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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Antarctica
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Antarctic ice sheet (3)
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Antarctic Peninsula (1)
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Arctic Ocean
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Lomonosov Ridge (1)
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Norwegian Sea
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Voring Plateau (1)
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Arctic region (1)
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Atlantic Ocean
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Equatorial Atlantic (1)
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North Atlantic
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Caribbean Sea (1)
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Great Bahama Bank (1)
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Gulf of Mexico (1)
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North Sea (1)
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Australasia
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Australia
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Tasmania Australia (1)
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Chicxulub Crater (1)
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Europe
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Southern Europe
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Italy (1)
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Indian Ocean
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Ninetyeast Ridge (1)
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International Ocean Discovery Program
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Expedition 353
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IODP Site U1443 (1)
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Kerguelen Plateau (1)
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ODP Site 642 (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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Northeast Pacific (1)
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Southeast Pacific
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Nazca Ridge (1)
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North Pacific
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Northeast Pacific (1)
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Northwest Pacific
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South China Sea (1)
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South Pacific
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Southeast Pacific
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Nazca Ridge (1)
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Southwest Pacific
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Tasman Sea (6)
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West Pacific
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Northwest Pacific
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South China Sea (1)
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Southwest Pacific
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Tasman Sea (6)
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South Tasman Rise (1)
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Southern Ocean
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Weddell Sea
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Maud Rise (1)
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United States
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Atlantic Coastal Plain (1)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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isotope ratios (3)
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isotopes
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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O-18/O-16 (2)
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oxygen
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O-18/O-16 (2)
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fossils
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Invertebrata
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Protista
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Foraminifera (2)
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microfossils (4)
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palynomorphs
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Dinoflagellata (2)
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miospores
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pollen (1)
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Plantae
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Spermatophyta
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Gymnospermae
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Coniferales (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Miocene
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middle Miocene (1)
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Paleogene
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Eocene
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lower Eocene (2)
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middle Eocene (1)
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upper Eocene
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Auversian (1)
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Oligocene
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lower Oligocene
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Rupelian (1)
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upper Oligocene
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Chattian (1)
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Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (1)
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minerals
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carbonates (1)
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silicates
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framework silicates
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silica minerals
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opal (1)
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Primary terms
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Antarctica
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Antarctic ice sheet (3)
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Antarctic Peninsula (1)
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Arctic Ocean
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Lomonosov Ridge (1)
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Norwegian Sea
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Voring Plateau (1)
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-
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Arctic region (1)
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Atlantic Ocean
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Equatorial Atlantic (1)
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North Atlantic
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Caribbean Sea (1)
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Great Bahama Bank (1)
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Gulf of Mexico (1)
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North Sea (1)
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Australasia
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Australia
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Tasmania Australia (1)
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biogeography (2)
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carbon
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Miocene
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middle Miocene (1)
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Paleogene
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Eocene
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lower Eocene (2)
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middle Eocene (1)
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upper Eocene
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Auversian (1)
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Oligocene
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lower Oligocene
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Rupelian (1)
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upper Oligocene
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Chattian (1)
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Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (1)
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climate change (2)
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Europe
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Southern Europe
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Italy (1)
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glacial geology (2)
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Indian Ocean
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Ninetyeast Ridge (1)
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Integrated Ocean Drilling Program
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Expeditions 320/321
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Expedition 321
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IODP Site U1337 (1)
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IODP Site U1338 (1)
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Invertebrata
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Protista
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Foraminifera (2)
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isotopes
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (2)
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O-18/O-16 (2)
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Ocean Drilling Program
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Leg 104 (1)
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Leg 113
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ODP Site 690 (1)
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Leg 120
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ODP Site 751 (1)
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Leg 121
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ODP Site 758 (1)
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Leg 159
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ODP Site 959 (1)
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Leg 165
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ODP Site 998 (1)
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Leg 166
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ODP Site 1007 (1)
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Leg 174AX (1)
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Leg 184
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ODP Site 1146 (1)
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Leg 189
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ODP Site 1168 (1)
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ODP Site 1171 (3)
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ODP Site 1172 (4)
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Leg 202
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ODP Site 1236 (1)
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ODP Site 1237 (1)
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oxygen
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O-18/O-16 (2)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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Northeast Pacific (1)
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Southeast Pacific
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Nazca Ridge (1)
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North Pacific
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Northeast Pacific (1)
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Northwest Pacific
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South China Sea (1)
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-
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South Pacific
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Southeast Pacific
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Nazca Ridge (1)
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Southwest Pacific
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Tasman Sea (6)
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-
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West Pacific
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Northwest Pacific
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South China Sea (1)
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Southwest Pacific
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Tasman Sea (6)
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paleoclimatology (5)
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paleoecology (1)
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paleogeography (1)
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palynomorphs
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Dinoflagellata (2)
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miospores
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pollen (1)
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Plantae
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Spermatophyta
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Gymnospermae
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Coniferales (1)
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sea-level changes (2)
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks
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diatomite (1)
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sediments
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marine sediments (2)
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Southern Ocean
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Weddell Sea
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Maud Rise (1)
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United States
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Atlantic Coastal Plain (1)
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weathering (1)
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rock formations
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Monterey Formation (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks
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diatomite (1)
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sediments
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sediments
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marine sediments (2)
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Leg 189
Middle Miocene climate–carbon cycle dynamics: Keys for understanding future trends on a warmer Earth?
ABSTRACT The late early to middle Miocene period (18–12.7 Ma) was marked by profound environmental change, as Earth entered into the warmest climate phase of the Neogene (Miocene climate optimum) and then transitioned to a much colder mode with development of permanent ice sheets on Antarctica. Integration of high-resolution benthic foraminiferal isotope records in well-preserved sedimentary successions from the Pacific, Southern, and Indian Oceans provides a long-term perspective with which to assess relationships among climate change, ocean circulation, and carbon cycle dynamics during these successive climate reversals. Fundamentally different modes of ocean circulation and carbon cycling prevailed on an almost ice-free Earth during the Miocene climate optimum (ca. 16.9–14.7 Ma). Comparison of δ 13 C profiles revealed a marked decrease in ocean stratification and in the strength of the meridional overturning circulation during the Miocene climate optimum. We speculate that labile polar ice sheets, weaker Southern Hemisphere westerlies, higher sea level, and more acidic, oxygen-depleted oceans promoted shelf-basin partitioning of carbonate deposition and a weaker meridional overturning circulation, reducing the sequestration efficiency of the biological pump. X-ray fluorescence scanning data additionally revealed that 100 k.y. eccentricity-paced transient hyperthermal events coincided with intense episodes of deep-water acidification and deoxygenation. The in-phase coherence of δ 18 O and δ 13 C at the eccentricity band further suggests that orbitally paced processes such as remineralization of organic carbon from the deep-ocean dissolved organic carbon pool and/or weathering-induced carbon and nutrient fluxes from tropical monsoonal regions to the ocean contributed to the high amplitude variability of the marine carbon cycle. Stepwise global cooling and ice-sheet expansion during the middle Miocene climate transition (ca. 14.7–13.8 Ma) were associated with dampening of astronomically driven climate cycles and progressive steepening of the δ 13 C gradient between intermediate and deep waters, indicating intensification and vertical expansion of ocean meridional overturning circulation following the end of the Miocene climate optimum. Together, these results underline the crucial role of the marine carbon cycle and low-latitude processes in driving climate dynamics on an almost ice-free Earth.
Stratigraphic and sedimentological aspects of the worldwide distribution of Apectodinium in Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum deposits
Abstract The Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) is characterized by pronounced global warming and associated environmental changes. In the more-or-less two decades since prior regional syntheses of Apectodinium distribution at the PETM, extensive biological and geochemical datasets have elucidated the effect of rising world temperatures on climate and the biome. A Carbon Isotope Excursion (CIE) that marks the Paleocene/Eocene Boundary is associated with an acme of marine dinocysts of the genus Apectodinium in many locations. Distinctive foraminiferal and calcareous nannofossil populations may also be present. For this updated, dinocyst-oriented view of the PETM, data from worldwide locations have been evaluated with an emphasis on stratigraphic and sedimentological context. What has emerged is that a change in lithology is common, often to a distinctive siltstone or claystone unit, which contrasts with underlying and overlying lithotypes. This change, present in shallow marine/coastal settings and in deep-water turbidite deposits, is attributed to radical modifications of precipitation and erosional processes. An abrupt boundary carries the implication that some time (of unknowable duration) is potentially missing, which then requires caution in the interpretation of the pacing of events in relation to that boundary. In most instances an ‘abrupt’ or ‘rapid’ CIE onset can be attributed to a data gap at a hiatus, particularly in shallow shelf settings where transgression resulted from sea-level rise associated with the PETM. Truly gradational lower boundaries of the PETM interval are quite unusual and, if present, are poorly known so far. Gradational upper boundaries are more common, but erosional upper boundaries have been reported. Taxonomic changes have been made to clarify identification issues that have adversely impacted some biostratigraphic interpretations. Apectodinium hyperacanthum has been retained in Wetzeliella , its original genus. The majority of specimens previously assigned to Apectodinium hyperacanthum or Wetzeliella ( Apectodinium ) hyperacanthum have been reassigned to an informal species, Apectodinium sp. 1. Dracodinium astra has been retained in its original genus as Wetzeliella astra and is emended.
Near-tropical Early Eocene terrestrial temperatures at the Australo-Antarctic margin, western Tasmania
Three time lines through the neritic stratigraphic record distributed around the northern margin of the Australo-Antarctic Gulf (AAG) mark three fundamental shifts in global environments collectively comprising the Auversian facies shift. The three lines are: (1) the beginning: the Khirthar transgression and the onset of neritic carbonate accumulation in the Bartonian Age (preceding onset of the Middle Eocene climatic optimum [MECO]); (2) the midlife change (Bartonian-Priabonian transition): the shift from carbonate-rich to carbonate-poor, higher-nutrient environments under estuarine circulation, causing widespread dysaerobia culminating in opaline silicas; and (3) the Eocene-Oligocene = Priabonian-Rupelian boundary and glaciation during oxygen isotope event Oi-1, with return of improved ventilation in neritic environments and resumption of carbonate accumulation. Meanwhile, it was warm and very wet at ~60°S. In developing a scenario for the death of the AAG, the birth of the Southern Ocean, and the transition from Paleogene greenhouse Earth to Neogene icehouse Earth, the neritic record of the northern margin is more in accord with the “Dinocyst biogeographic hypothesis” than with the “Tasman gateway hypothesis.”