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  • Ocean Drilling Program; ODP  (5)
  • Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP  (4)
  • 198-1209; Age model; Ageprofile Datum Description; COMPCORE; Composite Core; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GSA Geological Time Scale v.4.0 2012; Joides Resolution; Leg198; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP  (2)
  • PANGAEA  (11)
  • Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG)
  • Springer Science + Business Media
  • 2010-2014  (11)
  • 1935-1939
Collection
Keywords
Publisher
  • PANGAEA  (11)
  • Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG)
  • Springer Science + Business Media
Years
Year
  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Owens, Jeremy D; Lyons, Timothy W; Li, Xiaona N; MacLeod, Kenneth G; Gordon, Gwenyth; Kuypers, Marcel MM; Anbar, Ariel D; Kuhnt, Wolfgang; Severmann, Silke (2012): Iron isotope and trace metal records of iron cycling in the proto-North Atlantic during the Cenomanian-Turonian oceanic anoxic event (OAE-2). Paleoceanography, 27(3), PA3223, https://doi.org/10.1029/2012PA002328
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: he global carbon cycle during the mid-Cretaceous (~125-88 million years ago, Ma) experienced numerous major perturbations linked to increased organic carbon burial under widespread, possibly basin-scale oxygen deficiency and episodes of euxinia (anoxic and H2S-containing). The largest of these episodes, the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary event (ca. 93.5 Ma), or oceanic anoxic event (OAE) 2, was marked by pervasive deposition of organic-rich, laminated black shales in deep waters and in some cases across continental shelves. This deposition is recorded in a pronounced positive carbon isotope excursion seen ubiquitously in carbonates and organic matter. Enrichments of redox-sensitive, often bioessential trace metals, including Fe and Mo, indicate major shifts in their biogeochemical cycles under reducing conditions that may be linked to changes in primary production. Iron enrichments and bulk Fe isotope compositions track the sources and sinks of Fe in the proto-North Atlantic at seven localities marked by diverse depositional conditions. Included are an ancestral mid-ocean ridge and euxinic, intermittently euxinic, and oxic settings across varying paleodepths throughout the basin. These data yield evidence for a reactive Fe shuttle that likely delivered Fe from the shallow shelf to the deep ocean basin, as well as (1) hydrothermal sources enhanced by accelerated seafloor spreading or emplacement of large igneous province(s) and (2) local-scale Fe remobilization within the sediment column. This study, the first to explore Fe cycling and enrichment patterns on an ocean scale using iron isotope data, demonstrates the complex processes operating on this scale that can mask simple source-sink relationships. The data imply that the proto-North Atlantic received elevated Fe inputs from several sources (e.g., hydrothermal, shuttle and detrital inputs) and that the redox state of the basin was not exclusively euxinic, suggesting previously unknown heterogeneity in depositional conditions and biogeochemical cycling within those settings during OAE-2.
    Keywords: Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Sibert, Elizabeth C; Hull, Pincelli M; Norris, Richard D (2014): Resilience of Pacific pelagic fish across the Cretaceous/Palaeogene mass extinction. Nature Geoscience, 7(9), 667-670, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2227
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Open ocean ecosystems experienced profound disruption in biodiversity and structure during the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction ~66 million years ago. Extinction scenarios have suggested that a collapse of phytoplankton production rippled up the food chain causing wholesale loss of consumers and top predators. Pelagic fishes represent a key trophic link between primary producers and top predators and provide a means to examine the influence of trophic relationships during extinctions. Here we show that there is geographic heterogeneity in the abundance of fishes through the mass extinction using the accumulation rate of ichthyoliths (i.e., microscopic fish teeth and shark dermal scales). In the Tethys Sea, fish abundance falls abruptly at the boundary and remains depressed for at least 3 million years. In contrast, fish abundance in the Pacific Ocean remained at or above pre-boundary levels for at least four million years following the mass extinction, despite drastic extinctions in co-occurring primary producers and zooplankton consumers. Geographic differences in these post-disaster ecosystems suggest that the mass extinction did not produce a uniformly "dead" ocean or microbially dominated system, but instead supported, at least regionally, ecosystems with mid-trophic level abundances similar to or above those of the Late Cretaceous.
    Keywords: Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 13 datasets
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: 198-1209; Age model; Ageprofile Datum Description; COMPCORE; Composite Core; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GSA Geological Time Scale v.4.0 2012; Joides Resolution; Leg198; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 35 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: 198-1209; Age model; Ageprofile Datum Description; COMPCORE; Composite Core; DEPTH, sediment/rock; GSA Geological Time Scale v.4.0 2012; Joides Resolution; Leg198; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 30 data points
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hu, Dengke; Böning, Philipp; Köhler, Cornelia M; Hillier, Stephen; Pressling, Nicola; Wan, Shiming; Brumsack, Hans-Jürgen; Clift, Peter D (2012): Deep sea records of the continental weathering and erosion response to East Asian monsoon intensification since 14ka in the South China Sea. Chemical Geology, 326-327, 1-18, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2012.07.024
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: We analyzed sediment from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1144 in the northern South China Sea to examine the weathering response of SE Asia to the strengthening of the East Asian Monsoon (EAM) since 14 ka. Our high-resolution record highlights the decoupling between continental chemical weathering, physical erosion and summer monsoon intensity. Mass accumulation rates, Ti/Ca, K/Rb, hematite/goethite and 87Sr/86Sr show sharp excursions from 11 to 8 ka, peaking at 10 ka. Clay minerals show a shorter-lived response with a higher kaolinite/(illite + chlorite) ratio at 10.7-9.5 ka. However, not all proxies show a clear response to environmental changes. Magnetic susceptibility rises sharply between 12 and 11 ka. Grain-size becomes finer from 14 to 10 ka and then coarsens until ~7 ka, but is probably controlled by bottom current flow and sealevel. Sr and Nd isotopes show that material is dominantly eroded from Taiwan with a lesser flux from Luzon, while clay mineralogy suggests that the primary sources during the Early Holocene were reworked via the shelf in the Taiwan Strait, rather than directly from Taiwan. Erosion was enhanced during monsoon strengthening and caused reworking of chemically weathered Pleistocene sediment largely from the now flooded Taiwan Strait, which was transgressed by ~8 ka, cutting off supply to the deep-water slope. None of the proxies shows an erosional response lasting until ~6 ka, when speleothem oxygen isotope records indicate the start of monsoon weakening. Although more weathered sediments were deposited from 11 to 8 ka when the monsoon was strong these are reworked and represent more weathering during the last glacial maximum (LGM) when the summer monsoon was weaker but the shelves were exposed.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Bolton, Clara T; Lawrence, Kira T; Gibbs, Samantha J; Wilson, Paul A; Herbert, Timothy D (2011): Biotic and geochemical evidence for a global latitudinal shift in ocean biogeochemistry and export productivity during the late Pliocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 308(1-2), 200-210, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.05.046
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: During the late Pliocene (~3 to 2.5 Ma), oceanic records of opal and C37 alkenone accumulation from around the world show a secular shift towards lower values in the high latitudes and higher values in the low and mid latitudes. These shifts are broadly coincident with the intensification of northern hemisphere glaciation and are suggestive of changes in export productivity, with potential implications for Pliocene atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. The interpretation of a global latitudinal shift in productivity, however, requires testing because of the potential uncertainties associated with site to site comparisons of records that can be influenced by highly nonlinear processes associated with production, export, and preservation. Here, we assess the inferred Pliocene latitudinal productivity shift interpretation by presenting new records of C37 alkenone accumulation from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 982 in the North Atlantic and biotic assemblages (calcareous nannoplankton) from this site and ODP Site 846 in the eastern tropical Pacific. Our results corroborate the interpretation of C37 alkenone accumulation as a proxy for gross export productivity at these sites, indicating that large-scale productivity decreases at high latitudes and increases at tropical sites are recorded robustly. We conclude that the intensification of northern hemisphere glaciation during the late Pliocene was associated with a profound reorganisation of ocean biogeochemistry.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: O'Brien, Charlotte L; Foster, Gavin L; Martínez-Botí, Miquel Àngel; Abell, Richard; Rae, James W B; Pancost, Richard D (2014): High sea surface temperatures in tropical warm pools during the Pliocene. Nature Geoscience, 7, 606-611, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2194
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The western warm pools of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans are a critical source of heat and moisture for the tropical climate system. Over the past five million years, global mean temperatures have cooled by 3-4 °C. Yet, current reconstructions of sea surface temperatures indicate that temperature in the warm pools has remained stable during this time. This stability has been used to suggest that tropical sea-surface temperatures are controlled by some sort of thermostat-like regulation. Here we reconstruct sea surface temperatures in the South China Sea, Caribbean Sea and western equatorial Pacific Ocean for the past five million years, using a combination of the Mg/Ca, TEXH86-and Uk'37 surface temperature proxies. Our data indicate that during the period of Pliocene warmth from about 5 to 2.6 million years ago, the western Pacific and western Atlantic warm pools were about 2 °C warmer than today. We suggest that the apparent lack of warming seen in the previous reconstructions was an artefact of low seawater Mg/Ca ratios in the Pliocene oceans. Taking this bias into account, our data indicate that tropical sea surface temperatures did change in conjunction with global mean temperatures. We therefore conclude that the temperature of the warm pools of the equatorial oceans during the Pliocene was not limited by a thermostat-like mechanism.
    Keywords: Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 18 datasets
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Edgar, Kirsty M; Bohaty, Steven M; Gibbs, Samantha J; Sexton, Philip F; Norris, Richard D; Wilson, Paul A (2013): Symbiont 'bleaching' in planktic foraminifera during the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum. Geology, 41(1), 15-18, https://doi.org/10.1130/G33388.1
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Many genera of modern planktic foraminifera are adapted to nutrient-poor (oligotrophic) surface waters by hosting photosynthetic symbionts, but it is unknown how they will respond to future changes in ocean temperature and acidity. Here we show that ca. 40 Ma, some fossil photosymbiont-bearing planktic foraminifera were temporarily 'bleached' of their symbionts coincident with transient global warming during the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO). At Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Sites 748 and 1051 (Southern Ocean and mid-latitude North Atlantic, respectively), the typically positive relationship between the size of photosymbiont-bearing planktic foraminifer tests and their carbon isotope ratios (d13C) was temporarily reduced for ~100 k.y. during the peak of the MECO. At the same time, the typically photosymbiont-bearing planktic foraminifera Acarinina suffered transient reductions in test size and relative abundance, indicating ecological stress. The coincidence of minimum d18O values and reduction in test size-d13C gradients suggests a link between increased sea-surface temperatures and bleaching during the MECO, although changes in pH and nutrient availability may also have played a role. Our findings show that host-photosymbiont interactions are not constant through geological time, with implications for both the evolution of trophic strategies in marine plankton and the reliability of geochemical proxy records generated from symbiont-bearing planktic foraminifera.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Westerhold, Thomas; Röhl, Ursula; Pälike, Heiko; Wilkens, Roy H; Wilson, Paul A; Acton, Gary D (2014): Orbitally tuned timescale and astronomical forcing in the middle Eocene to early Oligocene. Climate of the Past, 10, 955-973, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-10-955-2014
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Deciphering the driving mechanisms of Earth system processes, including the climate dynamics expressed as paleoceanographic events, requires a complete, continuous, and high-resolution stratigraphy that is very accurately dated. In this study, we construct a robust astronomically calibrated age model for the middle Eocene to early Oligocene interval (31-43 Ma) in order to permit more detailed study of the exceptional climatic events that occurred during this time, including the Middle Eocene Climate Optimum and the Eocene/Oligocene transition. A goal of this effort is to accurately date the middle Eocene to early Oligocene composite section cored during the Pacific Equatorial Age Transect (PEAT, IODP Exp. 320/321). The stratigraphic framework for the new time scale is based on the identification of the stable long eccentricity cycle in published and new high-resolution records encompassing bulk and benthic stable isotope, calibrated XRF core scanning, and magnetostratigraphic data from ODP Sites 171B-1052, 189-1172, 199-1218, and 207-1260 as well as IODP Sites 320-U1333, and -U1334 spanning magnetic polarity Chrons C12n to C20n. Subsequently we applied orbital tuning of the records to the La2011 orbital solution. The resulting new time scale revises and refines the existing orbitally tuned age model and the Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale from 31 to 43 Ma. Our newly defined absolute age for the Eocene/Oligocene boundary validates the astronomical tuned age of 33.89 Ma identified at the Massignano (Italy) global stratotype section and point. Our compilation of geochemical records of climate-controlled variability in sedimentation through the middle-to-late Eocene and early Oligocene demonstrates strong power in the eccentricity band that is readily tuned to the latest astronomical solution. Obliquity driven cyclicity is only apparent during very long eccentricity cycle minima around 35.5 Ma, 38.3 Ma and 40.1 Ma.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 22 datasets
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hull, Pincelli M; Norris, Richard D (2011): Diverse patterns of ocean export productivity change across the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary: New insights from biogenic barium. Paleoceanography, 26(3), PA3205, https://doi.org/10.1029/2010PA002082
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: One of the best-studied aspects of the K-Pg mass extinction is the decline and subsequent recovery of open ocean export productivity (e.g., the flux of organic matter from the surface to deep ocean). Some export proxies, including surface-to-deep water d13C gradients and carbonate sedimentation rates, indicate a global decline in export productivity triggered by the extinction. In contrast, benthic foraminiferal and other geochemical productivity proxies suggest spatially and temporally heterogeneous K-Pg boundary effects. Here we address these conflicting export productivity patterns using new and compiled measurements of biogenic barium. Unlike a previous synthesis, we find that the boundary effect on export productivity and the timing of recovery varied considerably between different oceanic sites. The northeast and southwest Atlantic, Southern Ocean, and Indian Ocean records saw export production plummet and remain depressed for 350 thousand to 2 million years. Biogenic barium and other proxies in the central Pacific and some upwelling or neritic Atlantic sites indicate the opposite, with proxies recording either no change or increased export production in the early Paleocene. Our results suggest that widespread declines in surface-to-deep ocean d13C do not record a global decrease in export productivity. Rather, independent proxies, including barium and other geochemical proxies, and benthic community structure, indicate that some regions were characterized by maintained or rapidly recovered organic flux from the surface ocean to the deep seafloor, while other regions had profound reductions in export productivity that persisted long into the Paleocene.
    Keywords: Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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