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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Chicxulub Crater (1)
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Mexico (1)
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Yucatan Peninsula (1)
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fossils
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Invertebrata
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Protista
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Foraminifera (1)
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microfossils (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Paleogene
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Eocene (1)
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Paleocene
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lower Paleocene
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K-T boundary (1)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
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Upper Cretaceous
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K-T boundary (1)
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Primary terms
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Paleogene
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Eocene (1)
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Paleocene
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lower Paleocene
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K-T boundary (1)
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geophysical methods (1)
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Invertebrata
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Protista
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
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Upper Cretaceous
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K-T boundary (1)
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Mexico (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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packstone (1)
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wackestone (1)
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clastic rocks
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mudstone (1)
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sedimentary structures
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soft sediment deformation (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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packstone (1)
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wackestone (1)
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clastic rocks
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mudstone (1)
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sedimentary structures
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sedimentary structures
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Annealing the Chicxulub Impact: Paleogene Yucatàn Carbonate Slope Development in the Chicxulub Impact Basin, Mexico
Abstract Stratigraphic analysis of the Yaxcopoil-1 core (Yax-1) and seismic analysis of offshore two-dimensional (2D) seismic data provide insight into the Paleogene history of the Chicxulub impact basin and Yucatàn platform development. Ten facies were identified based on core and petrographic analysis. Slope sediments include redeposited and background facies. The former are carbonate supportstones and finer-grained facies with evidence of soft sediment deformation deposited as gravity flows. Background facies are shales and mud-wackestone interpreted as sub-storm wave base suspension deposits. Depositional setting ranged from a steep bathyal slope inside the crater rim to neritic outer carbonate platform environments of the seaward prograding Yucatàn platform. Through sequence stratigraphic analysis of Yax-1, we documented five sequences based on identification of transgressive and maximum flooding surfaces and facies stacking patterns. Biostratigraphic ages are equivocal, but they imply that sequences 1 and 2 are Early Paleocene, sequences 3 and 4 are Early Eocene, and sequence 5 is Middle Eocene. Coarse-grained redeposited carbonates in lower sequences 1 to 4 indicate slope gravity flow processes. Upper sequence 3 records the first evidence of fine-grained turbidites, indicating progradation of the Yucatàn platform. By the top of sequence 4, facies indicate that the platform margin had prograded over the position of Yax-1. Seismic analysis identified six units, the lower five of which appear to correlate with cored Yax-1 sequences. The geometry and distribution of seismic units A and B indicate deposition confined to the western and central parts of the basin. Unit C, with two sets of clinoforms, records a major progradational event in the eastern part of the basin likely related to Yax-1 sequence 3 turbidites. Mainly parallel reflectors in seismic units D and E indicate relatively level bottom conditions similar to the environments of facies in upper sequence 4 and 5. The tops of units D and E, in proximal settings, are erosionally truncated. This unconformity marks the base of unit F, which is characterized by discontinuous reflectors and is restricted to the northeastern portion of the basin. Stratal patterns in seismic units C to E are more controlled by relative sea-level change, as suggested by the development of clinoforms and regional unconformities. If Chicxulub and others like the Chesapeake Bay structure are representative, large marine impacts in tectonically quiescent regions may dominate local depositional environments for millions to tens of millions of years postimpact before returning control to eustasy.
Cyclostratigraphy of upper Paleocene and lower Eocene sediments at Blake Nose Site 1051 (western North Atlantic)
Abstract Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 171B recovered continuous sequences that yield evidence for a suite of ‘critical’ events in the Earth’s history. The main events include the late Eocene radiolarian extinction, the late Palaeocene benthic foraminiferal extinction associated with the Late Palaeocene Thermal Maximum (LPTM), the Cretaceous-Palaeogene (K-P) extinction, the mid-Maastrichtian event, and several episodes of sapropel deposition documenting the late Cenomanian, late Albian and early Albian warm periods. A compilation of stable isotope results for foraminifera from Leg 171B sites and previously published records shows a series of large-scale cycles in temperature and δ 13 C trends from Albian to late Eocene time. Evolution of δ 18 O gradients between planktic and benthic foraminifera suggests that the North Atlantic evolved from a circulation system similar to the modern Mediterranean during early Albian time to a more open ocean circulation by late Albian-early Cenomanian time. Sea surface temperatures peaked during the mid-Cretaceous climatic optimum from the Albian-Cenomanian boundary to Coniacian time and then show a tendency to fall off toward the cool climates of the mid-Maastrichtian. The Albian-Coniacian period is characterized by light benthic oxygen isotope values showing generally warm deep waters. Lightest benthic oxygen isotopes occurred around the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary, and suggest middle bathyal waters with temperatures up to 20 °C in the North Atlantic. The disappearance of widespread sapropel deposition in Turonian time suggests that sills separating the North Atlantic from the rest of the global ocean were finally breached to sufficient depth to permit ventilation by deep waters flowing in from elsewhere. The Maastrichtian and Palaeogene records show two intervals of large-scale carbon burial and exhumation in the late Maastrichtian-Danian and late Palaeocene-early Eocene. Carbon burial peaked in early Danian time, perhaps in response to the withdrawal of large epicontinental seas from Europe and North America. Much of the succeeding Danian period was spent unroofing previously deposited carbon and repairing the damage to carbon export systems in the deep ocean caused by the K-P mass extinction. The youngest episode of carbon exhumation coincided with the onset of the early Eocene Warm Period and the LPTM, and has been attributed to the tectonic closure of the eastern Tethys and initiation of the Himalayan Orogeny.
Abstract Previous stable oxygen isotopic data from surface-dwelling foraminifera indicate that Eocene tropical sea surface temperatures (SSTs) were significantly lower than at present. Here we show that stable isotopic analyses (δ 18 O, δ 13 C) of the late mid-Eocene mixed-layer dweller Morozovella spinulosa are consistent with mid-Eocene mid-latitude SSTs close to, or slightly lower than modern temperatures at Blake Nose, western North Atlantic. In contrast, isotopic analyses of the benthic foraminifer, Nuttalides truempyi reveal a gradual fall in mean bottom-water temperatures from 8 to 7 °C over c . 500 ka years. These deep intermediate-water temperatures are significantly higher than modern ones and are similar to intermediate- and bottom-water temperatures recorded from earlier in Palaeogene and late Cretaceous time. Large shifts are seen in the δ 18 O and δ 13 C values of the planktonic foraminifers, of up to 1‰ and 2.6‰, respectively, that probably reflect temperature and nutrient fluctuations controlled by regional changes in upwelling intensity and runoff. The surface to benthos δ 18 O gradient decreases from 3‰ PDB to a minimum of c . 0.5‰ PDB over 400 ka, which could relate to the intensity of upwelling. Spectral analysis reveals precessional forcing in the foraminiferal δ 18 O records, which shows the direct influence of low-latitude insolation on surface-water stratification. Monsoonal wind systems may have forced the upwelling cycles and/or freshwater input. The benthic foraminifer δ 18 O record also contains the obliquity cycle, in addition to the precessional cycles, indicating the inheritance of mid- and high-latitude forcing to subtropical deep waters.