988 resultados para North Indian Ocean


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Multivariate analyses of latest Pliocene through Holocene benthic foraminifera from 61 samples from Deep-Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Site 214, eastem Indian Ocean were carried out. The 46 highest ranked species were used in R-mode factor analysis which has enabled to the identification of three environmentally significant assemblages at Site 214. Assemblage 1 is characterized by Uvigerina hispido-costata, Osangularia culter , Gavelinopsis lobatulus, Cibicides wuellerstorfi and Karreriella baccata as principal species. This assemblage is inferred to reflect high-energy, well-oxygenated and probably low-organic carbon deep-sea environment at Site 214. Assemblage 2 is defined principally by Globocassidulina pacifica and U. proboscidea and is considered to indicate an organic carbon-rich environment which resulted from high surface productivity irrespective of dissolved oxygen content. Assemblage 3 is marked by Oridorsalis umbonatus, Textularia lythostrota, Hoeglundina elegans, Pyrgo murrhina, and Pullenia quinqueloba as principal species. This assemblage is inferred to indicate a low-organic carbon environment with high pore water oxygen concentration leading to better preservation of deep-sea sediments.

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Radiolarians form a remarkable part of the fossil plankton for Cretaceous sediments of the North Atlantic. Selected sites with long-term sedimentary successions of deep facies were studied (ODP Leg 103 and DSDP Site 398 off northwest Spain and DSDP Site 603 off the east coast of the United States). Preservation of the radiolarian faunas is generally poor, and the faunal abundance and diversity reflect the diagenetic history of the host sediment rather than the original faunal productivity. Several exceptions include abundant and some well-preserved radiolarian faunas from lower Campanian, Cenomanian/Turonian boundary, upper Albian, lower Albian, and Barremian sediments. These increases in radiolarian abundance and preservation coincide with well-established Cretaceous oceanic events in the North Atlantic. Typical faunal associations of these sections are described, and faunal associations from the Cenomanian/Turonian Boundary Event are documented for the first time in the North Atlantic. The relationship of the radiolarian blooms with coeval oceanic events in the North Atlantic is also discussed.