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  • 1995-1999  (11)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Terra nova 8 (1996), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-3121
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: The Burdekin River is an example of a class of tropical streams which experience two to four orders of magnitude variation in discharge, in response to seasonal but erratic monsoonal rainfall. Floods of the Burdekin rise abruptly, reaching peak discharges of up to 40,000 m3 s-1 in less than 24 h; maintain peak flow for up to a few days, and recede exponentially. The geomorphology and deposits of these rivers reflect the extreme discharge fluctuations, and have not previously been described.A stretch of the upper Burdekin River comprising four bends and one straight reach was examined near the town of Charters Towers. The river bed is largely exposed for most of any year, with a small, misfit perennial channel carrying low stage flow. Major geomorphic elements of bends include point bars with ridge-and-swale topography, three distinct types of chute channels, avalanche slipfaces up to 5 m or more high around the downstream edges of bars, and on the outer part of one point bar an elevated, vegetated ridge. Straight reaches are flat or gently inclined, sand- and gravel-covered surfaces. Much of the river bed is covered by well sorted, in places gravelly, coarse to very coarse-grained sand with local accumulations of pebble to boulder gravel. Lower parts of the river bed are periodically draped by mud which is desiccated on exposure. Dunes and plane beds are the most commonly occurring bedforms, with local development of gravelly antidunes. Most bank tops and upper, vegetated bars are covered by silt and fine-grained sand. The river bed also hosts a low-diversity but locally high-abundance, flood-tolerant flora dominated by the paperbark tree Melaleuca argentea, which plays an important role in controlling the distribution of sediment.The gross geomorphology of the river bed and most of the sedimentary features are interpreted as having formed during major (bankfull or near bankfull) flows, which have a recurrence of about 18 years (based on 65 years hydrographic data). The initial rapid drop in discharge following flood peaks appears to preserve flood peak features on upper bars more or less intact, whereas lower areas are subjected to variable degrees of modification during falling stage and by more frequent, non-bankfull discharge events.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1365-3121
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: In the eastern part of the Permo-Triassic Bowen Basin of Queensland, Australia, a transition from passive, thermal subsidence to flexural (foreland basin) subsidence is recorded within the Upper Permian stratigraphy. Two coarse-grained intervals containing deposits of mass-wasting processes occur within an otherwise siltstone-dominated succession over 1500 m thick (the Moah Creek Beds and equivalents). These intervals can be traced over at least 350 km north–south, along the structural eastern margin of the basin. The lower of the coarse-grained intervals is spectacularly exposed in the banks of the Fitzroy River, west of Rockhampton. Here, interbedded sandstones and siltstones of marine shelf origin are abruptly truncated by a mudrock succession containing evidence of slumping and contemporaneous magmatic activity. This unit passes up-section into packages of mass-flow conglomerates and diamictites, interpreted to have formed on an unstable submarine slope. The character of the mass-flow deposits, their stratigraphic position and lateral extent are interpreted in terms of destabilization of a sloping marine surface by pulsed, subsurface thrust propagation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1365-3091
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: The Late Permian Bainmedart Coal Measures form part of the Permo-Triassic Amery Group, which crops out in the Beaver Lake area of the Northern Prince Charles Mountains, MacRobertson Land, Antarctica. The exposed strata are believed to have formed in graben or half-graben sub-basins on the western edge of the Lambert Graben, a major failed rift system. Sedimentological analysis has revealed that these rocks formed in alluvial environments in which swiftly flowing rivers of low sinuosity (represented by Facies A1 and A2) flowed northward down the axis of the basin, and were associated with waterlogged floodbasin and peat-forming wetlands (Facies B1-B4). A third Facies Association (comprising Facies C1-C3), interpreted as the deposits of lake floor and delta environments, is exclusively developed within a distinctive, fine-grained interval here named the Dragon's Teeth Member. The proportion of Association B facies within the succession increases markedly above the level of the Dragon's Teeth Member (at about 300 m above the base of the formation).Flat, low-angle and undulatory bedding structures preserved within channel deposits are suggestive of sediment deposition in flow conditions which were often critical or supercritical. Presence of massive and chaotic intervals of sandstone further implies some deposition from high-concentration aqueous flows. Alluvial channel bodies show evidence of incision into underlying substrates, both during initiation and at later stages in channel belt construction. The lack of interfingering between channel deposits and coals suggests that thick peats formed only in areas and at times of minimal clastic sediment supply.Analysis of well-developed cyclicity within the coal measures suggests that the dominant control on sequence architecture was climatic, related to precessional Milankovitch fluctuations of c. 19-kyr periodicity. Cycles began abruptly with the deposition of coarse-grained material in high-energy alluvial channels, which contracted with time in response to changes in water supply (rainfall). Upper parts of cycles are dominated by finer-grained sediments and then coal, indicative of progressively reduced coarse sediment input. Tectonic processes overprinted this pattern at least once during the period of sediment accumulation, to form the Dragon's Teeth Member.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 16 km ENE Cape Roberts; Cape Roberts Project; Comment; Core wireline system; CRP; CRP-1; CWS; DEPTH, sediment/rock; off Cape Roberts, Ross Sea, Antarctica; Sampling/drilling ice; δ13C, carbonate; δ18O, carbonate; δ18O, water
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 28 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 16 km ENE Cape Roberts; Calcareous fossils; Calcium carbonate; Cape Roberts Project; Chert; Clay minerals; Core wireline system; CRP; CRP-1; CWS; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Heavy minerals; Intrusive, igneous rock; Iron carbonate, siderite; Kalifeldspar; Metamorphite; Mica; off Cape Roberts, Ross Sea, Antarctica; Opaque minerals; Plagioclase; Point counting with SEM/EDAX; Porosity; Pyroxene; Quartz; Sampling/drilling ice; Sedimentary rock; Sulfate; Volcanic glass; Volcanite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 171 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 16 km ENE Cape Roberts; Calcium carbonate; Cape Roberts Project; Comment; Core wireline system; CRP; CRP-1; CWS; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Energy dispersive X-ray analysis, EDAX; Iron carbonate, siderite; Magnesium carbonate, magnesite; Manganese carbonate, rhodochrosite; off Cape Roberts, Ross Sea, Antarctica; Sampling/drilling ice; Strontium carbonate, strontianite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 120 data points
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  • 7
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Fielding, Christopher R; Baker, Julian C; Woolfe, Ken; Howe, John; Lavelle, Mark (1998): Reassessment of the Miocene-Quaternary boundary in CRP-1, Cape Roberts Project, Antarctica. Terra Antartica, 5(3), 425-426, hdl:10013/epic.28334.d001
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Description: During the course of the 1997 drilling campaign, lithostratigraphic boundaries were assigned to the CRP-l core on the basis of perceived changes in lithology. The geologically most important boundary in the core, between the Miocene and overlying Quaternary sections, was placed at 43.55 mbsf. This horizon was described in the core logs (Cape Roberts Science Team, 1998) as a contact between muddy, finegrained sandstone (which were assigned a Lower Miocene age based on diatom biostratigsaphy) and overlying diamictons containing Quaternary diatoms. This boundary is a major unconformity, recognisable on seismic reflection records. As such, it has considerable significance in the ongoing scientific analysis of the drillcore. During a re-examination of the core, focusing on the archive half held at the Antarctic Geology Research Facility of the Florida State University at Tallahassee; the authors noted that the core across the published boundary (43.55 mbsf) did not show any lithological change, but logged a sharp contact between dark olive grey, muddy sandstone and overlying diamicton at 43.15 mbsf (Fig. l). We suggest, therefore, that the core log in appendix l of Cape Roberts Science Team (1998) is misleading over this interval. In order to test the veracity of the suggested boundary revision, a series of thin-sections was examined and point-counted for framework grain abundances.
    Keywords: 16 km ENE Cape Roberts; Calcite; Cape Roberts Project; Chert; Claystone; Core wireline system; CRP; CRP-1; CWS; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Epoch; Grain size, mean radius; Kalifeldspar; Micrite; off Cape Roberts, Ross Sea, Antarctica; Opaque minerals; Plagioclase; Porosity; Pyroxene; Quartz; Sampling/drilling ice; Sorting description; Thin section analysis/measurements; Volcanic glass; Volcanite
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 75 data points
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  • 8
  • 9
    Publication Date: 1997-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0954-4879
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-3121
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Wiley
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1996-09-01
    Print ISSN: 0954-4879
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-3121
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Wiley
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