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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Antarctica
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Arctic region
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carbon
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Cenozoic
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Invertebrata
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ionosphere (2)
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stable isotopes
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O-18/O-16 (3)
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Mediterranean region (1)
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metals
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alkaline earth metals
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calcium (1)
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magnesium (1)
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meteorites
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stony meteorites
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noble gases (1)
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North America
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Appalachian Basin (1)
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Northern Hemisphere (1)
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oxygen
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O-18/O-16 (3)
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Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Marjum Formation (1)
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Carboniferous
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Mississippian
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Lower Mississippian (1)
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Sunbury Shale (1)
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Permian
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Lower Permian (1)
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palynomorphs
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miospores
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pollen (2)
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Phanerozoic (2)
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Plantae
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algae
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diatoms (2)
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plate tectonics (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks
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sedimentary structures
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Sun (3)
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United States
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Kentucky
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New Mexico
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Otero County New Mexico (1)
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Socorro County New Mexico
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North Dakota
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Ward County North Dakota (1)
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Southwestern U.S. (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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limestone (1)
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clastic rocks
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sedimentary structures
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sediments
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sediments
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siliciclastics (1)
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soils
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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Date
Availability
solar activity
Solar Storms and the Geomagnetic Field
Millennial-scale climate cycles modulated by Milankovitch forcing in the middle Cambrian (ca. 500 Ma) Marjum Formation, Utah, USA
Some Challenges of Geomagnetism Addressed with the Use of Ground and Satellite Observations
2. NOBLE GASES FROM THE SUN
Solar activity expressed in a modern varve thickness sequence
Fossil forest reveals sunspot activity in the early Permian
ENSO- and solar-driven sub-Milankovitch cyclicity in the Palaeogene greenhouse world; high-resolution pollen records from Eocene Lake Messel, Germany
Solar forcing of Holocene summer sea-surface temperatures in the northern North Atlantic
Orbital, ice sheet, and possible solar controls on Holocene moisture trends in the North Atlantic drainage basin
Solar forcing of Holocene climate: New insights from a speleothem record, southwestern United States
Cyclic climate fluctuations during the last interglacial in central Europe
Evidence from Lake Lisan of solar influence on decadal- to centennial-scale climate variability during marine oxygen isotope stage 2
Centennial-scale cycles in middle Holocene sea level along the southeastern Swedish Baltic coast
Correlation of climate cycles in middle Mississippi Valley loess and Greenland ice
THE DEPENDENCE OF GEOLOGICAL AND BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES ON THE POSITION OF THE SUN IN ITS GALACTIC ORBIT
Possible solar forcing of century-scale drought frequency in the northern Great Plains
Productivity cycles of 200–300 years in the Antarctic Peninsula region: Understanding linkages among the sun, atmosphere, oceans, sea ice, and biota
Radiation windows as indicators of an astronomical influence on the Devil's Hole chronology
Microstratigraphy of the Lower Mississippian Sunbury Shale: A record of solar-modulated climatic cyclicity
A simple model that tracks global land area and its average latitude to specify CO 2 levels and consequent surface temperatures has been used to infer paleotem-peratures of 20 Phanerozoic global paleogeographic reconstructions. The model is based on the premise that global CO 2 levels and temperature are directly proportional to the average latitude of the world landmass and inversely proportional to total land area. In all 20 cases, inferred CO 2 and paleotemperature values are plausible and generally compatible with previous estimates. However, raw model output must be refined to take into account changes in rates of other climate modifiers such as orogeny, organic carbon burial, and precipitation that can be inferred from additional evidence. Results show a warm (19°C) ice-free Cambrian world of small land area (75% emergent) at mid-latitudes (35°). Rapid equatorward migration of world landmass to 25° latitude then led to a cool (13°C) ice-capped late Ordovician world that was 70% emergent. Equally rapid migration back to higher latitudes (39°) by the Silurian coupled with decreased emergence (64%) produced the warmest temperatures of the Phanerozoic (22°). Return of the landmass to mid-latitudes (32°) coupled with reemergence (71%) by early Devonian reestablished cooler (18°) temperatures. As Pangea coalesced from early Devonian to late Carboniferous, percent emergence continually increased to virtually 100% as average latitude continually increased to 38°, resulting in an ice-capped world of 16°C. High organic carbon burial rates and orogeny at that time would suggest that our temperature estimates are slightly too high for this interval. By early Triassic, our results indicate continual ice-enhanced emergence at virtually 100% and equatorward migration of land to 33° latitude, yielding a global temperature of 16°C. Other lines of evidence (absence of ice, low organic carbon burial, weak orogeny, aridity) suggest a slightly warmer world, or at least one with a lower pole-equator thermal gradient. From Triassic to mid Cretaceous, average latitude again increased to 38° and emergence decreased to 75%, producing a warming of global temperature to 20°C. Cretaceous to Recent results indicate that average latitude of the landmass decreases to 30° as India and Australia move equatorward and that there is an increase to as much as 100% emergence during maximum late Cenozoic ice-sheet growth. Corresponding global temperatures decline to as low as 13°C.