883 resultados para Implications in diabetes


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The isotopic characteristics of CH4 (d13C values range from -101.3 per mil to -61.1 per mil PDB, and dD values range from -256 per mil to -136 per mil SMOW) collected during Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 164 indicate that the CH4 was produced by microbial CO2 reduction and that there is not a significant contribution of thermogenic CH4 to the sampled sediment gas from the Blake Ridge. The isotopic values of CO2 (d13C range -20.6 per mil to +1.24 per mil PDB) and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC; d13C range -37.7 per mil to +10.8 per mil PDB) have parallel profiles with depth, but with an offset of 12.5 per mil. Distinct downhole variations in the carbon isotopic composition of CH4 and CO2 cannot be explained by closed-system fractionation where the CO2 is solely derived from the locally available sedimentary organic matter (d13C -2.0 per mil ± 1.4 per mil PDB) and the CH4 is derived from CO2 reduction. The observed isotopic profiles reflect the combined effects of upwards gas migration and decreased microbial activity with depth.

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Oxygen and carbon isotope stratigraphies are given for the planktonic foraminifer Globoquadrina venezuelana (a deep-dwelling species) at three DSDP sites located along a north-south transect at approximately 133°W across the Pacific equatorial high-productivity zone. The records obtained at Sites 573 and 574 encompass the lower Miocene. At Site 575 the record includes the middle Miocene and extends into the lowermost lower Miocene. The time resolution of the planktonic foraminifer isotope record varies from 50,000 to 500,000 yr. The benthic foraminifer Oridorsalis umbonatus was analyzed for isotope composition at a few levels of Site 575. Isotope stratigraphies for all three sites are compared with carbonate, foraminifer preservation, and grain size records. We identified a number of chemostratigraphic signals that appear to be synchronous with previously recognized signals in the western equatorial Pacific and the tropical Indian Ocean, and thus provide useful tools for chronostratigraphic correlations. The sedimentary sequence at Site 573 is incomplete and condensed, whereas the sequences from Sites 574 and 575 together provide a complete lower Miocene record. The expanded nature of this record, which was recovered with minimum disturbance and provides excellent calcareous and siliceous biostratigraphic control, offers a unique opportunity to determine the precise timing of early Miocene events. Paleomagnetic data from the hydraulic piston cores at Site 575 for the first time allow late early Miocene paleoceanographic events to be tied directly to the paleomagnetic time scale. The multiple-signal stratigraphies provide clues for paleoceanographic reconstruction during the period of preconditioning before the major middle Miocene cooling. In the lowermost lower Miocene there is a pronounced shift toward greater d13C values (by -1%) within magnetic Chron 16 (between approximately 17.5 and 16.5 Ma). The "Chron 16 Carbon Shift" coincides with the cessation of an early Miocene warming trend visible in the d18O signals. Values of d13C remain high until approximately 15 Ma, then decrease toward initial (early Miocene) values near 13.5 Ma. The broad lower to middle Miocene d13C maximum appears to correlate with the deposition of organic-carbon-rich sediments around the margin of the northern Pacific in the Monterey Formation of California and its lateral equivalents. The sediments rimming the Pacific were probably deposited under coastal upwelling conditions that may have resulted from the development of a strong permanent thermocline. Deposition in the upwelling areas occurred partly under anaerobic conditions, which led to the excess extraction of organic carbon from the ocean. The timing of the middle Miocene cooling, which began after the Chron 16 Carbon Shift, suggests that the extraction of organic carbon preconditioned the ocean-atmosphere system for subsequent cooling. A major carbonate dissolution event in the late early Miocene, starting at approximately 18.7 Ma, is associated with the enrichment in 13C. The maximum dissolution is coeval with the Chron 16 Carbon Shift. It corresponds to a prominent acoustic horizon that can be traced throughout the equatorial Pacific.

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Calcareous nannofossils, pollen, and spores were examined on samples from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 178 Site 1095 on the continental rise and Sites 1097, 1100, and 1103 on the outer continental shelf of the western Antarctic Peninsula. Stratigraphically useful specimens of calcareous nannofossils occur in Site 1095 sediments assigned to Zones CN15, CN13b, and CN11. Calcareous nannofossils are rare but occur throughout the sedimentary sequences from seismic Units S1 to S3 on the continental shelf. Most of the calcareous nannofossils in Units S1 and S2 are composed of Cretaceous specimens that have been recycled by glacial processes. The occurrence of Dictyococcites in samples within Unit S3 upper Miocene sediments without any reworked specimens suggests those sediments are deposited in an open-ocean environment. These results are consistent with those from foraminifer and radiolarian studies. Pollen and spores including Nothofagidites, the genus for fossil pollen referred to as Nothofagus, are also observed in Unit S3 sediments. The sparse occurrence of pollen and spores, however, makes it difficult to assess the nature of the Antarctic terrestrial vegetation.

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