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  • 1
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Paleoceanography, 9 (6). pp. 879-892.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-06
    Description: An abrupt lithofacies change between calcareous shale and noncalcareous shale occurs in strata deposited in the mid-Cretaceous Greenhorn Seaway in the southeastern corner of Montana. The facies were correlated lithostratigraphically using bentonites and calcarenites. The lithocorrelations were then refined using ammonites, foraminifera, and calcareous nannofossils. Twenty-five time slices were defined within the upper middle and lower upper Cenomanian strata. Biofacies analysis indicate that lithofacies changes record the boundary or oceanic front between two water masses with distinctly different paleoceanographic conditions. One water mass entered the seaway from the Arctic and the other from the Gulf of Mexico/Tethys. The microfauna and microflora permit interpretation of the environmental conditions in each water mass. At times when the front was near vertical, the two water masses were of the same density but of different temperatures and salinities.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-02-06
    Description: Digital hydrographic data combined with satellite thermal infrared and visible band remote sensing provide a synoptic climatological view of the shallow planktonic environment. This paper uses wind, hydrographic, and ocean remote sensing data to examine southwest monsoon controls on the foraminiferal faunal composition of Recent seafloor sediments of the northwestern Arabian Sea. Ekman pumping resulting in open-ocean upwelling and coastal upwelling create two distinctly different mixed layer plankton environments in the northwestern Arabian Sea during the summer monsoon. Open-sea upwelling to the northwest of the mean July position of the Findlater Jet axis yields a mixed layer environment with temperatures of less than 25°C to about 26.5°C, phytoplankton pigment concentrations between 1.5 and 5.0 mg/m³, and mixed layer depths less than 50 m. Convergence in the Ekman layer in the central Arabian Sea drives the formation of a mixed layer that is greater than 50 m thick, warmer than about 26.5°C, and has phytoplankton pigment concentrations generally below 2.0 mg/m³. Coastal upwelling creates an extremely eutrophic plankton environment that persists over and immediately adjacent to the Omani shelf and undergoes significant offshore transport only within topographically induced coastal squirts. The foraminiferal faunal composition of upper Pleistocene deep-sea sediments of the northwestern Arabian Sea are mainly controlled by vertical nutrient fluxes caused by Ekman pumping, not coastal upwelling. Transfer functions for late Pleistocene mixed layer depth, temperature, and chlorophyll have been obtained through factor analysis and nonlinear multiple regression between late summer mixed layer environment and Recent sediment faunal observations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 97 (C6). pp. 9455-9465.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-06
    Description: This paper provides a detailed hydrographic climatology for the shallow northwestern Arabian Sea prior to and during the southwest monsoon, presented as multiple-year composite vertical hydrographic sections based on National Oceanographic Data Center historical ocean station data. Temperature and salinity measurements are used to infer the water masses present in the upper 500 m. The hydrographic evolution depicted on bimonthly sections is inferred to result from wind-driven physical processes. In the northwestern Arabian Sea the water mass in the upper 50 m is the Arabian Sea Surface Water. Waters from 50 to 500 m are formed by mixing of Arabian Sea Surface Water with Antarctic and Indonesian intermediate waters. The inflow of Persian Gulf Water does not significantly influence the hydrography of the northwestern Arabian Sea along the Omani coast. Nitrate has a high inverse correlation with temperature and oxygen in the premonsoon thermocline in the depth interval 50–150 m. During the southwest monsoon, coastal upwelling off Oman and adjacent offshore upward Ekman pumping alter the shallow hydrography.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans, 96 (C11). pp. 20623-20642.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-06
    Description: The biological variability of the northwestern Arabian Sea during the 1979 southwest monsoon has been investigated by the synthesis of satellite ocean color remote sensing with analysis of in situ hydrographic and meteorological data sets and the results of wind-driven modeling of upper ocean circulation. The phytoplankton bloom in the northwestern Arabian Sea peaked during August-September, extended from the Oman coast to about 65°E, and lagged the development of open-sea upwelling by at least 1 month. In total, the pigment distributions, hydrographic data, and model results all suggest that the bloom was driven by spatially distinct upward nutrient fluxes to the euphotic zone forced by the physical processes of coastal upwelling and offshore Ekman pumping. Coastal upwelling was evident from May through September, yielded the most extreme concentrations of phytoplankton biomass, and along the Arabian coast was limited to the continental shelf in the promotion of high concentrations of phytoplankton. Upward Ekman pumping to the northwest of the Somali Jet axis stimulated the development of a broad open-sea phytoplankton bloom oceanward of the Oman shelf. Vertical mixing during the 1979 southwest monsoon was apparently not a primary cause of the regional-scale phytoplankton bloom.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth, 93 (B12). pp. 14933-14940.
    Publication Date: 2018-02-07
    Description: The total mass of sediments on the ocean floor is estimated to be 262 × 1021 g. The overall mass/age distribution is approximated by an exponential decay curve: (11.02 × 1021 g)e−0.0355t Ma. The mass/age distribution is a function of the area/age distribution of ocean crust, the supply of sediment to the deep sea, and submarine erosion and redeposition. About 140 × 1021 g of the sediment on the ocean floor is pelagic sediment, consisting of about 74% CaCO3, with the remainder opaline silica and red clay. Of the sediment on the ocean floor, 122 × 1021 g is detritus, mostly terrigenous, but a small portion (about 6 × 1021 g) is volcanic. Because very little pelagic sediment is obducted, virtually all of the pelagic sediment mass and some fraction of the terrigenous sediment is being subducted at a rate estimated to be about 1 × 1021 g per million years. The composition of sediment on the ocean floor differs significantly from that of average passive margin and continental sediment, so that the loss of ocean floor sediment through subduction may drive the composition of global sediment toward enrichment in silica, alumina, and potash and toward depletion in calcium.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
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    AGU (American Geophysical Union)
    In:  Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 82 (18). pp. 201-209.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-18
    Description: The Ocean Drilling Program (ODP), an international partnership of scientists and research institutions organized to explore the Earth's evolution and structure, provides researchers around the world access to a vast repository of geological and environmental information recorded far below the ocean surface in sea floor sediments and rocks. The Joint Oceanographic Institutions, Inc. manages ODP under contract with the National Science Foundation. Like all good things, however, even the ODP--widely hailed as one of the best examples of international cooperation in all of geosciences--must come to an end.
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The paleoclimatology and paleoceanology of the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous are of special interest because this was a time when large amounts of marine organic matter were deposited in sediments that have subsequently become petroleum source rocks. However, because of the lack of outcrops, most studies have concentrated on low latitudes, in particular the Tethys and the “Boreal Realm,” where information has been based largely on material from northwest Germany, the North Sea, and England. These areas were all south of 40°N latitude during the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous. We have studied sediment samples of Kimmeridgian (∼154 Ma) to Barremian (∼121 Ma) age from cores taken at sites offshore mid-Norway and in the Barents Sea that lay in a narrow seaway connecting the Tethys with the northern polar ocean. During the Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous these sites had paleolatitudes of 42–67°N. The Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous sequences at these sites reflect the global sea-level rise during the Volgian-Hauterivian and a climatic shift from warm humid conditions in Volgian times to arid cold climates in the early Hauterivian. The sediments indicate orbital control of climate, reflected in fluctuations in the clastic influx and variations in carbonate and organic matter production. Trace element concentrations in the Volgian-Berriasian sediments suggest that the central part of the Greenland-Norwegian Seaway might have had suboxic bottom water beneath an oxic water column. Both marine and terrigenous organic matter are present in the seaway sediments. The Volgian-Berriasian strata have unusually high contents of organic carbon and are the source rocks for petroleum and gas fields in the region. The accumulation of organic carbon is attributed to restricted conditions in the seaway during this time of low sea level. It might be that the Greenland-Norwegian segment was the deepest part of the transcontinental seaway, bounded at both ends by relatively shallow swells. The decline in organic matter content of the sediments in the Valanginian-Hauterivian indicates greater ventilation and more active flow through the seaway as the sea level rose. The same benthic foraminifera assemblages are encountered throughout the seaway. Endemic assemblages of arenaceous foraminifera in the Volgian-Berriasian give way to more diverse and cosmopolitan Valanginian-Hauterivian benthic communities that include calcareous species. The foraminiferal assemblages also suggest low oxygen content bottom waters during the earlier Cretaceous, changing to more fully oxygenated conditions later. The calcareous nannoplankton, particularly Crucibiscutum salebrosum, which is rare at low latitudes and abundant in high latitudes, reflect the meridional thermal gradient. They indicate that the Greenland-Norwegian segment of the seaway was north of a subtropical frontal zone that acted as a barrier between the Tethyan and Boreal Realms. This implies the existence of stable climatic belts during the early Valanginian and Hauterivian, significant meridional temperature gradients, and moderate “ice house” conditions.
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