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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Canada
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Western Canada
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British Columbia
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Saanich Inlet (1)
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Vancouver Island (1)
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Clear Lake (1)
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Pacific Coast (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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Northeast Pacific (1)
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North Pacific
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United States
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California
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Santa Barbara County California
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Oregon (1)
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Washington
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Jefferson County Washington (1)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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oxygen
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fossils
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microfossils (5)
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palynomorphs
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miospores
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pollen (3)
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algae
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diatoms (2)
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Spermatophyta
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geologic age
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upper Pleistocene
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upper Weichselian
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Canada
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Western Canada
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British Columbia
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carbon
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Cenozoic
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upper Pleistocene
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upper Weichselian
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upper Quaternary (1)
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Neogene
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continental slope (1)
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ecology (1)
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Invertebrata
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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stable isotopes
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O-18/O-16 (1)
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oxygen
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O-18/O-16 (1)
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Pacific Coast (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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paleobotany (1)
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palynomorphs
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miospores
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pollen (3)
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Plantae
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algae
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diatoms (2)
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Spermatophyta
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Angiospermae
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Dicotyledoneae
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Quercus (1)
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sedimentary structures
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planar bedding structures
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laminations (1)
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sediments
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marine sediments (2)
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stratigraphy (3)
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United States
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California
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Santa Barbara County California
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Washington
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sedimentary structures
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sediments
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sediments
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marine sediments (2)
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ABSTRACT We present here a comprehensive record of Miocene terrestrial ecosystems from exposures of the Monterey Formation along the Naples coastal bluffs, west of Santa Barbara, California. Constrained by an updated chronology, pollen analyses of 28 samples deposited between 18 and 6 Ma reflect the demise of mesophytic taxa that grew in a warm, wet environment during the late early and early middle Miocene and the development of a summer-dry/winter-wet Mediterranean climate during the late Miocene. Broadleaf tree pollen from mesophytic woodlands and forests now found in the southeastern United States and China ( Liquidambar , Tilia , Ulmus , Carya ) characterized the Miocene climatic optimum (16.9–14.7 Ma), the middle Miocene climate transition (14.7–13.8 Ma), and the interval up to ca. 13.0 Ma. Subsequently, during the late middle to early late Miocene, between 13.3 and 9.0 Ma, oak woodlands and herbs (Asteraceae, Amaranthaceae, Poaceae) from beach scrub and chaparral increased as ocean temperatures cooled and the climate became drier. Between ca. 8.9 and 7.6 Ma, pine increased mostly at the expense of oak ( Quercus ) and herbs, suggesting a period of increasing precipitation. During the latest Miocene (7.5–6.0 Ma), an increase of herb-dominated ecosystems (chaparral, coastal scrub) at the expense of pine reflects the full development of a summer-dry/winter-wet climate in coastal southern California.
Evidence for a Younger Dryas-like cooling event on the British Columbia coast
A deep-sea core collected on the continental slope off northern California contains a pollen stratigraphy for the past 20,000 yr that can be correlated to the pollen stratigraphy from the upper section of Clear Lake core CL-73-4. The occurrence in one sequence of pollen, reflecting the local continental paleoclimates, and marine microfossils reflecting the local paleoceanography, allows a comparison of concurrent responses of the local ocean and adjacent continental area to global climate changes. The interpretation of the two data sets gives a complex progression of changes that are probably interrelated, such as upwelling that produced coastal fogs. The changes in climatic and oceanographic environmental conditions that occurred in response to the switch from global glacial to interglacial conditions was not a smooth progression of increasingly moderate regimes; rather, the changes appear to be a complicated series of states that suggests a disequilibrium mode lasting from about 15,000 to 5,000 yr ago.