The section ends with sediments of the late Miocene and lower Pliocene with abundant planktonic foraminifers. The latter are unconformably overlain by the Quaternary ooze. In the Morocco basin (Site 370) deep-water marls and calcareous clays of the lower Miocene contain poor assemblages of planktonic foraminifers. The middle and upper Miocene are represented by turbidites (alternation of nanno oozes, clays, siltstones, and sands) with heterogeneous microfauna. Total thickness of Neogene is up to 200 meters. In general the Neogene foraminifer microfauna of the area studied includes the majority of species which developed within the tropical-subtropical belt. The entire succession of the Miocene and Pliocene foraminifer zones occurs. The only exclusion is the Sphaeroidinellopsis subdehiscens-Globigerina druryi Zone of the middle Miocene. The distribution of species is shown on three tables. Comments are given for 47 species and subspecies of foraminifers (stratigraphic ranges, peculiarities of morphology, and ultrastructure of the shell wall).

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Organic matter contents of black shales from the Cretaceous Hatteras and Blake-Bahama formations have been compared to those from surrounding organic-poor strata using C/N ratios, d13C values, and distributions of extractable and nonsolvent-extractable, long-chain hydrocarbons, acids, and alcohols. The proportion of marine and land-derived organic matter varies considerably among all samples, although terrigenous components generally dominate. Most black shales are hydrocarbon-poor relative to their organic-carbon concentrations. Deposition of the black shales in Hole 603B evidently occurred through turbiditic relocation from shallower landward sites and rapid reburial at this outer continental rise location under generally oxygenated bottom-water conditions.

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Ebridians and actiniscidians are described from Sites 588, 591, and 594 in the southwest Pacific. The middle Miocene to early Pliocene interval at Site 591 can be subdivided into five ebridian-actiniscidian zones. These are correlated to standard nannoplankton zones. Five new species are described from the Neogene of the southwest Pacific: Ammodochium serotinum, Hermesinum obliquum, Actiniscus flosculus, A. laciniatus, and A squamosus.

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At Site 546, below the Mazagan Escarpment at a water depth of 4 km, 36 m of salt rock was cored from the top of one of a field of salt domes. The core was studied by thin section and a variety of geochemical procedures. The salt rock contains 0.1 to 3% carnallite and lesser amounts of sylvite and polyhalite, which with the corresponding high level of bromide place it within the potash evaporite facies. The bromide profile is of a dominantly marine evaporite deposited in moderately shallow brine which, however, was not repeatedly desiccated. A mineralogical argument suggests that the brine surface was not below sea level. An average of about 5% elastics, with dispersed anhydrite, darken the salt rock to deep shades of red, brown, and gray green. Most of the included materials are in highly deformed boudins or dispersions in the salt rock that has also undergone cataclasis in a subsequent, probably tectonic, deformation. The salt rock is slightly deficient in anhydrite, and the usual separate beds and laminae of anhydrite are virtually absent. Stable isotope ratios of sulfur and oxygen in the sulfate are clearly derived from sea water of Permian to Scythian age, in contrast to the late Triassic or Early Jurassic age of evaporites onshore in Morocco and Portugal and the corresponding evaporites offshore Maritime Canada. In contrast to those evaporites off the axis of Atlantic rifting, the salt at Site 546 may have been deposited in a very early central rift fed by marine waters from Tethys through the Gibraltar or South Atlas fracture zones.

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Sediments from Deep Sea Drilling Project Sites 615, 617, 618, 619, and 620-623 were subjected to pyrolysis. The sediments are immature with respect to petroleum generation as determined by production index values of less than 0.1 and Tmax values of 460-480°C. The amount of pyrolyzable organic matter was moderately low as compared to typical petroleum source rocks. The immature organic matter present does not appear to contain a significant proportion of woody material as shown by the low gas-generating potential. Typical overbank sediments from Sites 617 and 620 generally show higher P2 values (500-800 µg hydrocarbon per g dry weight sediment) than typical channel-fill sediments from Sites 621 and 622 (P2 = 450-560 µg/g). Tmax for both types of sediment remained very constant (462-468 °C) with a slight elevation (+ 15°C) occurring in samples containing lignite. The highest P2 values occurred in sections described as turbidites. Very low P2 values (about 50 µg/g) occurred in sands. P2 values for shallower sections of basin Sites 618 and 619 tended to be higher (900-1000 µg/g) and decreased in deeper, more terrigenous sections of Site 619. Preliminary experiments indicate that microbiological degradation of sediment organic matter causes a decrease in P2. Pyrolyzable organic matter from lower fan Site 623 appears to increase with depth in two different sediment sequences (40-85 and 95-125 m sub-bottom). Organic matter type, as shown by pyrolysis capillary gas chromatography (GC) patterns, was generally the same throughout the well, with much more scatter occurring in the deepest sections (130-155 m sub-bottom). One major and two minor organic matter types could be recognized in both fan and basin sites drilled on Leg 96.