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  • 1
    Call number: 9/S 90.0095(417)
    In: Special paper
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: IV, 105 S.
    ISBN: 0813724171 , 978-0-8137-2417-1
    Series Statement: Special paper / Geological Society of America (GSA) 417
    Classification:
    Historical Geology
    Location: Reading room
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1365-3091
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: The Seven Rivers Formation exposed in Slaughter Canyon, Guadalupe Mountains, New Mexico, reveals complex relations between long- and short-term relative changes in sea-level, shelf configuration and sedimentation, which interacted to create a distinct toplap geometry. At least five sandstones diverge basinward from a prominent boundary unit marking the surface of toplap at the top of the Seven Rivers Formation and create a series of prograding, shingled clinoforms. The boundary unit is a horizontal, well-sorted, quartz arenite underlain across the shelf by peritidal carbonate or by other merging sandstones. Preserved palaeotopography is indicated by facies changes downdip and the presence of horizontal geopetal indicators in inclined beds. Near the boundary unit (updip), merging sandstones contain rare sedimentary structures including evaporite moulds and irregular fenestrae and are bounded above and below by peritidal carbonate with microbial laminae, fenestral fabrics and mudcracks. Laterally (downdip), the sandstone-bounding peritidal carbonate facies pass into subtidal carbonate facies (ooid-peloid-fusulinid-dasyclad-mollusc pack- and grainstone) and interbedded sandstones contain sedimentary structures such as ripple marks and trough to planar cross-stratification, as well as ooids, fusulinids and other carbonate grains. Toplap is interpreted to have developed by sediment bypass across a subaerially exposed shelf while sedimentation continued in still-submerged areas downdip from the shelf crest, and hence represents depositional toplap. Physical tracing of subaerial exposure surfaces suggests that the shoreline migrated up and down palaeoslope several times. The vertical component of five short-term shoreline migrations decreased during formation of the toplap geometry. Sea-level rose to approximately the same position following each fall to create the toplap geometry. This depositional toplap is the stratigraphic result of high-‘frequency’ relative changes of sea-level that combined to produce the larger-scale geometry. We suggest that changing amplitudes of relative sea-level may play a significant role in the stratigraphic evolution of platforms and that separating ‘short-term’and ‘long-term’relative sea-level may be ambiguous in such instances.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
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    PANGAEA
    In:  EPIC3Bremerhaven, PANGAEA
    Publication Date: 2015-04-09
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: PANGAEA Documentation , notRev
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
    Format: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Li, Rongxi; Dong, Shuwen; Lehrmann, Daniel; Duan, Lizhi (2013): Tectonically driven organic fluid migration in the Dabashan Foreland Belt: evidenced by geochemistry and geothermometry of vein-filling fibrous calcite with organic inclusions. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, 75, 202-212, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2013.07.026
    Publication Date: 2023-04-24
    Description: Fibrous calcite veins with organic inclusions have been widely considered as indicators of oil and gas generation and migration under overpressure. Abundant fibrous calcite veins containing organic-bearing inclusions occur in faulted Lower Paleozoic through Triassic hydrocarbon source rocks in the Dabashan Foreland Belt (DBF). d13CPDB and d18OPDB values of the fibrous calcite range from - 4.8 to -1.9 to per mil and - 12.8 to - 8.4 per mil respectively, which is lighter than that of associated carbonate host rocks ranging from - 1.7 to + 3.1 per mil and - 8.7 to - 4.5 per mil. A linear relationship between d13CPDB and d18OPDB indicates that the calcite veins were precipitated from a mixture of basinal and surface fluids. The fibrous calcite contains a variety of inclusions, such as solid bitumen, methane bearing all-liquid inclusions, and vapor-liquid aqueous inclusions. Homogenization temperatures of aqueous inclusions range from 140 to 196° with an average of 179°. Salinities of aqueous inclusions average 9.7 wt% NaCl. Independent temperatures from bitumen reflectance and inclusion phase relationships of aqueous and methane inclusions were used to determine fluid pressures. Results indicate high pressures, elevated above typical lithostatic confining pressure, from 150 to 200 MPa. The elevated salinity and high temperature and pressure conditions of the fibrous calcite veins argue against an origin solely from burial overpressure resulting from clay transformation and dehydration reactions. Instead fluid inclusion P-T data and geochemistry results and regional geology indicate abnormally high pressures during fluid migration. These findings indicate that tectonic stress generated fracture and fault fluid pathways and caused migration of organic bearing fluids from the DBF during the Yanshan orogeny.
    Keywords: Aluminium oxide; Calcium oxide; Dabashan_Foreland_Belt; Electron microprobe (EMP); Freezing point depression; HAND; Homogenization temperature; Iron oxide, FeO; LATITUDE; Linkam THMS600 microscope stage; Lithology/composition/facies; LONGITUDE; Magnesium oxide; Manganese oxide; Mass spectrometer Finnigan MAT 251EM; Maximal reflectance of bitumen; Microphotometer LEITZ MPV-3; Phosphorus pentoxide; Potassium oxide; Sample code/label; Sampling by hand; Sichuan, Shaanxi, China; Silicon dioxide; Sodium oxide; Sulfite; Titanium dioxide; δ13C, organic matter; δ18O, organic matter
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 726 data points
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  • 5
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Foster, William J; Lehrmann, Daniel; Yu, Meiyi; Ji, Li; Martindale, Rowan C (2018): Persistent Environmental Stress Delayed the Recovery of Marine Communities in the Aftermath of the Latest Permian Mass Extinction. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 33(4), 338-353, https://doi.org/10.1002/2018PA003328
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: The aftermath of the late Permian mass extinction is a key interval for the evolution of modern marine ecosystems. It has been hypothesized that the magnitude of the mass extinction delayed the subsequent recovery, and so to test this, we undertook the highest resolution study to date of the post-extinction (Griesbachian) microbialite unit on the Great Bank of Guizhou, South China. The benthic community from the microbialite unit is taxonomically diverse when compared to other coeval deposits, recording both inarticulate and articulate brachiopods, crinoids, echinoids, bivalves, gastropods, microconchids, and ostracods. Here we recognize 49 taxa from 4557 individuals, which raise the known diversity of the Great Bank of Guizhou basal microbialite unit to 84 invertebrate species, making it the most diverse Early Triassic community currently reported. 89% of the genera are Permian holdovers, whilst only 13% of the species are Permian holdovers. This new data record no temporal trends in the species richness, Simpson diversity, Simpson effective diversity, taxonomic distinctness, functional diversity, or body size of the benthos during the post-extinction microbialite unit. Nevertheless, the small body sizes of the benthic community, and the large lophophoral cavity in the lingulid brachiopod, Sinolingularia huananensis, suggests that these animals lived in a highly stressed environment. We propose that the microbialite unit contains a survival fauna in an interval that represents persistent environmental stress from the late Permian mass extinction event, associated with deoxygenation, high temperatures, elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide levels (pCO2), and elevated primary productivity.
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Keywords: China; DISTANCE; Epoch; Formation; MULT; Multiple investigations; Stage; Youjianzhai; Zone; δ13C, carbonate
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 320 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Keywords: Body length; China; Dajiang; Dawen; Dongjawen_I; Dongjawen_II; Event label; Houchang; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; MULT; Multiple investigations; Rongbao; Sample code/label; Species; Youjianzhai
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 8712 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Keywords: Abundance; China; Contribution; Group; Guizhou_GrBank; MULT; Multiple investigations; Similarity; Similarity index; Similarity index, standard deviation; Species
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 211 data points
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Lehrmann, Daniel; Chaikin, Daniel H; Enos, Paul; Minzoni, Marcello; Payne, Jonathan L; Yu, Meiyi; Goers, Alexa; Wood, Tanner; Richter, Paula; Kelley, Brian M; Li, Xiaowei; Quin, Yanijao; Liu, Lingyun; Lu, Gang (2015): Patterns of basin fill in Triassic turbidites of the Nanpanjiang basin: implications for regional tectonics and impacts on carbonate-platform evolution. Basin Research, 27(5), 587-612, https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12090
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Description: Triassic turbidites of the Nanpanjiang basin of south China represent the most expansive and voluminous siliciclastic turbidite accumulation in south China. The Nanpanjiang basin occurs at a critical junction between the southern margin of the south China plate and the Indochina, Siamo and Sibumasu plates to the south and southwest. The Triassic Yangtze carbonate shelf and isolated carbonated platforms in the basin have been extensively studied, but silicilastic turbidites in the basin have received relatively little attention. Deciphering the facies, paleocurrent indicators and provenance of the Triassic turbidites is important for several reasons: it promises to help resolve the timing of plate collisions along suture zones bordering the basin to the south and southwest, it will enable evaluation of which suture zones and Precambrian massifs were source areas, and it will allow an evaluation of the impact of the siliciclastic flux on carbonate platform evolution within the basin. Turbidites in the basin include the Early Triassic Shipao Formation and the Middle-Late Triassic Baifeng, Xinyuan, Lanmu Bianyang and Laishike formations. Each ranges upward of 700 m and the thickest is nearly 3 km. The turbidites contain very-fine sand in the northern part of the basin whereas the central and southern parts of the basin also commonly contain fine and rarely medium sand size. Coarser sand sizes occur where paleocurrents are from the south, and in this area some turbidites exhibit complete bouma sequences with graded A divisions. Successions contain numerous alternations between mud-rich and sand-rich intervals with thickness trends corresponding to proximal/ distal fan components. Spectacularly preserved sedimentary structures enable robust evaluation of turbidite systems and paleocurrent analyses. Analysis of paleocurrent measurements indicates two major directions of sediment fill. The northern part of the basin was sourced primarily by the Jiangnan massif in the northeast, and the central and southern parts of the basin were sourced primarily from suture zones and the Yunkai massif to the south and southeast respectively. Sandstones of the Lower Triassic Shipao Fm. have volcaniclastic composition including embayed quartz and glass shards. Middle Triassic sandstones are moderately mature, matrix-rich, lithic wackes. The average QFL ratio from all point count samples is 54.1/18.1/27.8% and the QmFLt ratio is 37.8/ 18.1/ 44.1%. Lithic fragments are dominantly claystone and siltstone clasts and metasedimentary clasts such as quartz mica tectonite. Volcanic lithics are rare. Most samples fall in the recycled orogen field of QmFLt plots, indicating a relatively quartz and lithic rich composition consistent with derivation from Precambrian massifs such as the Jiangnan, and Yunkai. A few samples from the southwest part of the basin fall into the dissected arc field, indicating a somewhat more lithic and feldspar-rich composition consistent with derivation from a suture zone Analysis of detrial zircon populations from 17 samples collected across the basin indicate: (1) Several samples contain zircons with concordant ages greater than 3000 Ma, (2) there are widespread peaks across the basin at 1800 Ma and 2500, (3) a widespread 900 Ma population, (3) a widespread population of zircons at 440 Ma, and (5) a larger population of younger zircons about 250 Ma in the southwestern part which is replaced to the north and northwest by a somewhat older population around 260-290 Ma. The 900 Ma provenance fits derivation from the Jiangnan Massif, the 2500, 1800, and 440 Ma provenance fits the Yunkai massif, and the 250 Ma is consistent with convergence and arc development in suture zones bordering the basin on the south or southwest. Early siliciclastic turbidite flux, proximal to source areas impacted carbonate platform evolution by infilling the basin, reducing accommodation space, stabilizing carbonate platform margins and promoting margin progradation. Late arrival, in areas far from source areas caused margin aggradation over a starved basin, development of high relief aggradational escarpments and unstable scalloped margins.
    Keywords: Age, error; Age, mineral; Area/locality; Correction; Feldspar; Formation; Guangxi, Guizhou, China; HAND; Kalifeldspar; LATITUDE; Lead-206/Lead-204 ratio; Lead-206/Lead-207, error; Lead-206/Lead-207 ratio; Lead-206/Uranium-238, error; Lead-206/Uranium-238 ratio; Lead-207/Uranium-235, error; Lead-207/Uranium-235 ratio; Linear flow indicator; Lithic grains; LONGITUDE; Matrix; Nanpanjiang_Basin; Nu HR ICP-MS, Arizona Laserchron Center (ALC); Number of points; Plagioclase; Point counting, petrographic microscope; Protractor, corrected for strike and dip; Quartz; Quartz, monocrystalline; Quartz, polycrystalline; Sample code/label; Sampling by hand; Sedimentary fragments; Uranium; Uranium/Thorium ratio; Vector; Volcanic fragments
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 34067 data points
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  • 10
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Lehrmann, Daniel; Stepchinski, Leanne; Altiner, Demir; Orchard, Michael J; Montgomery, Paul; Enos, Paul; Ellwood, Brooks B; Bowring, Samuel A; Ramezani, Jahandar; Wang, Hongmei; Wei, Jiayong; Yu, Meiyi; Griffiths, James D; Minzoni, Marcello; Schaal, Ellen K; Li, Xiaowei; Meyer, Katja M; Payne, Jonathan L (2015): An integrated biostratigraphy (conodonts and foraminifers) and chronostratigraphy (paleomagnetic reversals, magnetic susceptibility, elemental chemistry, carbon isotopes and geochronology) for the Permian–Upper Triassic strata of Guandao section, Nanpanjiang Basin, south China. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, 108, 117-135, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2015.04.030
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Description: The chronostratigraphy of Guandao section has served as the foundation for numerous studies of the end-Permian extinction and biotic recovery in south China. Guandao section is continuous from the Permian-Triassic boundary to the Upper Triassic. Conodonts enable broad delineation of stage and substage boundaries and calibration of foraminifer biostratigraphy as follows. Changhsingian-Griesbachian: first Hindeodus parvus, and first appearance of foraminifers Postcladella kalhori and Earlandia sp. Griesbachian-Dienerian: first Neospathodus dieneri, and last appearance of foraminifer P. grandis. Dienerian-Smithian: first Novispathodus waageni and late Dienerian first appearance of foraminifer Hoyenella ex gr. sinensis. Smithian-Spathian: first Nv? crassatus and last appearance of foraminifers Arenovidalina n. sp. and Glomospirella cf. vulgaris. Spathian-Aegean: first Chiosella timorensis and first appearance of foraminifer Meandrospira dinarica. Aegean-Bithynian: first Nicoraella germanica and first appearance of foraminifer Pilammina densa. Bithynian-Pelsonian: after last Neogondolella regalis, prior to first Paragondolella bulgarica and first appearance of foraminifer Aulotortus eotriasicus. Pelsonian-Illyrian: first Pg. excelsa and last appearance of foraminifers Meandrospira? deformata and Pilamminella grandis. Illyrian-Fassanian: first Budurovignathus truempyi, and first appearance of foraminifers Abriolina mediterranea and Paleolituonella meridionalis. Fassanian-Longobardian: first Bv. mungoensis and last appearance of foraminifer A. mediterranea. Longobardian-Cordevolian: first Quadralella polygnathiformis and last appearance of foraminifers Turriglomina mesotriasica and Endotriadella wirzi. The section contains primary magnetic signature with frequent reversals occurring around the Permian-Triassic, Olenekian-Anisian, and Anisian-Ladinian boundaries. Predominantly normal polarity occurs in the lower Smithian, Bithynian, and Longobardian-Cordevolian. Predominantly reversed polarity occurs in the upper Griesbachian, Induan-Olenekian, Pelsonian and lower Illyrian. Reversals match well with the GPTS. Large amplitude carbon isotope excursions, attaining values as low as -2.9 per mil d13C and high as +5.7 per mil d13C, characterize the Lower Triassic and basal Anisian. Values stabilize around +2 per mil d13C through the Anisian to Carnian. Similar signatures have been reported globally. Magnetic susceptibility and synthetic gamma ray logs show large fluctuations in the Lower Triassic and an overall decline in magnitude of fluctuation through the Middle and Upper Triassic. The largest spikes in magnetic susceptibility and gamma ray, indicating greater terrestrial lithogenic flux, correspond to positive d13C excursions. High precision U-Pb analysis of zircons from volcanic ash beds provide a robust age of 247.28 ± 0.12 Ma for the Olenekian-Anisian boundary at Guandao and an age of 251.985 ± 0.097 Ma for the Permian-Triassic boundary at Taiping. Together, the new U-Pb geochronology from the Guandao and Taiping sections suggest an estimated duration of 4.71 ± 0.15 Ma for the Early Triassic Epoch.
    Keywords: Abriolina mediterranea; Agathammina sp.; Age, dated; Age, dated standard error; Age, Uranium-Lead; Arenovidalina sp.; Aulotortus eotriasicus; Austrocolomia marschalli; Bianyang, Guizhou, China; Budurovignathus hungaricus; Budurovignathus mungoensis; Budurovignathus truempyi; Chemical Gamma Ray; Chiosella gondolelloides; Chiosella timorensis; Clarkina changxingensis; Conservatella conservativa; Cornudina sp.; Cratognathus spp; Discretella discreta; Endoteba bithynica; Endoteba controversa; Endotebanella kocaeliensis; Endotebanella sp.; Endoteba obturata; Endotriada thyrrhenica; Endotriadella wirzi; Eurygnathodus sp.; Foraminifera, benthic indeterminata; Galeanella sp.; Gladigondolella carinata; Gladigondolella tethydis; Glomospirella cf. vulgaris; Guandao_Section; Guangxidella bransoni; HAND; Hindeodus anterodentatus; Hindeodus parvus; Hindeodus typicalis; Hoyenella ex gr. sinensis; Inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry (ICP-MS); Krikoumbilica pileiformis; Light microscope; Magnetic susceptibility; Magnetometer, cryogenic, 2G-755R, thermal demagnetization; Malayspirina sp.; Mass spectrometer Finnigan MAT 252; Meandrospira cheni; Meandrospira deformata; Meandrospira dinarica; Meandrospira pusilla; Meandrospira sp.; Meandrospirillina irregularis; Mosherella newpassensis; Neogondolella bifurcata; Neogondolella constricta; Neogondolellaregalis; Neogondolella trammeri; Neogondolella transita; Neospathodus crassatus; Neospathodus cristagalli; Neospathodus dieneri; Neospathodus pakistanensis; Neospathodus peculiaris; Neospathodus triangularis; Neostrachanognathus spp.; Nicoraella germanica; Nicoraella kockeli; Nicoraella sp.; Novispathodus abruptus; Novispathodus waageni; Ophthalmidium exiguum; Ophthalmidium spp.; Paleolituonella meridionalis; Paleolituonella reclinata; Paragondolella alpina; Paragondolella bifurcata; Paragondolella bulgarica; Paragondolella excelsa; Paragondolella foliata; Paragondolella fuelopi; Paragondolella inclinata; Piallina bronnimanni; Pilammina densa; Pilamminella grandi; Planiinvoluta mesotriasica; Quadralella polygnathiformis; Quadralella tadpole; Sample code/label; Sampling by hand; SECTION, height; Spathicuspus spathi; Susceptibility bridge; Tolypammina gregaria; Triadodiscus sp.; Triassospathodus brochus; Triassospathodus homeri; Triassospathodus symmetricus; Trochammina almtalensis; Turriglomina carnica; Turriglomina cf. magna; Turriglomina mesotriasica; Turrispirillina sp.; Virtual geomagnetic pole latitude; δ13C, carbonate
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 93579 data points
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