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  • Ocean Drilling Program; ODP  (110)
  • Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
  • PANGAEA  (136)
  • MDPI Publishing
  • 2010-2014  (61)
  • 1995-1999  (75)
  • 1965-1969
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Keywords
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  • PANGAEA  (136)
  • MDPI Publishing
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Year
  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Vallé, Francesca; Dupont, Lydie M; Leroy, Suzanne A G; Schefuß, Enno; Wefer, Gerold (2014): Pliocene environmental change in West Africa and the onset of strong NE trade winds (ODP Sites 659 and 658). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 414, 403-414, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2014.09.023
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Pliocene vegetation dynamics and climate variability in West Africa have been investigated through pollen and XRF-scanning records obtained from sediment cores of ODP Site 659 (18°N, 21°W). The comparison between total pollen accumulation rates and Ti/Ca ratios, which is strongly correlated with the dust input at the site, showed elevated aeolian transport of pollen during dusty periods. Comparison of the pollen records of ODP Site 659 and the nearby Site 658 resulted in a robust reconstruction of West African vegetation change since the Late Pliocene. Between 3.6 and 3.0 Ma the savannah in West Africa differed in composition from its modern counterpart and was richer in Asteraceae, in particular of the Tribus Cichorieae. Between 3.24 and 3.20 Ma a stable wet period is inferred from the Fe/K ratios, which could stand for a narrower and better specified mid-Pliocene (mid-Piacenzian) warm time slice. The northward extension of woodland and savannah, albeit fluctuating, was generally greater in the Pliocene. NE trade wind vigour increased intermittently around 2.7 and 2.6 Ma, and more or less permanently since 2.5 Ma, as inferred from increased pollen concentrations of trade wind indicators (Ephedra, Artemisia, Pinus). Our findings link the NE trade wind development with the intensification of the Northern Hemisphere glaciations (iNHG). Prior to the iNHG, little or no systematic relation could be found between sea surface temperatures of the North Atlantic with aridity and dust in West Africa.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Osborne, Anne H; Newkirk, Derrick R; Groeneveld, Jeroen; Martin, Ellen E; Tiedemann, Ralf; Frank, Martin (2014): The seawater neodymium and lead isotope record of the final stages of Central American Seaway closure. Paleoceanography, 29, https://doi.org/10.1002/2014PA002676
    Publication Date: 2024-03-02
    Description: The shoaling and final closure of the Central American Seaway (CAS) resulted in a major change of the global ocean circulation and has been suggested as an essential driver for strengthening of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). The exact timing of CAS closure is key to interpreting its importance. Here we present a reconstruction of deep and intermediate water Nd and Pb isotope compositions obtained from fossil fish teeth and the authigenic coatings of planktonic foraminifera in the eastern equatorial Pacific (Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1241) and the Caribbean (ODP Sites 998, 999, and 1000) covering the final stages of CAS closure between 5.6 and 2.2 Ma. The data for the Pacific site indicate no significant Atlantic/Caribbean influence over this entire period. The Caribbean sites show a continuous trend to less radiogenic Nd isotope compositions during the Pliocene, consistent with an enhancement of Upper North Atlantic Deep Water (UNADW) inflow and a strengthening of the AMOC. Superimposed onto this long-term trend, shorter-term changes of intermediate Caribbean Nd isotope signatures approached more UNADW-like values during intervals when published reconstructions of seawater salinity suggested complete closure of the CAS. The data imply that significant deep water exchange with the Pacific essentially stopped by 7 Ma and that shallow exchange, which still occurred at least periodically until approximately 2.5 Ma, may have been linked to the strength of the AMOC but did not have any direct effect on the intermediate and deep Caribbean Nd isotope signatures through mixing with Pacific waters.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-10
    Description: Seismicity patterns offshore Costa Rica (Central America) at the Middle America Trench have led to speculation that large (moment magnitude, Mw ~7.0) earthquakes are associated with subducting topographic highs. In areas of high basement topography, a regionally extensive nannofossil chalk unit is exposed at the seafl oor on the incoming plate, whereas in regions of low basement topography, hemipelagic clay-rich sediment is exposed. Because the entire sediment section is subducted at this margin, lithologic variation in the uppermost subducting sediments may control plate boundary fault behavior. Our laboratory experiments reveal that the chalk is frictionally strong (µ = 0.71-0.88) and characterized by velocity weakening and stick-slip behavior, notably at elevated temperature. In contrast, the hemipelagic sediment is weak (µ = 0.22-0.35) and in many cases velocity strengthening. We suggest that the presence of frictionally unstable carbonates at bathymetric highs may play a key, previously unrecognized, role in governing earthquake nucleation.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Littler, Kate; Röhl, Ursula; Westerhold, Thomas; Zachos, James C (2014): A high-resolution benthic stable-isotope record for the South Atlantic: Implications for orbital-scale changes in Late Paleocene–Early Eocene climate and carbon cycling. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 401, 18-30, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2014.05.054
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The Late Paleocene and Early Eocene were characterised by warm greenhouse climates, punctuated by a series of rapid warming and ocean acidification events known as "hyperthermals", thought to have been paced or triggered by orbital cycles. While these hyperthermals, such as the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), have been studied in great detail, the background low-amplitude cycles seen in carbon and oxygen-isotope records throughout the Paleocene-Eocene have hitherto not been resolved. Here we present a 7.7 million year (myr) long, high-resolution, orbitally-tuned, benthic foraminiferal stable-isotope record spanning the late Paleocene and early Eocene interval (~52.5 - 60.5 Ma) from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1262, South Atlantic. This high resolution (~2-4 kyr) record allows the changing character and phasing of orbitally-modulated cycles to be studied in unprecedented detail as it reflects the long-term trend in carbon cycle and climate over this interval. The main pacemaker in the benthic oxygen-isotope (d18O) and carbon-isotope (d13C) records from ODP Site 1262, are the long (405 kyr) and short (100 kyr) eccentricity cycles, and precession (21 kyr). Obliquity (41 kyr) is almost absent throughout the section except for a few brief intervals where it has a relatively weak influence. During the course of the Early Paleogene record, and particularly in the latest Paleocene, eccentricity-paced negative carbon-isotope excursions (d13C, CIEs) and coeval negative oxygen-isotope (d18O) excursions correspond to low carbonate (CaCO3) and coarse fraction (%CF) values due to increased carbonate dissolution, suggesting shoaling of the lysocline and accompanied changes in the global exogenic carbon cycle. These negative CIEs and d18O events coincide with maxima in eccentricity, with changes in d18O leading changes in d13C by ~6 (±5) kyr in the 405-kyr band and by ~3 (±1) kyr in the higher frequency 100-kyr band on average. However, these phase lags are not constant, with the lag in the 405-kyr band extending from ~4 (±5) kyr to ~21 (±2) kyr from the late Paleocene to the early Eocene, suggesting a progressively weaker coupling of climate and the carbon-cycle with time. The higher amplitude 405-kyr cycles in the latest Paleocene are associated with changes in bottom water temperature of 2-4ºC, while the most prominent 100 kyr-paced cycles can be accompanied by changes of up to 1.5ºC. Comparison of the 1262 record with a lower resolution, but orbitally-tuned benthic record for Site 1209 in the Pacific allows for verification of key features of the benthic isotope records which are global in scale including a key warming step at 57.7 Ma.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The membrane lipids diglycosyl-glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraethers (2G-GDGTs) in marine subsurface sediments are believed to originate from uncultivated benthic archaea, yet the production of 2G-GDGTs from subseafloor samples has not been demonstrated in vitro. In order to validate sedimentary biosynthesis of 2G-GDGTs, we performed a stable carbon isotope probing experiment on a subseafloor sample with six different 13C-labelled substrates (bicarbonate, methane, acetate, leucine, glucose and Spirulina platensis biomass). After 468 days of anoxic incubation, only glucose and S. platensis resulted in label uptake in lipid moieties of 2G-GDGTs, indicating incorporation of carbon from these organic substrates. The hydrophobic moieties of 2G-GDGTs showed minimal label incorporation, with up to 4 per mil 13C enrichment detected in crenarchaeol-derived tricyclic biphytane from the S. platensis-supplemented slurries. The 2G-GDGT-derived glucose or glycerol moieties also showed 13C incorporation (Dd13C = 18 - 38 per mil) in the incubations with glucose or S. platensis, consistent with a lipid salvage mechanism utilized by marine benthic archaea to produce new 2G-GDGTs. The production rates were nevertheless rather slow, even when labile organic matter was supplied. The 2G-GDGT turnover times of 1700 - 20 500 years were much longer than those estimated for subseafloor microbial communities, implying that sedimentary 2G-GDGTs as biomarkers of benthic archaea are cumulative records of past and present generations.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Teitler, Lora; Florindo, Fabio; Warnke, Detlef A; Filippelli, Gabriel M; Kupp, Gary; Taylor, Brian (2015): Antarctic Ice Sheet response to a long warm interval across Marine Isotope Stage 31: A cross-latitudinal study of iceberg-rafted debris. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 409, 109-119, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2014.10.037
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Constraining the nature of Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) response to major past climate changes may provide a window onto future ice response and rates of sea level rise. One approach to tracking AIS dynamics, and differentiating whole system versus potentially heterogeneous ice sheet sector changes, is to integrate multiple climate proxies for a specific time slice across widely distributed locations. This study presents new iceberg-rafted debris (IRD) data across the interval that includes Marine Isotope Stage 31 (MIS 31: 1.081-1.062 Ma, a span of ~19 kyr; Lisiecki and Raymo, 2005), which lies on the cusp of the mid-Brunhes climate transition (as glacial cycles shifted from ~41,000 yr to ~100,000 yr duration). Two sites are studied - distal Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 177 Site 1090 (Site 1090) in the eastern subantarctic sector of the South Atlantic Ocean, and proximal ODP Leg 188 Site 1165 (Site 1165), near Prydz Bay, in the Indian Ocean sector of the Antarctic margin. At each of these sites, MIS 31 is marked by the presence of the Jaramillo Subchron (0.988-1.072 Ma; Lourens et al., 2004) which provides a time-marker to correlate these two sites with relative precision. At both sites, records of multiple climate proxies are available to aid in interpretation. The presence of IRD in sediments from our study areas, which include garnets indicating a likely East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) origin, supports the conclusion that although the EAIS apparently withdrew significantly over MIS 31 in the Prydz Bay region and other sectors, some sectors of the EAIS must still have maintained marine margins capable of launching icebergs even through the warmest intervals. Thus, the EAIS did not respond in complete synchrony even to major climate changes such as MIS 31. Further, the record at Site 1090 (supported by records from other subantarctic locations) indicates that the glacial MIS 32 should be reduced to no more than a stadial, and the warm interval of Antarctic ice retreat that includes MIS 31 should be expanded to MIS 33-31. This revised warm interval lasted about 52 kyr, in line with several other interglacials in the benthic d18O records stack of Lisiecki and Raymo (2005), including the super-interglacials MIS 11 (duration of 50 kyr) and MIS 5 (duration of 59 kyr). The record from Antarctica-proximal Site 1165, when interpreted in accord with the record from ANDRILL-1B, indicates that in these southern high latitude sectors, ice sheet retreat and the effects of warming lasted longer than at Site 1090, perhaps until MIS 27. In the current interpretations of the age models of the proximal sites, ice sheet retreat began relatively slowly, and was not really evident until the start of MIS 31. In another somewhat more speculative interpretation, ice sheet retreat began noticeably with MIS 33, and accelerated during MIS 31. Ice sheet inertia (the lag-times in the large-scale responses of major ice sheets to a forcing) likely plays an important part in the timing and scale of these events in vulnerable sectors of the AIS.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 7
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Rosell-Melé, Antoni; Martínez‐García, Alfredo; McClymont, Erin L (2014): Persistent warmth across the Benguela upwelling system during the Pliocene epoch. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 386, 10-20, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2013.10.041
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: A feature of Pliocene climate is the occurrence of "permanent El Niño-like" or "El Padre" conditions in the Pacific Ocean. From the analysis of sediment cores in the modern northern Benguela upwelling, we show that the mean oceanographic state off Southwest Africa during the warm Pliocene epoch was also analogous to that of a persistent Benguela "El Niño". At present these events occur when massive southward flows of warm and nutrient-poor waters extend along the coasts of Angola and Namibia, with dramatic effects on regional marine ecosystems and rainfall. We propose that the persistent warmth across the Pliocene in the Benguela upwelling ended synchronously with the narrowing of the Indonesian seaway, and the early intensification of the Northern Hemisphere Glaciations around 3.0-3.5 Ma. The emergence of obliquity-related cycles in the Benguela sea surface temperatures (SST) after 3 Ma highlights the development of strengthened links to high latitude orbital forcing. The subsequent evolution of the Benguela upwelling system was characterized by the progressive intensification of the meridional SST gradients, and the emergence of the 100 ky cycle, until the modern mean conditions were set at the end of the Mid Pleistocene transition, around 0.6 Ma. These findings support the notion that the interplay of changes in the depth of the global thermocline, atmospheric circulation and tectonics preconditioned the climate system for the end of the warm Pliocene epoch and the subsequent intensification of the ice ages.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 8
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Schmidt, Daniela N; Caromel, Aude G M; Seki, Osamu; Rae, James W B; Renaud, Sabrina (submitted): Ecological and evolutionary response of marine plankton to habitat formation and destruction in the marine environment. Ecology and Evolution
    Publication Date: 2024-02-16
    Description: Sediment samples from both Site 165-999/165-1000 (Atlantic) and Site 202-1241 (Pacific) were chosen at 1Ma intervals over the period 0.3-9.3Ma. Samples were washed and sieved 〈150µm. Splits of the sediment fraction were picked completely to obtain, where possible, at least 30 specimens each of planktic foraminifer species Globigerinoides sacculifer and Globorotalia tumida, on which outline analysis (Fourier) was performed. Sea surface and thermocline temperatures were reconstructed from palaeoenvironmental proxies (UK37' and Tex86H respectively).
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 9
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Westerhold, Thomas; Röhl, Ursula (2013): Orbital pacing of Eocene climate during the Middle Eocene Climate Optimum and the chron C19r event: Missing link found in the tropical western Atlantic. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 14(11), 4811-4825, https://doi.org/10.1002/ggge.20293
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: A high-resolution stratigraphy is essential toward deciphering climate variability in detail and understanding causality arguments of events in earth history. Because the highly dynamic middle to late Eocene provides a suitable testing ground for carbon cycle models for a waning warm world, an accurate time scale is needed to decode climate-driving mechanisms. Here we present new results from ODP Site 1260 (Leg 207) which covers a unique expanded middle Eocene section (magnetochrons C18r to C20r, late Lutetian to early Bartonian) of the tropical western Atlantic including the chron C19r transient hyperthermal event and the Middle Eocene Climate Optimum (MECO). To establish a detailed cyclostratigraphy we acquired a distinctive iron intensity records by XRF scanning Site 1260 cores. We revise the shipboard composite section, establish a cyclostratigraphy and use the exceptional eccentricity modulated precession cycles for orbital tuning. The new astrochronology revises the age of magnetic polarity chrons C19n to C20n, validates the position of very long eccentricity minima at 40.2 and 43.0 Ma in the orbital solutions, and extends the Astronomically Tuned Geological Time Scale back to 44 Ma. For the first time the new data provide clear evidence for an orbital pacing of the chron C19r event and a likely involvement of the very long eccentricity cycle contributing to the evolution of the MECO.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 10
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    In:  Supplement to: Monechi, Simonetta; Reale, Viviana; Bernaola, Gilen; Balestra, Barbara (2013): The Danian/Selandian boundary at Site 1262 (South Atlantic) and in the Tethyan region: Biomagnetostratigraphy, evolutionary trends in fasciculiths and environmental effects of the Latest Danian Event. Marine Micropaleontology, 98, 28-40, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2012.11.002
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: A high-resolution calcareous nannofossil analysis of the Danian/Selandian boundary was conducted at Site 1262 (Walvis Ridge, South Atlantic) to pinpoint the lowest occurrence of fasciculiths and to unravel the evolutionary trends throughout nannofossil Zone NP4. Using quantitative analyses, numerous primary and secondary bioevents were identified, improving the biostratigraphic resolution of this interval. The main events recorded at Site 1262 were also identified at the Zumaia section Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) of the base of the Selandian and at the Qreiya section (Egypt). The lowest occurrence of fasciculiths (represented by the LO of Gomphiolithus magnicordis and Gomphiolithus magnus) was observed in the middle part of Chron C27r, above the LO of Toweius pertusus and prior to the LO of the genus Sphenolithus. The synchroneity of the LO of fasciculiths was also verified at various latitudes, such as DSDP Site 384 (NW Atlantic), ODP Site 761B (Indian Ocean) and DSDP Site 577A (Pacific Ocean). The first and second diversification events (Steurbaut and Sztrákos, 2008, doi:10.1016/j.marmicro.2007.08.004), or radiation events (Bernaola et al., 2009, doi:10.1344/105.000000272), of fasciculiths have been thoroughly discussed and well characterized by a succession of events. The occurrence of the Latest Danian Event (LDE) and several paleoenvironmental changes recognized during this time interval, coupled with an ecological competition with Sphenolithus, appear to be the probable causes of the First and Second Radiations and the fasciculith barren interval between them. The occurrence of new morphostructures and taxa suggests evolutionary trends and a strict link between morphological evolution and paleoclimate.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 11
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Murphy, Daniel P; Thomas, Deborah J (2010): The negligible role of intermediate water circulation in stadial–interstadial oxygenation variations along the southern California margin: Evidence from Nd isotopes. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(19-20), 2442-2450, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.05.021
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Changes in the source of intermediate waters to the southern California margin may have caused variations in seafloor oxygen levels on stadial–interstadial time scales. We test this hypothesis using the Nd isotopic composition of benthic foraminifera and fossil fish debris from ODP Sites 893 and 1017 to track the composition of intermediate waters across interstadials 8-14 (~37-52 ka) during Marine Isotope Stage 3. The epsilon-Nd values of waters bathing the seafloor at Site 893 were typically ~-9 and those bathing Site 1017 were ~-7, both of which are significantly less radiogenic than waters that had originated in either the North Pacific or Southern Ocean (by the time such waters reached the southern California margin). Detrital silicate epsilon-Nd values of nearly -12 suggest that this offset toward lower epsilon-Nd values was likely caused by boundary scavenging that partially overprinted the water mass composition with local/regional fluvial Nd inputs. In spite of the evidence for boundary scavenging, the lack of systematic seawater Nd isotope changes on a stadial–interstadial basis suggests that the provenance of the intermediate waters did not change, and that the waters were derived from the Southern Ocean. Instead, changes in local/regional sea surface productivity may have caused the recorded changes in seafloor oxygenation.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 12
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Pariso, Janet E; Stokking, Laura B; Allerton, Simon A (1995): Rock magnetism and magnetic mineralogy of a 1-km section of sheeted dikes, Hole 504B. In: Erzinger, J; Becker, K; Dick, HJB; Stokking, LB (eds.), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 137, 253-262, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.137140.028.1995
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Magnetic properties and oxide petrography results are presented from dike samples recovered during Ocean Drilling Program Legs 137 and 140 at Hole 504B on the Costa Rica Rift. Although secondary magnetite is common, the most abundant magnetic phase is low-titanium magnetite produced during oxidation of primary (igneous) titanomagnetite. In general, titanomagnetite grains in the Leg 137/140 dike samples were observed to have experienced substantially higher degrees of high-temperature deuteric oxidation than the upper portion of the dike complex, suggesting a gradual decrease in the rate of cooling with depth. Paleomagnetic measurements indicate that samples recovered during Legs 137 and 140 acquired a component of drilling-induced remanent magnetization. However, stable magnetic inclinations determined after alternating-field demagnetization indicate the direction of the hardest component of magnetization is very near that predicted for this equatorial site (0°). The average intensity of natural remanent magnetization for the entire dike complex is 2.1 A/m, about half that observed for the overlying extrusive basalts. Room temperature rock magnetic measurements indicate that the effective magnetic grain size of the dike samples falls within the region described as pseudo-single domain. Together, these results suggest that the sheeted dike complex sampled at Hole 504B is capable of contributing to the anomaly observed at sea surface.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 13
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    In:  Supplement to: Ballegeer, Anne-Marie; Flores, José-Abel; Sierro, Francisco Javier; Andersen, Nils (2012): Monitoring fluctuations of the Subtropical Front in the Tasman Sea between 3.45 and 2.45Ma (ODP site 1172). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 313-314, 215-224, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.11.001
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Calcareous nannoplankton assemblages and benthic d18O isotopes of Pliocene deep-sea sediments of ODP site 1172 (East of Tasmania) have been studied to improve our knowledge of the Southern Ocean paleoceanography. Our study site is located just north of the Subtropical Front (STF), an ideal setting to monitor migrations of the STF during our study period, between 3.45 and 2.45 Ma. The assemblage identified at ODP site 1172 has been interpreted as characteristic for the transitional zone water mass, located south of the STF, based on: (i) the low abundances (〈 1%) of subtropical taxa, (ii) relatively high percentages of Coccolithus pelagicus, a subpolar type species, (iii) abundances from 2-10% of Calcidiscus leptoporus, a species that frequently inhabits the zone south of the STF and (iv) the high abundances of small Noelaerhabdaceae which at present dominates the zone south of the STF. Across our interval the calcareous nannoplankton manifests glacial-interglacial variability. We have identified cold events, characterized by high abundances of C. pelagicus which coincide with glacial periods, except during G7. After 3.1 Ma cold events are more frequent, in concordance with global cooling trends. Around 2.75 Ma, the interglacial stage G7 is characterized by anomalous low temperatures which most likely are linked to definite closure of the Central American Seaway (CAS), an event that is believed to have had global consequences. A gradual increase of very small Reticulofenestra across our section marks a significant trend in the small Noelaerhabdaceae species group and has been linked to a general enhanced mixing of the water column in agreement with previous studies. It is suggested that a rapid decline of small Gephyrocapsa after isotopic stage G7 might be related to the cooling observed in our study site after the closure of the CAS.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 14
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    In:  Supplement to: Foster, Laura C; Schmidt, Daniela N; Thomas, Ellen; Arndt, Sandra; Ridgwell, Andy (2013): Surviving rapid climate change in the deep sea during the Paleogene hyperthermals. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(23), 9273-9276, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1300579110
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Predicting the impact of ongoing anthropogenic CO2 emissions on calcifying marine organisms is complex, owing to the synergy between direct changes (acidification) and indirect changes through climate change (e.g., warming, changes in ocean circulation, and deoxygenation). Laboratory experiments, particularly on longer-lived organisms, tend to be too short to reveal the potential of organisms to acclimatize, adapt, or evolve and usually do not incorporate multiple stressors. We studied two examples of rapid carbon release in the geological record, Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 (~53.2 Ma) and the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, ~55.5 Ma), the best analogs over the last 65 Ma for future ocean acidification related to high atmospheric CO2 levels. We use benthic foraminifers, which suffered severe extinction during the PETM, as a model group. Using synchrotron radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy, we reconstruct the calcification response of survivor species and find, contrary to expectations, that calcification significantly increased during the PETM. In contrast, there was no significant response to the smaller Eocene Thermal Maximum 2, which was associated with a minor change in diversity only. These observations suggest that there is a response threshold for extinction and calcification response, while highlighting the utility of the geological record in helping constrain the sensitivity of biotic response to environmental change.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 15
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    In:  Supplement to: Bahr, André; Nürnberg, Dirk; Karas, Cyrus; Gruetzner, Jens (2013): Millennial-scale versus long-term dynamics in the surface and subsurface of the western North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre during Marine Isotope Stage 5. Global and Planetary Change, 111, 77-87, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2013.08.013
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Subtropical Gyres are an important constituent of the ocean-atmosphere system due to their capacity to store vast amounts of warm and saline waters. Here we decipher the sensitivity of the (sub)surface North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre with respect to orbital and millennial scale climate variability between ~140 and 70 ka, Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5. Using (isotope)geochemical proxy data from surface and thermocline dwelling foraminifers from Blake Ridge off the west coast of North America (ODP Site 1058) we show that the oceanographic development at subsurface (thermocline) level is substantially different from the surface ocean. Most notably, surface temperatures and salinities peak during the penultimate deglaciation (Termination II) and early MIS 5e, implying that subtropical surface ocean heat and salt accumulation might have resulted from a sluggish northward heat transport. In contrast, maximum thermocline temperatures are reached during late MIS 5e when surface temperatures are already declining. We argue that the subsurface warming originated from intensified Ekman downwelling in the Subtropical Gyre due to enhanced wind stress. During MIS 5a-d a tight interplay of the subtropical upper ocean hydrography to high latitude millennial-scale cold events can be observed. At Blake Ridge, the most pronounced of these high latitude cold events are related to surface warming and salt accumulation in the (sub)surface. Similar to Termination II, heat accumulated in the Subtropical Gyre probably due to a reduced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Additionally, a southward shift and intensification of the subtropical wind belts lead to a decrease of on-site precipitation and enhanced evaporation, coupled to intensified gyre circulation. Subsequently, the northward advection of these warm and saline water likely contributed to the fast resumption of the overturning circulation at the end of these high latitude cold events.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
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  • 16
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    In:  Supplement to: Jung, Claudia; Voigt, Silke; Friedrich, Oliver; Koch, Mirjam C; Frank, Martin (2013): Campanian-Maastrichtian ocean circulation in the tropical Pacific. Paleoceanography, 28(3), 562-573, https://doi.org/10.1002/palo.20051
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The Pacific Ocean is the largest water body on Earth, and circulation in the Pacific contributed significantly to climate evolution in the latest Cretaceous, the culmination of a period of long-term cooling. Here, we present new high-resolution late Campanian to Maastrichtian benthic and planktic foraminiferal stable isotope data and a neodymium (Nd) isotope record obtained from sedimentary ferromanganese oxide coatings of Ocean Drilling Program Hole 1210B from the tropical Pacific Ocean (Shatsky Rise). These new records resolve 13 million years in the latest Cretaceous, providing insights into changes in surface and bottom water temperatures and source regions of deep to intermediate waters covering the carbon isotope excursions of the Campanian-Maastrichtian Boundary Event (CMBE) and the Mid-Maastrichtian event (MME). Our new benthic foraminiferal d18O and Nd isotope records together with published Nd isotope data show markedly parallel trends across the studied interval over a broad range of bathyal to abyssal water depths interpreted to reflect changes in the intensity of deep-ocean circulation in the tropical Pacific. In particular, we observe a three-million-year-long period of cooler conditions in the early Maastrichtian (72.5 to 69.5 Ma) when a concomitant change toward less radiogenic seawater Nd isotope signatures probably marks a period of enhanced admixture and northward flow of deep waters with Southern Ocean provenance. We suggest this change to have been triggered by intensified formation and convection of deep waters in the high southern latitudes, a process that weakened during the MME (69.5 to 68.5 Ma). The early Maastrichtian cold interval is closely related to the negative and positive carbon isotope trends of the CMBE and MME. The millions-of-years long duration of these carbon cycle perturbations suggests a tectonic forcing of climatic cooling, possibly related to changes in ocean basin geometry and bathymetry.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 17
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    In:  Supplement to: Kozdon, Reinhard; Kelly, Daniel Clay; Kitajima, K; Strickland, A; Fournelle, John H; Valley, John W (2013): In situ d18O and Mg/Ca analyses of diagenetic and planktic foraminiferal calcite preserved in a deep-sea record of the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum|. Paleoceanography, 28(3), 517-528, https://doi.org/10.1002/palo.20048
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: We report d18O and minor element (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca) data acquired by high-resolution, in situ secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) from planktic foraminiferal shells and 100-500 µm sized diagenetic crystallites recovered from a deep-sea record (ODP Site 865) of the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM). The d18O of crystallites (~1.2 per mil Pee Dee Belemnite (PDB)) is ~4.8 per mil higher than that of planktic foraminiferal calcite (-3.6 per mil PDB), while crystallite Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca ratios are slightly higher and substantially lower than in planktic foraminiferal calcite, respectively. The focused stratigraphic distribution of the crystallites signals an association with PETM conditions; hence, we attribute their formation to early diagenesis initially sourced by seafloor dissolution (burndown) ensued by reprecipitation at higher carbonate saturation. The Mg/Ca ratios of the crystallites are an order of magnitude lower than those predicted by inorganic precipitation experiments, which may reflect a degree of inheritance from "donor" phases of biogenic calcite that underwent solution in the sediment column. In addition, SIMS d18O and electron microprobe Mg/Ca analyses that were taken within a planktic foraminiferal shell yield parallel increases along traverses that coincide with muricae blades on the chamber wall. The parallel d18O and Mg/Ca increases indicate a diagenetic origin for the blades, but their d18O value (-0.5 per mil PDB) is lower than that of crystallites suggesting that these two phases of diagenetic carbonate formed at different times. Finally, we posit that elevated levels of early diagenesis acted in concert with sediment mixing and carbonate dissolution to attenuate the d18O decrease signaling PETM warming in "whole-shell" records published for Site 865.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 18
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kozdon, Reinhard; Kelly, Daniel Clay; Kita, Noriko T; Fournelle, John H; Valley, John W (2011): Planktonic foraminiferal oxygen isotope analysis by ion microprobe technique suggests warm tropical sea surface temperatures during the Early Paleogene. Paleoceanography, 26(3), PA3206, https://doi.org/10.1029/2010PA002056
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Cool tropical sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are reported for warm Paleogene greenhouse climates based on the d18O of planktonic foraminiferal tests. These results are difficult to reconcile with models of greenhouse gas-forced climate. It has been suggested that this "cool tropics paradox" arises from postdepositional alteration of foraminiferal calcite, yielding erroneously high d18O values. Recrystallization of foraminiferal tests is cryptic and difficult to quantify, and the compilation of robust d18O records from moderately altered material remains challenging. Scanning electron microscopy of planktonic foraminiferal chamber-wall cross sections reveals that the basal area of muricae, pustular outgrowths on the chamber walls of species belonging to the genus Morozovella, contain no mural pores and may be less susceptible to postdepositional alteration. We analyzed the d18O in muricae bases of morozovellids from the central Pacific (Ocean Drilling Program Site 865) by ion microprobe using 10 mm pits with an analytical reproducibility of ±0.34 per mil (2 standard deviations). In situ measurements of d18O in these domains yield consistently lower values than those published for conventional multispecimen analyses. Assuming that the original d18O is largely preserved in the basal areas of muricae, this new d18O record indicates Early Paleogene (~49-56 Ma) tropical SSTs in the central Pacific were 4°-8°C higher than inferred from the previously published d18O record and that SSTs reached at least ~33°C during the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum. This study demonstrates the utility of ion microprobe analysis for generating more reliable paleoclimate records from moderately altered foraminiferal tests preserved in deep-sea sediments.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 19
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    In:  Supplement to: Hötzel, Sebastian; Dupont, Lydie M; Schefuß, Enno; Rommerskirchen, Florian; Wefer, Gerold (2013): The role of fire in Miocene to Pliocene C4 grassland and ecosystem evolution. Nature Geoscience, 6, 1027-1030, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo1984
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Modern savannah grasslands were established during the late Miocene and Pliocene (8-3 million years ago). In the tropics, grasslands are dominated by grasses that use the C4 photosynthetic pathway, rather than the C3 pathway. The C4 pathway is better adapted to warm, dry and low-CO2 conditions, leading to suggestions that declining atmospheric CO2 levels, increasing aridity and enhanced rainfall seasonality allowed grasses using this pathway to expand during this interval. The role of fire in C4 expansion may have been underestimated. Here we use analyses of pollen, microscopic charcoal and the stable isotopic composition of plant waxes from a marine sediment core off the coast of Namibia to reconstruct the relative timing of changes in plant composition and fire activity for the late Miocene and Pliocene. We find that in southwestern Africa, the expansion of C4 grasses occurred alongside increasing aridity and enhanced fire activity. During further aridification in the Pliocene, the proportion of C4 grasses in the grasslands increased, while the grassland contracted and deserts and semi-deserts expanded. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that ecological disturbance by fire was an essential feedback mechanism leading to the establishment of C4 grasslands in the Miocene and Pliocene.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 20
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    In:  Supplement to: Alegret, Laia; Thomas, Ellen (2013): Benthic foraminifera across the Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary in the Southern Ocean (ODP Site 690): Diversity, food and carbonate saturation. Marine Micropaleontology, 105, 40-51, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2013.10.003
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The impact of an asteroid at the Cretaceous/Paleogene (K/Pg) boundary triggered dramatic biotic, biogeochemical and sedimentological changes in the oceans that have been intensively studied. Paleo-biogeographical differences in the biotic response to the impact and its environmental consequences, however, have been less well documented. We present a high-resolution analysis of benthic foraminiferal assemblages at Southern Ocean ODP Site 690 (Maud Rise, Weddell Sea, Antarctica). At this high latitude site, late Maastrichtian environmental variability was high, but benthic foraminiferal assemblages were not less diverse than at lower latitudes, in contrast to those of planktic calcifiers. Also in contrast to planktic calcifiers, benthic foraminifera did not suffer significant extinction at the K/Pg boundary, but show transient assemblage changes and decreased diversity. At Site 690, the extinction rate was even lower (~3%) than at other sites. The benthic foraminiferal accumulation rate varied little across the K/Pg boundary, indicating that food supply to the sea floor was affected to a lesser extent than at lower latitude sites. Compared to Maastrichtian assemblages, Danian assemblages have a lower diversity and greater relative abundance of heavily calcified taxa such as Stensioeina beccariiformis and Paralabamina lunata. This change in benthic foraminiferal assemblages could reflect post-extinction proliferation of different photosynthesizers (thus food for the benthos) than those dominant during the Late Cretaceous, therefore changes in the nature rather than in the amount of the organic matter supplied to the seafloor. However, severe extinction of pelagic calcifiers caused carbonate supersaturation in the oceans, thus might have given competitive advantage to species with large, heavily calcified tests. This indirect effect of the K/Pg impact thus may have influenced the deep-sea dwellers, documenting the complexity of the effects of major environmental disturbance.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 21
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    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
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  • 22
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    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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  • 23
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Etourneau, Johan; Robinson, Rebecca S; Martinez, Philippe; Schneider, Ralph R (2013): Equatorial Pacific peak in biological production regulated by nutrient and upwelling during the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene cooling. Biogeosciences, 10(8), 5663-5670, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-10-5663-2013
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The largest increase in export production in the eastern Pacific of the last 5.3 Myr (million years) occurred between 2.2 and 1.6 Myr, a time of major climatic and oceanographic reorganization in the region. Here, we investigate the causes of this event using reconstructions of export production, nutrient supply and oceanic conditions across the Pliocene-Pleistocene in the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) for the last 3.2 Myr. Our results indicate that the export production peak corresponds to a cold interval marked by high nutrient supply relative to consumption, as revealed by the low bulk sedimentary 15N/14N (d15N) and alkenone-derived sea surface temperature (SST) values. This ~0.6 million year long episode of enhanced delivery of nutrients to the surface of the EEP was predominantly initiated through the upwelling of nutrient-enriched water sourced in high latitudes. In addition, this phenomenon was likely promoted by the regional intensification of upwelling in response to the development of intense Walker and Hadley atmospheric circulations. Increased nutrient consumption in the polar oceans and enhanced denitrification in the equatorial regions restrained nutrient supply and availability and terminated the high export production event.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 24
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    In:  Supplement to: Hoogakker, Babette A A; Downy, Frances; Andersson, Maria A; Chapman, Mark R; Elderfield, Henry; McCave, I Nick; Lenton, Timothy M; Gruetzner, Jens (2013): Gulf Stream - subtropical gyre properties across two Dansgaard–Oeschger cycles. Quaternary Science Reviews, 81, 105-113, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2013.09.020
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Salinity increase in the subtropical gyre system may have pre-conditioned the North Atlantic Ocean for a rapid return to stronger overturning circulation and high-latitude warming following meltwater events during the Last Glacial period. Here we investigate the Gulf Stream - subtropical gyre system properties over Dansgaard-Oeschger (DO) cycles 14 to 12, including Heinrich ice-rafting event 5. During the Holocene and Last Glacial Maximum a positive gradient in surface dwelling planktonic foraminifera d18O (Globigerinoides ruber) can be observed between the Gulf Stream and subtropical gyre, due to decreasing temperature, increasing salinity, and a change from summer to year-round occurrence of G. ruber. We assess whether this gradient was a common feature during stadial-interstadial climate oscillations of Marine Isotope Stage 3, by comparing existing G. ruber d18O from ODP Site 1060 (subtropical gyre location) and new data from ODP Site 1056 (Gulf Stream location) between 54 and 46 ka. Our results suggest that this gradient was largely absent during the period studied. During the major warm DO interstadials 14 and 12 we infer a more zonal and wider Gulf Stream, influencing both ODP Sites 1056 and 1060. A Gulf Stream presence during these major interstadials is also suggested by the large vertical d18O gradient between shallow dwelling planktonic foraminifera species, especially G. ruber, and the deep dwelling species Globorotalia inflata at site 1056, which we associate with strong summer stratification and Gulf Stream presence. A major reduction in this vertical d18O gradient from 51 ka until the end of Heinrich event 5 at 48.5 ka suggests site 1056 was situated within the subtropical gyre in this mainly cold period, from which we infer a migration of the Gulf Stream to a position nearer to the continental shelf, indicative of a narrower Gulf Stream with possibly reduced transport.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 25
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Channell, James E T; Stoner, Joseph S; Hodell, David A; Charles, Christopher D (2000): Geomagnetic paleointensity for the last 100 kyr from the sub-antarctic South Atlantic: a tool for inter-hemispheric correlation. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 175(1-2), 145-160, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0012-821X(99)00285-X
    Publication Date: 2024-05-18
    Description: We report relative paleointensity proxy records from four piston cores collected near the Agulhas Ridge and Meteor Rise (South Atlantic). The mean sedimentation rate of the cores varies from 24 cm/kyr to 11 cm/kyr. The two cores with mean sedimentation rates over 20 cm/kyr record positive remanence inclinations at 40-41 ka coeval with the Laschamp Event. Age models are based on oxygen isotope data from three of the cores, augmented by radiocarbon ages from nearby Core RC11-83, and by correlation of paleointensity records for the one core with no oxygen isotope data. The relative paleointensity proxy records are the first from the South Atlantic and from the high to mid-latitude southern hemisphere. Prominent paleointensity lows at ?40 ka and ?65 ka, as well as many other features, can be correlated to paleointensity records of comparable resolution from the northern hemisphere. The records are attributable, in large part, to the global-scale field, and therefore have potential for inter-hemispheric correlation at a resolution difficult to achieve with isotope data alone.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 26
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    In:  Supplement to: Meckler, Anna Nele; Sigman, Daniel M; Gibson, Kelly A; Francois, Roger; Martínez‐García, Alfredo; Jaccard, Samuel L; Röhl, Ursula; Peterson, Larry C; Tiedemann, Ralf; Haug, Gerald H (2013): Deglacial pulses of deep-ocean silicate into the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean. Nature, 495(7442), 495-498, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12006
    Publication Date: 2024-05-21
    Description: Growing evidence suggests that the low atmospheric CO2 concentration of the ice ages resulted from enhanced storage of CO2 in the ocean interior, largely as a result of changes in the Southern Ocean1. Early in the most recent deglaciation, a reduction in North Atlantic overturning circulation seems to have driven CO2 release from the Southern Ocean**2, 3, 4, 5, but the mechanism connecting the North Atlantic and the Southern Ocean remains unclear. Biogenic opal export in the low-latitude ocean relies on silicate from the underlying thermocline, the concentration of which is affected by the circulation of the ocean interior. Here we report a record of biogenic opal export from a coastal upwelling system off the coast of northwest Africa that shows pronounced opal maxima during each glacial termination over the past 550,000 years. These opal peaks are consistent with a strong deglacial reduction in the formation of silicate-poor glacial North Atlantic intermediate water**2 (GNAIW). The loss of GNAIW allowed mixing with underlying silicate-rich deep water to increase the silicate supply to the surface ocean. An increase in westerly-wind-driven upwelling in the Southern Ocean in response to the North Atlantic change has been proposed to drive the deglacial rise in atmospheric CO2 (refs 3, 4). However, such a circulation change would have accelerated the formation of Antarctic intermediate water and sub-Antarctic mode water, which today have as little silicate as North Atlantic Deep Water and would have thus maintained low silicate concentrations in the Atlantic thermocline. The deglacial opal maxima reported here suggest an alternative mechanism for the deglacial CO2 release**5, 6. Just as the reduction in GNAIW led to upward silicate transport, it should also have allowed the downward mixing of warm, low-density surface water to reach into the deep ocean. The resulting decrease in the density of the deep Atlantic relative to the Southern Ocean surface promoted Antarctic overturning, which released CO2 to the atmosphere.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 27
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    In:  Supplement to: Rothwell, Robin Guy; Weaver, Philip PE; Hodkinson, Richard A; Pratt, Cristelle E; Styzen, Michael J; Higgs, N C (1994): Clayey nannofossil ooze turbidites and hemipelagites at Sites 834 and 835 (Lau Basin, Southwest Pacific). In: Hawkins, J; Parson, L; Allan, J; et al. (eds.), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 135, 101-130, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.135.108.1994
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The western Lau Basin, between the Central and Eastern Lau Spreading Centers and the Lau Ridge, contains several small, elongate, fault-bounded, partially sediment-filled sub-basins. Sites 834 and 835 were drilled in the oldest part of the Lau Basin in two of these small extensional basins close to the Lau Ridge, formed on late Miocene to early Pliocene oceanic crust. Both sites show a similar sediment sequence that consists of clayey nannofossil oozes and mixed sediments interbedded with epiclastic vitric sands and silts. The vitric sands and silts are largely restricted to the deeper part of the sediment column (early Pliocene-late Pliocene), and the upper part of the sediment column at both sites consists of a distinctive sequence of brown clayey nannofossil ooze, stained by iron and manganese oxyhydroxides (late Pliocene-Holocene). However, the clayey nannofossil ooze sequence at Site 835 is anomalously thick and contains several medium- to very thick beds of matrix-supported, mud-clast conglomerate (interpreted as muddy debris-flow deposits), together with large amounts of redeposited clayey nannofossil ooze and coherent rafted blocks of older hemipelagic material. Redeposited clayey nannofossil oozes can be distinguished from hemipelagic nannofossil oozes using several sedimentological criteria. These include variation in color hue and chroma, presence or absence of bioturbation, presence or absence of scattered foraminifers, grain-size characteristics, variability in calcium carbonate content, presence or absence of pumice clasts, and micropaleontology. Clayey nannofossil ooze turbidites and hemipelagites are also geochemically distinct, with the turbidites being commonly enriched in Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn, Cr, and P. The sediment sequence at Site 835 is dominated by allochthonous sediments, either muddy debris-flow deposits, coherent rafted blocks, or thick clayey nannofossil ooze turbidites. Since 2.9 Ma, only 25% of the 133 m of sediments deposited represents hemipelagic deposition, with an average sedimentation rate of 1.5 cm/k.y.. Allochthonous sediments were the main sediment type deposited during the Brunhes geomagnetic Epoch and make up 80% of the thickness of sediment deposited during this period. Short intervals of mainly hemipelagic deposition occurred from 0.4 to 0.9 Ma, 1.0 to 1.4 Ma, and 1.7 to 2.1 Ma. However, allochthonous sediments were again the dominant sediment type deposited between 2.1 and 2.5 Ma, with a large slide complex emplaced around 2.5 Ma. We conclude that the adjacent high ground, surrounding the basin in which Site 835 was drilled, was affected by marked instability throughout the late Pliocene and Pleistocene. In contrast, sedimentation at Site 834 during this period has been dominated by hemipelagic deposition, with redeposited sediments making up slightly less than 17% of the total thickness of sediment deposited since 2.3 Ma. However, there was a marked increase in frequency and magnitude of redeposited sediments at around 0.2 Ma at Site 834, which broadly corresponds to the onset of a major episode of turbidite and debris-flow emplacement beginning about 0.4 Ma at Site 835. This episode of instability at both sites may be the effect of the approach and passing of the Central Lau propagator at the latitude of Sites 834 and 835 at about 0.5 Ma.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 28
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    In:  Supplement to: Hardas, Petros; Mutterlose, Jörg; Friedrich, Oliver; Erbacher, Jochen (2012): The Middle Cenomanian Event in the equatorial Atlantic: The calcareous nannofossil and benthic foraminiferal response. Marine Micropaleontology, 96-97, 66-74, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2012.08.003
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: In addition to Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE2), other perturbations of the carbon cycle occurred during the Cenomanian and Turonian, of which the Middle Cenomanian Event (MCE) is the most prominent one. In palaeoecological publications, however, this event is strongly underrepresented in contrast to the well-studied OAE2. In order to fill this gap, we have studied Early Cenomanian to Late Turonian calcareous nannofossil and benthic foraminiferal assemblages of Ocean Drilling Program Site 1260 at Demerara Rise (western equatorial North Atlantic), in order to decipher biotic changes throughout this interval and especially across the MCE. Our data show distinctive changes in the relative abundance of certain calcareous nannofossil taxa and a drastic decrease in benthic foraminiferal diversities and abundances associated with the MCE. In the lower part of the studied section and prior to the MCE, a mixed water-column with high nutrient availability in the upper photic zone is suggested based on very high relative abundances of the mesotrophic/eutrophic nannofossil species Biscutum constans. Around the MCE interval, certain nannofossil taxa (e.g., Rhagodiscus asper) show a distinctive decrease in relative abundance while others become more dominant. Taxa which increase in relative abundance after the MCE (e.g., Eprolithus floralis) are interpreted as either having favoured less eutrophic surface-waters or having inhabited deeper parts of the photic zone in a well stratified water-column. This interpretation is supported by published oxygen isotope and TEX86 data, which suggest increased water-column stratification starting with the MCE and lasting to the end of the Cenomanian stage, as a result of the implementation of a saline intermediate- to deep-water mass during this interval. Our study shows that the MCE was a significant biotic event in the Cenomanian/Turonian equatorial Atlantic, characterised by a lasting change of surface- and bottom-water ecosystems.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 29
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    In:  Supplement to: Elderfield, Henry; Ferretti, Patrizia; Greaves, Mervyn; Crowhurst, Simon J; McCave, I Nick; Hodell, David A; Piotrowski, Alexander M (2012): Evolution of ocean temperature and ice volume through the Mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition. Science, 337(6095), 704-709, https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1221294
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Earth's climate underwent a fundamental change between 1250 and 700 thousand years ago, the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (MPT), when the dominant periodicity of climate cycles changed from 41,000 to 100,000 years in the absence of significant change in orbital forcing. Over this time, an increase occurred in the amplitude of change of deep ocean foraminiferal oxygen isotopic ratios, traditionally interpreted as defining the main rhythm of ice ages although containing large effects of changes in deep-ocean temperature. We have separated the effects of decreasing temperature and increasing global ice volume on oxygen isotope ratios. Our results suggest that the MPT was initiated by an abrupt increase in Antarctic ice volume at 900 ka. We see no evidence of a pattern of gradual cooling but near-freezing temperatures occur at every glacial maximum.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 7 datasets
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  • 30
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    In:  Supplement to: Murphy, Daniel P; Thomas, Deborah J (2012): Cretaceous deep-water formation in the Indian sector of the Southern Ocean. Paleoceanography, 27(1), PA1211, https://doi.org/10.1029/2011PA002198
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The role that meridional overturning circulation (MOC) patterns played in poleward heat transport during the extreme warmth of the Early to Late Cretaceous is a fundamental and unresolved question in climate dynamics. In order to address this question we must determine where deep waters formed, and how they may have circulated during periods of extreme warmth. Here we present late Albian through Maastrichtian (105 to 65 Ma) Nd isotope records from Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) and Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) sites in the proto-Indian Ocean and the tropical Pacific. Comparison of these data with previously published records indicates deep-water formation in the Indian sector of the Southern Ocean began at least ∼105 Ma, extending the record of high-latitude convection back into the Early Cretaceous prior to the peak warmth of the mid-Cretaceous. The growing body of data supports a mode of MOC in part characterized by high-latitude downwelling during the peak of greenhouse warmth of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic. However, this mode of MOC likely was characterized by numerous locations of deep convection that were regionally important, but not significant in terms of a globally overturning circulation due to paleogeographic and bathymetric barriers.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 31
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    In:  Supplement to: Simonyan, Anna V; Dultz, Stefan; Behrens, Harald (2012): Diffusive transport of water in porous fresh to altered mid-ocean ridge basalts. Chemical Geology, 306-307, 63-77, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2012.02.017
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Studying diffusive transport in porous rocks is of fundamental importance in understanding a variety of geochemical processes including: element transfer, primary mineral dissolution kinetics and precipitation of secondary phases. Here we report new findings on the relationship between diffusive transport and textural characteristics of the pore systems on the example of mid-oceanic ridge basalts having different degree of alteration but very similar bulk pore volume. Diffusion processes in porous basalts were studied in situ using H2O -〉 D2O exchange experiments. The effective diffusion coefficients of water molecules increase systematically from 5.05*10**-11 to 1.19*10**-10 m**2/s for fresh and moderately altered basalts and from 2.40*10**-11 to 6.72*10**-11 m**2/s for completely altered basalt as temperature increases from 5 to 50 °C. The activation energy of the diffusion process increases from 12.29 ± 0.71 kJ/mol for fresh and moderately altered basalts to 14.3 ± 1.33 kJ/mol for completely altered basalt. The results indicate that neither the bulk porosity nor the degree of alteration can be used as proxies for the efficiency of element transport during MORB-water interaction. The formation of secondary phases that replace primary minerals and fill the pore space in the rock leads to the formation of tiny pores and phases with large specific surface area. These factors might have a dominant control on the transport properties of altered basaltic rocks.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 32
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    In:  Supplement to: Solomon, Evan A; Kastner, Miriam (2012): Progressive barite dissolution in the Costa Rica forearc - Implications for global fluxes of Ba to the volcanic arc and mantle. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 83, 110-124, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2011.12.021
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Barium concentrations were measured in pore fluids and sediments from the shallow forearc of the Costa Rica subduction zone to investigate the impact of progressive barite dissolution coupled to [SO4]2- depletion on the residual sediment Ba flux to the volcanic arc and mantle. At the Costa Rica subduction zone, the entire sediment section entering the trench is underthrust beneath the prism sediments of the overriding plate. Dissolved [SO4]2- concentrations measured in the reference sediment section in the incoming plate at ODP Site 1039/1253 vary between 13 and 29 mM. At ODP Site 1040/1254, 1.6 km arcward from the trench, [SO4]2- is depleted in the ~370 m of prism sediments as well as in the upper 30 m of the underthrust sediments. This suggests that, upon subduction, [SO4]2- diffusion from seawater into the underthrust sediment section ceases and the available pore fluid [SO4]2- at the top of the section is consumed by active microbial [SO4]2- reduction. Because the only remaining source of [SO4]2- is in the underthrust sediments, the depth of [SO4]2- depletion in the underthrust sediments must increase with distance from the trench. Dissolved Ba2+ concentrations in the uppermost underthrust sediments at Site 1040/1254 are several orders of magnitude greater than in the reference sediment section at Site 1039/1253, indicating intense barite dissolution coupled to [SO4]2- depletion. This is corroborated by a 50% decrease in the barite content within this unit. As a result of tectonic compaction, the dissolved Ba2+ released from barite dissolution is transported seaward and reprecipitated as barite when reaching [SO4]2- -rich fluids. As [SO4]2- depletion continues arcward, greater losses of sedimentary barite must occur in the subducting sediments. If all the barite is dissolved from the subducting sediment section, 60% of the incoming bulk sediment Ba will be distilled from the sediments in the shallow forearc. Balancing the Ba output flux with this lower input flux requires a much larger sediment component recycled to the volcanic arc than previously suggested. These results indicate that diagenetic mobilization of Ba from barite can have a profound impact on the chemical composition of sediments recycled to the arc and mantle, and should be considered in the global budget of subducted sediments.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 33
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    In:  Supplement to: Kelly, Daniel Clay; Nielsen, Tina M J; Schellenberg, Stephen A (2012): Carbonate saturation dynamics during the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum: Bathyal constraints from ODP sites 689 and 690 in the Weddell Sea (South Atlantic). Marine Geology, 303-306, 75-86, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2012.02.003
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Spatiotemporal patterns of carbonate dissolution provide a critical constraint on carbon input during an ancient (~55.5 Ma) global warming event known as the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM), yet the magnitude of lysocline shoaling in the Southern Ocean is poorly constrained due to limited spatial coverage in the circum-Antarctic region. This shortcoming is partially addressed by comparing patterns of carbonate sedimentation at the Site 690 PETM reference section to those herein reconstructed for nearby Site 689. Biochemostratigraphic correlation of the two records reveals that the first ~36 ka of the carbon isotope excursion (CIE) signaling PETM conditions is captured by the Site 689 section, while the remainder of the CIE interval and nearly all of the CIE recovery are missing due to a coring gap. A relatively expanded stratigraphy and higher carbonate content at mid-bathyal Site 689 indicate that dissolution was less severe than at Site 690. Thus, the bathymetric transect delimited by these two PETM records indicates that the lysocline shoaled above Site 689 (~1,100 m) while the calcite compensation depth remained below Site 690 (~1,900 m) in the Weddell Sea region. The ensuing recovery of carbonate sedimentation conforms to a bathymetric trend best explained by gradual lysocline deepening as negative feedback mechanisms neutralized ocean acidification. Further, biochemostratigraphic evidence indicates the tail end of the CIE recovery interval at both sites has been truncated by a hiatus most likely related to vigorous production and advection of intermediate waters.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 34
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    In:  Supplement to: Le Houedec, Sandrine; Meynadier, Laure M; Allègre, Claude J (2012): Nd isotope systematics on ODP Sites 756 and 762 sediments reveal major volcanic, oceanic and climatic changes in South Indian Ocean over the last 35 Ma. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 327-328, 29-38, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2012.01.019
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: We have analyzed the Nd isotopic composition of both ancient seawater and detrital material from long sequences of carbonated oozes of the South Indian Ocean which are ODP Site 756 (Ninety East Ridge (-30°S), 1518 m water depth) and ODP Site 762 (Northwest Australian margin, 1360 m water depth). The measurements indicate that the epsilon-Nd changes in Indian seawater over the last 35 Ma result from changes in the oceanic circulation, large volcanic and continental weathering Nd inputs. This highlights the diverse nature of those controls and their interconnections in a small area of the ocean. These new records combined with those previously obtained at the equatorial ODP Sites 757 and 707 in the Indian Ocean (Gourlan et al., 2008, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2007.11.054) established that the distribution of intermediate seawater epsilon-Nd was uniform over most of the Indian Ocean from 35 Ma to 10 Ma within a geographical area extending from 40°S to the equator and from -60°E to 120°E. However, the epsilon-Nd value of Indian Ocean seawater which kept an almost constant value (at about -7 to -8) from 35 to 15 Ma rose by 3 epsilon-Nd units from 15 to 10 Ma. This sharp increase has been caused by a radiogenic Nd enrichment of the water mass originating from the Pacific flowing through the Indonesian Passage. Using a two end-members model we calculated that the Nd transported to the Indian Ocean through the Indonesian Pathway was 1.7 times larger at 10 Ma than at 15 Ma. The Nd isotopic composition of ancient seawater and that of the sediment detrital component appear to be strongly correlated for some specific events. A first evidence occurs between 20 and 15 Ma with two positive spikes recorded in both epsilon-Nd signals that are clearly induced by a volcanic crisis of, most likely, the St. Paul hot-spot. A second evidence is the very large epsilon-Nd decrease recorded at ODP Sites 756 and 762 during the past 10 Ma which has never been previously observed. The synchronism between the epsilon-Nd decrease in seawater from 10 to 5 Ma and evidences of desertification in the western part of the nearly Australian continent suggests enhanced weathering inputs in this ocean from this continent as a result of climatic changes.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 35
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    In:  Supplement to: Bourne, Mark; Niocaill, Conall M; Thomas, Alexander L; Knudsen, Mads Faurschou; Henderson, Gideon M (2012): Rapid directional changes associated with a 6.5 kyr-long Blake geomagnetic excursion at the Blake-Bahama Outer Ridge. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 333-334, 21-34, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2012.04.017
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Geomagnetic excursions are recognized as intrinsic features of the Earth's magnetic field. High-resolution records of field behaviour, captured in marine sedimentary cores, present an opportunity to determine the temporal and geometric character of the field during geomagnetic excursions and provide constraints on the mechanisms producing field variability. We present here the highest resolution record yet published of the Blake geomagnetic excursion (~125 ka) measured in three cores from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1062 on the Blake-Bahama Outer Ridge. The Blake excursion has a controversial structure and timing but these cores have a sufficiently high sedimentation rate (~10cm/ka) to allow detailed reconstruction of the field behaviour at this site during the excursion. Palaeomagnetic measurements of the cores reveal rapid transitions (〈500 yr) between the contemporary stable normal polarity and a completely reversed state of long duration which spans a stratigraphic interval of 0.7 m. We determine the duration of the reversed state during the Blake excursion using oxygen isotope stratigraphy, combined with 230Th excess measurements to assess variations in the sedimentation rates through the sections of interest. This provides an age and duration for the Blake excursion with greater accuracy and with constrained uncertainty. We date the directional excursion as falling between 129 and 122 ka with a duration for the deviation of 6.5±1.3 kyr. The long duration of this interval and the fully reversed field suggest the existence of a pseudo-stable, reversed dipole field component during the excursion and challenge the idea that excursions are always of short duration.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 36
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    In:  Supplement to: Peterse, Francien; van der Meer, Jaap; Schouten, Stefan; Weijers, Johan W H; Fierer, Noah; Jackson, Robert B; Kim, Jung-Hyun; Sinninghe Damsté, Jaap S (2012): Revised calibration of the MBT–CBT paleotemperature proxy based on branched tetraether membrane lipids in surface soils. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 96, 215-229, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2012.08.011
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The MBT-CBT proxy for the reconstruction of paleotemperatures and past soil pH is based on the distribution of branched glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (brGDGT) membrane lipids. The Methylation of Branched Tetraether (MBT) and the Cyclisation of Branched Tetraether (CBT) indices were developed to quantify these distributions, and significant empirical relations between these indices and annual mean air temperature (MAT) and/or soil pH were found in a large data set of soils. In this study, we extended this soil dataset to 278 globally distributed surface soils. Of these soils, 26% contains all nine brGDGTs, while in 63% of the soils the seven most common brGDGTs were detected, and the latter were selected for calibration purposes. This resulted in new transfer functions for the reconstruction of pH based on the CBT index: pH = 7.90-1.97 × CBT (r**2 = 0.70; RMSE = 0.8; n = 176), as well as for MAT based on the CBT index and methylation index based on the seven most abundant GDGTs (defined as MBT'): MAT = 0.81-5.67 × CBT + 31.0 × MBT' (r**2 = 0.59; RMSE = 5.0 °C; n = 176). The new transfer function for MAT has a substantially lower correlation coefficient than the original equation (r**2 = 0.77). To investigate possible improvement of the correlation, we used our extended global surface soil dataset to statistically derive the indices that best describe the relations of brGDGT composition with MAT and soil pH. These new indices, however, resulted in only a relatively minor increase in correlation coefficients, while they cannot be explained straightforwardly by physiological mechanisms. The large scatter in the calibration cannot be fully explained by local factors or by seasonality, but MAT for soils from arid regions are generally substantially (up to 20 °C) underestimated, suggesting that absolute brGDGT-based temperature records for these areas should be interpreted with caution. The applicability of the new MBT'-CBT calibration function was tested using previously published MBT-CBT-derived paleotemperature records covering the last deglaciation in Central Africa and East Asia, the Eocene-Oligocene boundary and the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum. The results show that trends remain similar in all records, but that absolute temperature estimates and the amplitude of temperature changes are lower for most records, and generally in better agreement with independent proxy data.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 37
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    In:  Supplement to: Stassen, Peter; Thomas, Ellen; Speijer, Robert P (2012): Integrated stratigraphy of the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum in the New Jersey Coastal Plain: Toward understanding the effects of global warming in a shelf environment. Paleoceanography, 27(4), PA4210, https://doi.org/10.1029/2012PA002323
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: In the New Jersey Coastal Plain, a silty to clayey sedimentary unit (the Marlboro Formation) represents deposition during the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM). This interval is remarkably different from the glauconitic sands and silts of the underlying Paleocene Vincentown and overlying Eocene Manasquan Formation. We integrate new and published stable isotope, biostratigraphic, lithostratigraphic and ecostratigraphic records, constructing a detailed time frame for the PETM along a depth gradient at core sites Clayton, Wilson Lake, Ancora and Bass River (updip to downdip). The onset of the PETM, marked by the base of the carbon isotope excursion (CIE), is within the gradual transition from glauconitic silty sands to silty clay, and represented fully at the updip sites (Wilson Lake and Clayton). The CIE "core" interval is expanded at the updip sites, but truncated. The CIE "core" is complete at the Bass River and Ancora sites, where the early part of the recovery is present (most complete at Ancora). The extent to which the PETM is expressed in the sediments is highly variable between sites, with a significant unconformity at the base of the overlying lower Eocene sediments. Our regional correlation framework provides an improved age model, allowing better understanding of the progression of environmental changes during the PETM. High-resolution benthic foraminiferal data document the change from a sediment-starved shelf setting to a tropical, river-dominated mud-belt system during the PETM, probably due to intensification of the hydrologic cycle. The excellent preservation of foraminifera during the PETM and the lack of severe benthic extinction suggest there was no extreme ocean acidification in shelf settings.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 38
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    In:  Supplement to: Boiteau, Rene; Greaves, Mervyn; Elderfield, Henry (2012): Authigenic uranium in foraminiferal coatings: A proxy for ocean redox chemistry. Paleoceanography, 27(3), PA3227, https://doi.org/10.1029/2012PA002335
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The rate of uranium accumulation in oceanic sediments from seawater is controlled by bottom water oxygen concentrations and organic carbon fluxes-two parameters that are linked to deep ocean storage of CO2. To investigate glacial-interglacial changes in what is known as authigenic U, we have developed a rapid method for its determination as a simple addition to a procedure for foraminiferal trace element analysis. Foraminiferal calcite acts as a low U substrate (U/Ca 〈 15 nmol/mol) upon which authigenic U accumulates in reducing sediments. We measured a downcore record of foraminiferal U/Ca from ODP Site 1090 in the South Atlantic and found that U/Ca ratios increase by 70-320 nmol/mol during glacial intervals. There is a significant correlation between U/Ca records of benthic and planktonic foraminiferal species and between U/Ca and bulk sediment authigenic U. These results indicate that elevated U/Ca ratios are attributable to the accumulation of authigenic U coatings in sediments. Foraminiferal Mn/Ca ratios were lower during the glacial intervals, suggesting that the observed U accumulation on the shells is not directly linked to U incorporation into secondary manganese phases. Thus, foraminiferal U/Ca ratios may provide useful information on past changes in sediment redox conditions.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 39
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    In:  Supplement to: Persico, Davide; Fioroni, Chiara; Villa, Giuliana (2012): A refined calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy for the middle Eocene–early Oligocene Southern Ocean ODP sites. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 335-336, 12-23, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.05.017
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: This work presents the stratigraphic distribution of several species of calcareous nannofossil in the middle Eocene early-Oligocene from four Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) sites located between 60° and 65°S paleolatitude in the Southern Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Useful nannofossil datums that should facilitate construction of age-models and contribute to an integrated chronology for the upper Paleogene Southern Ocean sediments from ~42 to 33 Ma are summarized. The distribution patterns of calcareous nannofossils, studied by means of quantitative and semiquantitative methods, provide an improvement of the classical Southern Ocean biozonations, introducing new biostratigraphically useful biohorizons, and testing their reproducibility within and outside the region.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
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  • 40
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    In:  Supplement to: Roberts, Natalie L; Piotrowski, Alexander M; Elderfield, Henry; Eglinton, Timothy Ian; Lomas, Michael W (2012): Rare earth element association with foraminifera. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 94, 57-71, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2012.07.009
    Publication Date: 2024-04-25
    Description: Neodymium isotopes are becoming widely used as a palaeoceanographic tool for reconstructing the source and flow direction of water masses. A new method using planktonic foraminifera which have not been chemically cleaned has proven to be a promising means of avoiding contamination of the deep ocean palaeoceanographic signal by detrital material. However, the exact mechanism by which the Nd isotope signal from bottom waters becomes associated with planktonic foraminifera, the spatial distribution of rare earth element (REE) concentrations within the shell, and the possible mobility of REE ions during changing redox conditions, have not been fully investigated. Here we present REE concentration and Nd isotope data from mixed species of planktonic foraminifera taken from plankton tows, sediment traps and a sediment core from the NW Atlantic. We used multiple geochemical techniques to evaluate how, where and when REEs become associated with planktonic foraminifera as they settle through the water column, reside at the surface and are buried in the sediment. Analyses of foraminifera shells from plankton tows and sediment traps between 200 and 2938 m water depth indicate that only ~20% of their associated Nd is biogenically incorporated into the calcite structure. The remaining 80% is associated with authigenic metal oxides and organic matter, which form in the water column, and remain extraneous to the carbonate structure. Remineralisation of these organic and authigenic phases releases ions back into solution and creates new binding sites, allowing the Nd isotope ratio to undergo partial equilibration with the ambient seawater, as the foraminifera fall through the water column. Analyses of fossil foraminifera shells from sediment cores show that their REE concentrations increase by up to 10-fold at the sediment-water interface, and acquire an isotopic signature of bottom water. Adsorption and complexation of REE3+ ions between the inner layers of calcite contributes significantly to elevated REE concentrations in foraminifera. The most likely source of REE ions at this stage of enrichment is from bottom waters and from the remineralisation of oxide phases which are in chemical equilibrium with the bottom waters. As planktonic foraminifera are buried below the sediment-water interface redox-sensitive ion concentrations are adjusted within the shells depending on the pore-water oxygen concentration. The concentration of ions which are passively redox sensitive, such as REE3+ ions, is also controlled to some extent by this process. We infer that (a) the Nd isotope signature of bottom water is preserved in planktonic foraminifera and (b) that it relies on the limited mobility of particle reactive REE3+ ions, aided in some environments by micron-scale precipitation of MnCO3. This study indicates that there may be sedimentary environments under which the bottom water Nd isotope signature is not preserved by planktonic foraminifera. Tests to validate other core sites must be carried out before downcore records can be used to interpret palaeoceanographic changes.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 41
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    In:  Supplement to: Brown, Rachel E; Anderson, Linda Davis; Thomas, Ellen; Zachos, James C (2011): A core-top calibration of B/Ca in the benthic foraminifers Nuttallides umbonifera and Oridorsalis umbonatus: A proxy for Cenozoic bottom water carbonate saturation. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 310(3-4), 360-368, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.08.023
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: We present modern B/Ca core-top calibrations for the epifaunal benthic foraminifer Nuttallides umbonifera and the infaunal Oridorsalis umbonatus to test whether B/Ca values in these species can be used for the reconstruction of paleo-D[[CO3]2-]. O. umbonatus originated in the Late Cretaceous and remains extant, whereas N. umbonifera originated in the Eocene and is the closest extant relative to Nuttallides truempyi, which ranges from the Late Cretaceous through the Eocene. We measured B/Ca in both species in 35 Holocene sediment samples from the Atlantic, Pacific and Southern Oceans. B/Ca values in epifaunal N. umbonifera (~ 85-175 µmol/mol) are consistently lower than values reported for epifaunal Cibicidoides (Cibicides) wuellerstorfi (130-250 µmol/mol), though the sensitivity of D[[CO3]2-] on B/Ca in N. umbonifera (1.23 ± 0.15) is similar to that in C. wuellerstorfi (1.14 ± 0.048). In addition, we show that B/Ca values of paired N. umbonifera and its extinct ancestor, N. truempyi, from Eocene cores are indistinguishable within error. In contrast, both the B/Ca (35-85 µmol/mol) and sensitivity to D[[CO3]2-] (0.29 ± 0.20) of core-top O. umbonatus are considerably lower (as in other infaunal species), and this offset extends into the Paleocene. Thus the B/Ca of N. umbonifera and its ancestor can be used to reconstruct bottom water D[[CO3]2?], whereas O. umbonatus B/Ca appears to be buffered by porewater [[CO3]2-] and suited for constraining long-term drift in seawater B/Ca.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 42
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    In:  Supplement to: Webber, A P; Roberts, S; Burgess, R M; Boyce, A J (2011): Fluid mixing and thermal regimes beneath the PACMANUS hydrothermal field, Papua New Guinea: Helium and oxygen isotope data. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 304(1-2), 93-102, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.01.020
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Fluid mixing processes and thermal regimes within the Snowcap and Roman Ruins vent sites of the PACMANUS hydrothermal system, Papua New Guinea, were investigated using 3He/4He ratios from fluid inclusions within pyrite and anhydrite and the d18O signature of anhydrite. Depressed 3He/4He ratios of 0.2-6.91RA appear to be caused by significant atmospheric diffusive exchange, whilst He-Ne diffusive fractionation precludes correction using 20Ne. 40Ar/36Ar ratios of 295-310 are elevated above seawater, indicating the majority of argon is seawater derived but with a magmatic component. d18O anhydrite ratios are 6.5 per mil to 11 per mil for Snowcap and 6.4 per mil to 11.9 per mil for Roman Ruins. Using oxygen isotope fractionation factors for the anhydrite-water system, the temperatures calculated assuming isotopic equilibrium at depth are up to 100 °C cooler than fluid inclusion trapping temperatures. It is likely that anhydrite is precipitated rapidly, preventing d18O equilibration. By comparing new d18O values for anhydrite with corresponding published 87Sr/86Sr ratios, seawater is inferred to penetrate deep into the Snowcap system with little conductive heating. A simple fluid mixing model has been constructed whereby the differing venting styles can be explained by a plumbing system at depth which favors delivery of end-member hydrothermal fluid to the high temperature sites.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 43
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    In:  Supplement to: Alt, Jeffrey C; Shanks, Wayne C (2011): Microbial sulfate reduction and the sulfur budget for a complete section of altered oceanic basalts, IODP Hole 1256D (eastern Pacific). Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 310(1-2), 73-83, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.07.027
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Sulfide mineralogy and the contents and isotope compositions of sulfur were analyzed in a complete oceanic volcanic section from IODP Hole 1256D in the eastern Pacific, in order to investigate the role of microbes and their effect on the sulfur budget in altered upper oceanic crust. Basalts in the 800 m thick volcanic section are affected by a pervasive low-temperature background alteration and have mean sulfur contents of 530 ppm, reflecting loss of sulfur relative to fresh glass through degassing during eruption and alteration by seawater. Alteration halos along fractures average 155 ppm sulfur and are more oxidized, have high SO4/Sum S ratios (0.43), and lost sulfur through oxidation by seawater compared to host rocks. Although sulfur was lost locally, sulfur was subsequently gained through fixation of seawater-derived sulfur in secondary pyrite and marcasite in veins and in concentrations at the boundary between alteration halos and host rocks. Negative d34S[sulfide-S] values (down to -30 per mil) and low temperatures of alteration (down to ~40 °C) point to microbial reduction of seawater sulfate as the process resulting in local additions of sulfide-S. Mass balance calculations indicate that 15–20% of the sulfur in the volcanic section is microbially derived, with the bulk altered volcanic section containing 940 ppm S, and with d34S shifted to -6.0 per mil from the mantle value (0 per mil). The bulk volcanic section may have gained or lost sulfur overall. The annual flux of microbial sulfur into oceanic basement based on Hole 1256D is 3-4 * 10**10 mol S/yr, within an order of magnitude of the riverine sulfate source and the sedimentary pyrite sink. Results indicate a flux of bacterially derived sulfur that is fixed in upper ocean basement of 7-8 * 10**-8 mol/cm**-2/yr1 over 15 m.y. This is comparable to that in open ocean sediment sites, but is one to two orders of magnitude less than for ocean margin sediments. The global annual subduction of sulfur in altered oceanic basalt lavas based on Hole 1256D is 1.5-2.0 * 10**11 mol/yr, comparable to the subduction of sulfide in sediments, and could contribute to sediment-like sulfur isotope heterogeneities in the mantle.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 44
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    In:  Supplement to: Blättler, Clara L; Jenkyns, Hugh C; Reynard, Linda M; Henderson, Gideon M (2011): Significant increases in global weathering during Oceanic Anoxic Events 1a and 2 indicated by calcium isotopes. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 309(1-2), 77-88, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.06.029
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Calcium-isotope ratios (d44/42Ca) were measured in carbonate-rich sedimentary sections deposited during Oceanic Anoxic Events 1a (Early Aptian) and 2 (Cenomanian-Turonian). In sections from Resolution Guyot, Mid-Pacific Mountains; Coppitella, Italy; and the English Chalk at Eastbourne and South Ferriby, UK, a negative excursion in d44/42Ca of ~0.20 per mil and ~0.10 per mil is observed for the two events. These d44/42Ca excursions occur at the same stratigraphic level as the carbon-isotope excursions that define the events, but do not correlate with evidence for carbonate dissolution or lithological changes. Diagenetic and temperature effects on the calcium-isotope ratios can be discounted, leaving changes in global seawater composition as the most probable explanation for d44/42Ca changes in four different carbonate sections. An oceanic box model with coupled strontium- and calcium-isotope systems indicates that a global weathering increase is likely to be the dominant driver of transient excursions in calcium-isotope ratios. The model suggests that contributions from hydrothermal activity and carbonate dissolution are too small and short-lived to affect the oceanic calcium reservoir measurably. A modelled increase in weathering flux, on the order of three times the modern flux, combined with increased hydrothermal activity due to formation of the Ontong-Java Plateau (OAE1a) and Caribbean Plateau (OAE2), can produce trends in both calcium and strontium isotopes that match the signals recorded in the carbonate sections. This study presents the first major-element record of a weathering response to Oceanic Anoxic Events.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 45
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    In:  Supplement to: Zegarra, Monica; Helenes, Javier (2011): Changes in Miocene through Pleistocene dinoflagellates from the Eastern Equatorial Pacific (ODP Site 1039), in relation to primary productivity. Marine Micropaleontology, 81(3-4), 107-121, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.09.005
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Palynological data from offshore Costa Rica, allow us to investigate the relationship between dinoflagellate cyst assemblages and changes in regional oceanic primary productivity. From Miocene to Pleistocene, productivity at ODP Site 1039 was influenced by tectonic drift, as Site 1039 approached the continent, from the Equator to its current position at ~10°N. In addition, dinoflagellate abundance is modulated by regional productivity events, which modified primary productivity, as also indicated by available data on calcareous nannofossils, diatoms, TOC, and CaCO3 content. Five palynomorph intervals are defined. The early-late Miocene one, dominated by Batiacasphaera, represents relatively stable, productive oceanic conditions before the closure of the Indonesian and Panama Seaways. The late Miocene decrease in palynomorph recovery is related to the Carbonate Crash Event. The high abundance and diversity of the assemblages at the end of the late Miocene to early Pliocene indicate increased productivity related to the Global Biogenic Bloom, and a change in dominance from Batiacasphaera to Impagidinium to Nematosphaeropsis. The low abundance of the late Pliocene interval is related to El Niño-like conditions, and there is another change related to the disappearance of Batiacasphaera and dominance of Impagidinium, Nematosphaeropsis, and Operculodinium. The abundant Pleistocene assemblages represent increased marine productivity, and a high influx of continental palynomorphs and bissacate pollen, associated with the proximity of the Costa Rica Dome. Pleistocene dinoflagellates are characterized by Spiniferites and Selenopemphix, together with rare Impagidinium and Nematosphaeropsis.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 46
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    In:  Supplement to: MacLeod, Kenneth G; Isaza-Londoño, Carolina; Martin, Ellen E; Jiménez Berrocosco, Álvaro; Basak, Chandranath (2011): Changes in North Atlantic circulation at the end of the Cretaceous greenhouse interval. Nature Geoscience, 4, 779-782, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo1284
    Publication Date: 2024-03-02
    Description: The mechanics of ocean circulation during the Late Cretaceous greenhouse interval remain contested (MacLeod and Hoope, 1992, doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1992)020〈0117:ETIBWB〉2.3.CO;2; Frank and Arthur, 1999, doi:10.1029/1998PA900017; MacLeod and Huber, 2001; Abramovich et al., doi:10.1029/2009PA001843; Isaza-Londono et al., doi:10.1029/2004PA001130; MacLeod et al., 2005, doi:10.1130/G21466.1), with the role of North Atlantic Deep Water in ocean circulation particularly debated: the relative warming of the North Atlantic during the termination of the greenhouse interval has been attributed to heat piracy from North Atlantic Deep Water formation (Isaza-Londono et al., doi:10.1029/2004PA001130; MacLeod et al., 2005, doi:10.1130/G21466.1), but the sources of Cretaceous deep water have been difficult to resolve. Nd isotopes as captured by seafloor sediments and expressed as epsilon-Nd(t) reflect the region in which the water mass was formed. Here we present epsilon-Nd(t) measurements from Cretaceous- to Palaeogene-aged sediments from four cores in the tropical North Atlantic. Before 69 Myr ago, we find extremely low epsilon-Nd(t) values of about -16, consistent with the presence of a warm, saline deep water mass formed in the low latitudes (MacLeod et al., 2008, doi:10.1130/G24999A.1; Jiménez Berrocoso et al., 2010, doi:10.1130/G31195.1). By 62 Myr ago, epsilon-Nd(t) values had risen to -11, similar to values reported from the northern North Atlantic over the past 65 million years, but lower than most contemporaneous values in the South Atlantic (Robinson et al., 2010, doi:10.1130/G31165.1) and Pacific oceans ((MacLeod et al., 2008, doi:10.1130/G24999A.1; Frank et al., 2005, doi:10.1029/2004PA001052 ). We therefore suggest that the epsilon-Nd(t) shift reflects the increasing influence of a northern-sourced water mass at this site, indicating the onset or intensification of deep- or intermediate-water formation in the North Atlantic 69 Myr ago. Our findings support the heat piracy model and imply that circulation patterns during the greenhouse interval were different from those of the subsequent relatively temperate interval.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 47
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    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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  • 48
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    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
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  • 49
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    In:  Supplement to: Pierce, Elizabeth L; Williams, Trevor J; van de Flierdt, Tina; Hemming, Sidney R; Goldstein, Steven L; Brachfeld, Stefanie A (2011): Characterizing the sediment provenance of East Antarctica's weak underbelly: The Aurora and Wilkes sub-glacial basins. Paleoceanography, 26(4), PA4217, https://doi.org/10.1029/2011PA002127
    Publication Date: 2024-05-06
    Description: The Wilkes and Aurora basins are large, low-lying sub-glacial basins that may cause areas of weakness in the overlying East Antarctic ice sheet. Previous work based on ice-rafted debris (IRD) provenance analyses found evidence for massive iceberg discharges from these areas during the late Miocene and Pliocene. Here we characterize the sediments shed from the inferred areas of weakness along this margin (94°E to 165°E) by measuring40Ar/39Ar ages of 292 individual detrital hornblende grains from eight marine sediment core locations off East Antarctica and Nd isotopic compositions of the bulk fine fraction from the same sediments. We further expand the toolbox for Antarctic IRD provenance analyses by exploring the application of 40Ar/39Ar ages of detrital biotites; biotite as an IRD tracer eliminates lithological biases imposed by only analyzing hornblendes and allows for characterization of samples with low IRD concentrations. Our data quadruples the number of detrital 40Ar/39Ar ages from this margin of East Antarctica and leads to the following conclusions: (1) Four main sectors between the Ross Sea and Prydz Bay, separated by ice drainage divides, are distinguishable based upon the combination of 40Ar/39Ar ages of detrital hornblende and biotite grains and the e-Nd of the bulk fine fraction; (2) 40Ar/39Ar biotite ages can be used as a robust provenance tracer for this part of East Antarctica; and (3) sediments shed from the coastal areas of the Aurora and Wilkes sub-glacial basins can be clearly distinguished from one another based upon their isotopic fingerprints.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 50
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    In:  Supplement to: Elderfield, Henry; Greaves, Mervyn; Barker, S; Hall, Ian R; Tripati, Aradhna K; Ferretti, Patrizia; Crowhurst, Simon J; Booth, Linda; Daunt, C (2010): A record of bottom water temperature and seawater d18O for the Southern Ocean over the past 440kyr based on Mg/Ca of benthic foraminiferal Uvigerina spp. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(1-2), 160-169, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.07.013
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The sensitivity to temperature of Mg/Ca ratios in the shallow-infaunal benthic foraminifera Uvigerina spp. has been assessed. Core-top calibrations over ~1-20 °C show a range in sensitivity of 0.065-0.084 mmol/mol/°C but few data are available spanning the temperature range anticipated in deep-sea records over glacial-interglacial cycles. In contrast to epibenthic foraminiferal species, carbonate ion saturation appears not to affect Mg/Ca significantly. A method based on estimating the ratio of the temperature sensitivity of foraminiferal Mg/Ca to that of d18Ocalcite shows that sensitivity for Mg/Ca at the high end of the observed core-top range (~0.1 mmol/mol/°C) is required for consistency with LGM-Holocene differences in each property as constrained by independent proxy data. This is supported by a Mg/Ca record for Uvigerina spp. generated for the Southern Ocean over the past 440,000 years from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1123 (Chatham Rise, New Zealand). The record shows variability that correlates with climate oscillations. The LGM deep ocean temperature derived from the Mg/Ca record is -1.1 ± 0.3 °C. Transformation to temperature allows estimates to be made of changes in bottom water temperature and seawater d18O and comparison made with literature records. Analysis reveals a ~2.5-kyr lead in the record of temperature over calcite d18O and a longer lead over seawater d18O. This is a reflection of larger phase offsets at eccentricity periods; phase offsets at tilt and precession are within error zero.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 51
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    In:  Supplement to: Etourneau, Johan; Schneider, Ralph R; Blanz, Thomas; Martinez, Philippe (2010): Intensification of the Walker and Hadley atmospheric circulations during the Pliocene-Pleistocene climate transition. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 297(1-2), 103-110, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2010.06.010
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: When comparing new sea surface temperature (SST) records between the western and eastern equatorial Pacific spanning the last 3.2 Ma, we found that the zonal temperature gradient over the entire tropical Pacific irreversibly increased by 3 to 4 °C from 2.2 to 2.0 Ma. Here, we suggest a pronounced increase in atmospheric circulation from a weak to a strong zonal Walker circulation (WC) during the early Pleistocene. Evidence from other oceanic areas also suggests a strengthening in the meridional Hadley circulation (HC) during the same time period. Therefore, we also suggest that the invigoration of both atmospheric circulation patterns was intimately coupled during the Plio-Pleistocene transition, and likely linked to a shrinkage in the zonal extension of the tropical to subtropical warm-sphere associated with a prominent increase in the pole to equator temperature gradient. Our conclusion refutes assumptions that the intensification of atmospheric circulation in the tropics and subtropics significantly contributed to the initiation of continental ice sheet formation at high latitudes, since the onset of extensive Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (NHG) occurred ~2.75 Ma ago, in the late Pliocene. Instead, the development of a stronger atmospheric circulation ~2.2-2.0 Ma ago could have significantly contributed to the Plio-Pleistocene climate cooling.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 52
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    In:  Supplement to: Gourlan, Alexandra T; Meynadier, Laure M; Allègre, Claude J; Tapponnier, Paul; Birck, Jean-Louis; Joron, Jean Louis (2010): Northern Hemisphere climate control of the Bengali rivers discharge during the past 4 Ma. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(19-20), 2484-2498, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.05.003
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Nd isotopes are useful tracers for paleoceanography due to the short Nd residence time in seawater and the large differences between the isotopic signatures of various geological reservoirs. Therefore, eNd variations reflect the geological history of individual oceanic basins. Using a differential dissolution technique, which extracts Nd isotopes of seawater trapped in MnO2 coatings and carbonates in marine sediment, we measured almost two hundred samples from ODP Sites 758 and 757 in the Northern Bay of Bengal covering the last 4 Ma. For the first time, we have shown a covariation between epsilon-Nd and d18O over at least the last 800 ka. We also show that from 4 Ma to 2.6 Ma, epsilon-Nd is almost constant and starts to fluctuate at 2.6 Ma when northern glaciations increased. From 2.6 Ma to 1 Ma the fluctuation period is close to 40 ka while from 1 Ma to present it is dominantly 100 ka. We attribute these findings to mixing between Himalayan river water (that ultimately originates as Indian summer monsoon rain) and normal Bay of Bengal seawater. Previous studies on seawater, using epsilon-Nd, d18O analyzed on planktonic foraminifera and sedimentary data, can be integrated into this model. A simple quantitative binary mixing model suggests that the summer monsoon rain was more intense during interglacial than glacial periods. During last glacial episode, the monsoon trajectory was deviated to the east. At a large scale, the Indian monsoon is fully controlled by the variations in Northern Hemisphere climate but with a complex response function to this forcing. Our study clearly establishes the large potential of Nd isotope data to evaluate the hydrological river regime during the Quaternary and its relationship with climate fluctuations, particularly when the sediment archive is sampled close to sediment sources.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 53
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    In:  Supplement to: Sample, James C (2010): Stable isotope constraints on vein formation and fluid evolution along a recent thrust fault in the Cascadia accretionary wedge. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 293(3-4), 300-312, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2010.02.044
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: In situ secondary ionization mass spectrometry (SIMS) analyses of oxygen isotopes in authigenic calcite veins were obtained from an active thrust fault system drilled at Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 892 (44°40.4'N, 125°07.1'W) along the Cascadia subduction margin. The average d18OPDB value of all samples is -9.9 per mil and the values are the lowest of any measured in active accretionary prisms. Ranges in individual veins can be as much as 19.6 per mil. There is an isotopic stratigraphy related to the structural stratigraphy. Mean isotope values in the hanging wall, thrust, and footwall are -14.4 per mil, -9.5 per mil, and -5.2 per mil, respectively. Several veins and crosscutting vein sequences show a general trend from lower to higher d18O values over time. Isotopic and textural data indicate several veins formed by a crack-seal mechanism and growth into open fractures. The best explanation for the strong 18O depletions is periodic rapid flow from 2-3 km deeper in the prism. Relatively narrow isotopic ranges for most veins suggest that fluids were derived from a similar source depth for each episode of fluid pulse and calcite crystallization. Structural and mass balance considerations are consistent with a record preserved in the veins of ten to hundreds of thousands of years. The fluid pulses may relate to periodic large earthquake events such as those recognized in the paleoseismicity records from the Cascadia margin.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
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  • 54
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    In:  Supplement to: Jiménez Berrocosco, Álvaro; MacLeod, Kenneth G; Martin, Ellen E; Bourbon, Elodie; Isaza-Londoño, Carolina; Basak, Chandranath (2010): Nutrient trap for Late Cretaceous organic-rich black shales in the tropical North Atlantic. Geology, 38(12), 1111-1114, https://doi.org/10.1130/G31195.1
    Publication Date: 2024-03-02
    Description: Neodymium isotopes of fish debris from two sites on Demerara Rise, spanning ~4.5 m.y. of deposition from the early Cenomanian to just before ocean anoxic event 2 (OAE2) (Cenomanian-Turonian transition), suggest a circulation-controlled nutrient trap in intermediate waters of the western tropical North Atlantic that could explain continuous deposition of organic-rich black shales for as many as ~15 m.y. (Cenomanian-early Santonian). Unusually low Nd isotopic data (epsilon-Nd(t) ~-11 to ~-16) on Demerara Rise during the Cenomanian are confirmed, but the shallower site generally exhibits higher and more variable values. A scenario in which southwest-flowing Tethyan and/or North Atlantic waters overrode warm, saline Demerara bottom water explains the isotopic differences between sites and could create a dynamic nutrient trap controlled by circulation patterns in the absence of topographic barriers. Nutrient trapping, in turn, would explain the ~15 m.y. deposition of black shales through positive feedbacks between low oxygen and nutrient-rich bottom waters, efficient phosphate recycling, transport of nutrients to the surface, high productivity, and organic carbon export to the seafloor. This nutrient trap and the correlation seen previously between high Nd and organic carbon isotopic values during OAE2 on Demerara Rise suggest that physical oceanographic changes could be components of OAE2, one of the largest perturbations to the global carbon cycle in the past 150 m.y.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 55
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    In:  Supplement to: Muratli, Jesse M; Chase, Zanna; McManus, James; Mix, Alan C (2010): Ice-sheet control of continental erosion in central and southern Chile (36°-41°S) over the last 30,000 years. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(23-24), 3230-3239, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.06.037
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Bulk sediment chemistry from three Chilean continental margin Ocean Drilling Program sites constrains regional continental erosion over the past 30,000 years. Sediments from thirteen rivers that drain the (mostly igneous) Andes and the (mostly metamorphic) Coast Range, along with existing rock chemistry datasets, define terrestrial provenance for the continental margin sediments. Andean river sediments have high Mg/Al relative to Coast-Range river sediments. Near 36°S, marine sediments have high-Mg/Al (i.e. more Andean) sources during the last glacial period, and lower-Mg/Al (less Andean) sources during the Holocene. Near 41°S a Ti-rich source, likely from coast-range igneous intrusions, is prevalent during Holocene time, whereas high-Mg/Al Andean sources are more prevalent during the last glacial period. We infer that there is a dominant ice-sheet control of sediment sources. At 36°S, Andean-sourced sediment decreased as Andean mountain glaciers retreated after ~17.6 ka, coincident with local oceanic warming and southward retreat of the Patagonian Forest and, by inference, westerly winds. At 41°S Andean sediment dominance peaks and then rapidly declines at ~19 ka, coincident with local oceanic warming and the earliest deglacial sea-level rise. We hypothesize that this decreased flux of Andean material in the south is related to rapid retreat of the marine-based portion of the Patagonian Ice Sheet in response to global sea-level rise, as the resulting flooding of the southern portion of the Central Valley created a sink for Andean sediments in this region. Reversal of the decreasing deglacial Mg/Al trend at 41°S from 14.5 to 13.0 ka is consistent with a brief re-advance of the Patagonian ice sheet coincident with the Antarctic Cold Reversal.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
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  • 56
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    In:  Supplement to: Kemp, Alan E S; Grigorov, Ivo; Pearce, Richard B; Naveira Garabato, Alberto C (2010): Migration of the Antarctic Polar Front through the mid-Pleistocene transition: evidence and climatic implications. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(17-18), 1993-2009, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2010.04.027
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The Antarctic Polar Front is an important biogeochemical divider in the Southern Ocean. Laminated diatom mat deposits record episodes of massive flux of the diatom Thalassiothrix antarctica beneath the Antarctic Polar Front and provide a marker for tracking the migration of the Front through time. Ocean Drilling Program Sites 1091, 1093 and 1094 are the only deep piston cored record hitherto sampled from the sediments of the circumpolar biogenic opal belt. Mapping of diatom mat deposits between these sites indicates a glacial-interglacial front migration of up to 6 degrees of latitude in the early/mid Pleistocene. The mid-Pleistocene transition marks a stepwise minimum 7° northward migration of the locus of the Polar Front sustained for about 450 kyr until an abrupt southward return to a locus similar to its modern position and further south than any mid-Pleistocene locus. This interval from a "900 ka event" that saw major cooling of the oceans and a d13C minimum through to the 424 ka Mid-Brunhes Event at Termination V is also seemingly characterised by 1) sustained decreased carbonate in the sub-tropical south Atlantic, 2) reduced strength of Antarctic deep meridional circulation, 3) lower interglacial temperatures and lower interglacial atmospheric CO2 levels (by some 30 per mil) than those of the last 400 kyr, evidencing less complete deglaciation. This evidence is consistent with a prolonged period lasting 450 kyr of only partial ventilation of the deep ocean during interglacials and suggests that the mechanisms highlighted by recent hypotheses linking mid-latitude atmospheric conditions to the extent of deep ocean ventilation and carbon sequestration over glacial-interglacial cycles are likely in operation during the longer time scale characteristic of the mid-Pleistocene transition. The cooling that initiated the "900 ka event" may have been driven by minima in insolation amplitude related to eccentricity modulation of precession that also affected low latitude climates as marked by threshold changes in the African monsoon system. The major thresholds in earth system behaviour through the mid-Pleistocene transition were likely governed by an interplay of the 100 kyr and 400 kyr eccentricity modulation of precession.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 57
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    In:  Supplement to: Chun, Cecily O J; Delaney, Margaret Lois; Zachos, James C (2010): Paleoredox changes across the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, Walvis Ridge (ODP Sites 1262, 1263, and 1266): Evidence from Mn and U enrichment factors. Paleoceanography, 25(4), PA4202, https://doi.org/10.1029/2009PA001861
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: An understanding of sediment redox conditions across the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) (~55 Ma) is essential for evaluating changes in processes that control deep-sea oxygenation, as well as identifying the mechanisms responsible for driving the benthic foraminifera extinction. Sites cored on the flanks of Walvis Ridge (Ocean Drilling Program Leg 208, Sites 1262, 1266, and 1263) allow us to examine changes in bottom and pore water redox conditions across a ~2 km depth transect of deep-sea sediments of PETM age recovered from the South Atlantic. Here we present measurements of the concentrations of redox-sensitive trace metals manganese (Mn) and uranium (U) in bulk sediment as proxies for redox chemistry at the sediment-water interface and below. All three Walvis Ridge sites exhibit bulk Mn enrichment factors (EF) ranging between 4 and 12 prior to the warming, values at crustal averages (Mn EF = 1) during the warming interval, and a return to pre-event values during the recovery period. U enrichment factors across the PETM remains at crustal averages (U EF = 1) at Site 1262 (deep) and Site 1266 (intermediate depth). U enrichment factors at Site 1263 (shallow) peaked at 5 immediately prior to the PETM and dropped to values near crustal averages during and after the event. All sites were lower in dissolved oxygen content during the PETM. Before and after the PETM, the deep and intermediate sites were oxygenated, while the shallow site was suboxic. Our geochemical results indicate that oxygen concentrations did indeed drop during the PETM but not sufficiently to cause massive extinction of benthic foraminifera.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 58
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Faul, Kristina L; Delaney, Margaret Lois (2010): A comparison of early Paleogene export productivity and organic carbon burial flux for Maud Rise, Weddell Sea, and Kerguelen Plateau, south Indian Ocean. Paleoceanography, 25(3), PA3214, https://doi.org/10.1029/2009PA001916
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Marine biological productivity has been invoked as a possible climate driver during the early Paleogene through its potential influence on atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations. However, the relationship of export productivity (the flux of organic carbon (C) from the surface ocean to the deep ocean) to organic C burial flux (the flux of organic C from the deep ocean that is buried in marine sediments) is not well understood. We examine the various components involved with atmosphere-to-ocean C transfer by reconstructing early Paleogene carbonate and silica production (using carbonate and silica mass accumulation rates (MARs)); export productivity (using biogenic barium (bio-Ba) MARs); organic C burial flux (using reactive phosphorus (P) MARs); redox conditions (using uranium and manganese contents); and the fraction of organic C buried relative to export productivity (using reactive P to bio-Ba ratios). Our investigations concentrate on Paleocene/Eocene sections of Sites 689/690 from Maud Rise and Site 738 from Kerguelen Plateau. In both regions, export productivity, organic C burial flux, and the fraction of organic C buried relative to export productivity decreased from the Paleocene/early Eocene to the middle Eocene. A shift is indicated from an early Paleogene two-gyre circulation in which nutrients were not efficiently recycled to the surface via upwelling in these regions, to a circulation more like the present day with efficient recycling of nutrients to the surface ocean. Export productivity was enhanced for Kerguelen Plateau relative to Maud Rise throughout the early Paleogene, possibly due to internal waves generated by the plateau regardless of gyre circulation.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 59
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wang, Pinxian; Tian, Jun; Lourens, Lucas Joost (2010): Obscuring of long eccentricity cyclicity in Pleistocene oceanic carbon isotope records. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 290(3-4), 319-330, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2009.12.028
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Long eccentricity (400-kyr) cycles in carbon isotope records from the Pacific and Atlantic oceans and the Mediterranean sea of the past 5.0 Ma are compared. All records show maximum d13C values (d13Cmax) at eccentricity minima during the Pliocene, but this relationship obscured in the Pleistocene after ~1.6 Ma in particular for the open ocean deep-water d13C records. Since a clear anti-phase relationship was set up between oceanic d18O and d13C in the 100-kyr band from this time, we attribute the obscured 400-kyr signal to a major change in the oceanic carbon reservoir probably associated with restructure of the Southern Ocean. A similar change occurred in the Miocene at 13.9 Ma when the 400-kyr cyclicity in d13C records flattened out together with a drastic cooling and Antarctic ice-sheet expansion. A remarkable exception is the Mediterranean surface water d13C record, which remained paced by the long-term eccentricity cycle throughout the Pliocene and Pleistocene, suggesting a low-latitude climatic origin of the 400-kyr signal that is independent of glacial-interglacial forcing. Since the Earth is currently passing through an eccentricity minimum, it is crucial to understand the nature of the d13Cmax events.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 60
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hilgen, Frederik J; Kuiper, Klaudia F; Lourens, Lucas Joost (2010): Evaluation of the astronomical time scale for the Paleocene and earliest Eocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 300(1-2), 139-151, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2010.09.044
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The astronomical-tuned time scale is rapidly extended into the Paleogene but, due to the existence of an Eocene gap, different tuning options had to be presented for the Paleocene. These options differ both in number and tuning of ~405-kyr eccentricity related cycles and are only partially consistent with recalculated 40Ar/39Ar constraints for the Cretaceous/Paleogene (K/Pg) and Paleocene/Eocene (P/E) boundaries. In this paper, we evaluate the cyclostratigraphic interpretation of records from ODP Leg 198 and 208 sites, and the Zumaia section to solve the problem of the different tuning options. We found that the interval between the K/Pg boundary and the early Late Paleocene biotic event (ELPE) comprises 17 instead of 16 * ~405-kyr eccentricity related cycles as previously proposed, while the entire Paleocene contains 25 * ~405-kyr cycles. Starting from 40Ar/39Ar age constraints for the K/Pg boundary, a new tuning to 405-kyr eccentricity is presented for the Paleocene and earliest Eocene, which results in ages of ~66.0 and ~ 56.0 Ma for the K/Pg and P/E boundaries, respectively. This tuning introduces considerable differences in age for a number of nannofossil events at ODP Sites 1209 and 1262 in the interval between 61 and 63 Ma, but eliminates large and abrupt changes in the seafloor spreading rate. The tuning seems further consistent with recalculated 40Ar/39Ar ages for ash layer -17 of early Eocene age. However, despite this apparent consistency with existing radio-isotopic constraints, an alternative 405-kyr younger or, less likely, older tuning cannot be excluded at this stage.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 61
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Xu, Jian; Kuhnt, Wolfgang; Holbourn, Ann E; Regenberg, Marcus; Andersen, Nils (2010): Indo-Pacific Warm Pool variability during the Holocene and Last Glacial Maximum. Paleoceanography, 25(4), PA4230, https://doi.org/10.1029/2010PA001934
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: We measured oxygen isotopes and Mg/Ca ratios in the surface-dwelling planktonic foraminifer Globigerinoides ruber (white s.s.) and the thermocline dweller Pulleniatina obliquiloculata to investigate upper ocean spatial variability in the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP). We focused on three critical time intervals: the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 18-21.5 ka), the early Holocene (8-9 ka), and the late Holocene (0-2 ka). Our records from 24 stations in the South China Sea, Timor Sea, Indonesian seas, and western Pacific indicate overall dry and cool conditions in the IPWP during the LGM with a low thermal gradient between surface and thermocline waters. During the early Holocene, sea surface temperatures increased by ~3°C over the entire region, indicating intensification of the IPWP. However, in the eastern Indian Ocean (Timor Sea), the thermocline gradually shoaled from the LGM to early Holocene, reflecting intensification of the subsurface Indonesian Throughflow (ITF). Increased surface salinity in the South China Sea during the Holocene appears related to northward displacement of the monsoonal rain belt over the Asian continent together with enhanced influx of saltier Pacific surface water through the Luzon Strait and freshwater export through the Java Sea. Opening of the freshwater portal through the Java Sea in the early Holocene led to a change in the vertical structure of the ITF from surface- to thermocline-dominated flow and to substantial freshening of Timor Sea thermocline waters.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 62
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Wallrabe-Adams, Hans-Joachim; Werner, Reinhard (1999): Date report: Chemical Composition of Middle Miocene to Early Pliocene ash from Sites 982 and 985. In: Raymo, ME; Jansen, E; Blum, P; Herbert, TD (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 162, 1-14, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.162.021.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The Cenozoic volcanic activity on Iceland has been recorded in North Atlantic sediments drilled during several Ocean Drilling Program (ODP)/Deep Sea Drilling Project legs (Legs 104, 151, 152, 162, and 163). Leg 162 (North Atlantic-Arctic Gateways II) recovered ash layers at Sites 982, 985, and 907 (Jansen, Raymo, Blum, et al., 1996, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.162.1996). The revisited Site 907 was first drilled during Leg 151, and the ash from this site has been described in detail by Lacasse et al. (1996, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.151.122.1996) and Werner et al. (1996, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.151.123.1996). Site 982 is located within the Hatton-Rockall Basin on the Rockall Plateau, which is situated west of the British Isles. Site 985 is located northeast of Iceland at the foot of the eastern slope of the Iceland Plateau, adjacent to the Norwegian Basin. Here we report chemical analyses of Neogene tephra layers from Holes 982A, 983B, 982C, 985A, and 985B. The sedimentary sequence at Site 982 spans the lower Miocene-Holocene; Site 985 recovered sediments spanning the upper Oligocene-Holocene. Twenty-two distinct ash layers and ash-bearing sediments were sampled in Holes 982A-982C (Cores 162-982A-16H through 24H, 162-982B-14H through 56X, and 162-982C-15H through 27H), and 59 ash layers were sampled in Holes 985A and 985B (Cores 162-985A-11H through 59X, and 162-985B-11H through 14H). Almost 50% of the sampled ash is strongly altered (predominantly from Site 985). A cluster of altered thin layers in the lower Pliocene of Site 985 (top of Unit III) is remarkable.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 63
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Ortiz, Joseph D; O'Connell, Suzanne B; Mix, Alan C (1999): Data Report: Spectral reflectance observations from recovered sediments. In: Raymo, ME; Jansen, E; Blum, P; Herbert, TD (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 162, 1-6, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.162.029.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Sediment spectral reflectance measurements were generated aboard the JOIDES Resolution during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 162 shipboard operations. The large size of the raw data set (over 1.3 gigabytes) and limited computer hard disk storage space precluded detailed analysis of the data at sea, although broad band averages were used as aids in developing splices and determining lithologic boundaries. This data report describes the methods used to collect these data and their shipboard and postcruise processing. These initial results provide the basis for further postcruise research.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 200 data points
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 160 data points
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 185 data points
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 160 data points
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 239 data points
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 280 data points
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 160 data points
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 90 data points
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Abundance per area; ALOHA_Station; Biomass, dry mass per area; Biomass, wet mass per area; Biomass as carbon per area; Biomass as nitrogen per area; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Element analyser CHN; Hawaiian Islands, North Central Pacific; Hawaii Ocean Time-Series; HOT; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; Moana Wave; OOS; Open ocean station; Sample code/label; Sample type; see reference(s); ST-2; Volume; Weighted; WOCE; World Ocean Circulation Experiment
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 240 data points
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  • 90
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    In:  Supplement to: St. John, Kristen E Kudless (1999): Data Report: Site 918 IRD mass accumulation rate record, late Miocene-Pleistocene. In: Larsen, HC; Duncan, RA; Allan, JF; Brooks, K (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 163, 1-4, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.119.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: To understand the late Cenozoic glacial history of the Northern Hemisphere, continuous long-term proxy records from climatically sensitive regions must be examined. Ice-rafted debris (IRD) from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 918, located in the Irminger Basin, is one such record. IRD in marine sediments is a direct indicator of the presence of glacial ice extending to sea level on adjacent landmasses, and, therefore, is an important paleoclimatic signal from the mid- to high latitudes. The IRD record at Site 918 is the first long-term ice-rafting record available for southeast Greenland, a region that may have been a key nucleation area for widespread glaciation during the late Cenozoic (Larsen et al, 1994, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.152.1994). This data report presents the results of coarse sand-size IRD mass accumulation rate (MAR) analyses for Site 918 from the late Miocene through the Pleistocene. In addition, a preliminary analysis of IRD compositions is included. Detailed discussions of the local, regional, and global paleoclimatic implications of this data, and of the companion Site 919 Pleistocene IRD MAR data (Krissek, 1999, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.118.1999), are in preparation. Such future work will include comparisons of these IRD MAR data sets to the Site 919 oxygen isotope stratigraphy developed by Flower (1998, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.sr.152.219.1998).
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 91
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    In:  Supplement to: Allan, James F; Forsythe, Lance; Natland, James H (1999): Determination of primitive melt composition in the North Atlantic seaward-dipping reflector sequences from Cr-rich spinel compositions. In: Larsen, HC; Duncan, RA; Allan, JF; Brooks, K (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 163, 1-16, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.121.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Coring during Ocean Drilling Program and Deep Sea Drilling Project Legs 163, 152, 104, 81, and 38 recovered sequences of altered basalt from North Atlantic seaward-dipping reflector sequences (SDRS) erupted during the initial rifting of Greenland from northern Europe and likely associated with excessive mantle temperatures caused by an impacting mantle plume head. Cr-rich spinel is found abundantly as inclusions and groundmass crystals within the olivine-rich lavas of Hole 917A (Leg 152) cored into the Southeast Greenland SDRS, but only rarely as inclusions within plagioclase in the lavas of the Vøring Plateau SDRS, and it is absent from other cored SDRS lavas from the Rockall Plateau and Southeast Greenland. Eruptive melt compositions determined from inferred, thermodynamically-defined, spinel-melt exchange equilibria indicate that the most primitive melts represented by Hole 917A basalts have Mg/(Mg + Fe2+) at least as high as 0.70 and approach near-primary mantle melt compositions. In contrast, Cr-rich spinels from Hole 338 (Leg 38) lavas on the Vøring Plateau SDRS give evidence for melt with Mg/(Mg + Fe2+) only as high as 0.64. This study underlines that primitive melts similar to those from Hole 917A comprise only a small fraction of the eruptive North Atlantic SDRS melts, and that most SDRS basalts were, in fact, too evolved to have precipitated Cr-rich spinel, with true melt Mg/(Mg + Fe2+) likely below 0.60. The evolved nature of the SDRS basalts implies large amounts of fractionation at the base of the crust or deep within it, consistent with seismic results that indicate an abnormally thick Layer 3 underlying the SDRS.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 5 datasets
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  • 92
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Channell, James E T; Amigo, Alejandro E; Fronval, Torben; Rack, Frank R; Lehman, Benoît (1999): Magnetic stratigraphy at Sites 907 and 985 in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea and a revision of the Site 907 composite section. In: Raymo, ME; Jansen, E; Blum, P; Herbert, TD (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 162, 1-18, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.162.036.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The magnetic polarity stratigraphy at Site 907 obtained from the shipboard pass-through magnetometer and from discrete samples is readily interpretable back to the onset of the Gilbert Chron (5.89 Ma). From this level to the base of the section at ~14 Ma, the interpretation is corroborated by silicoflagellate datums with predictable correlation to polarity chrons. The resulting magnetostratigraphic interpretation differs from those proposed in the Leg 151 (Hole 907A) and 162 (Holes 907B and 907C) Initial Reports volumes. An important hiatus in the 7-10 Ma interval at Site 907 caused sedimentation to slow or cease for ~2.7 m.y. We have revised the shipboard correlation among the three holes at Site 907, resulting in a new composite section splice and recalculation of composite depths. For Site 985, magnetostratigraphic interpretation is possible down to ~150 meters below seafloor (mbsf) (C3An/C3Ar) at ~6 Ma. There are no useful biostratigraphic datums from Site 985 to support this interpretation; however, the interpretation is supported by the correlation of Sites 985 and 907 using natural gamma data from the shipboard multisensor track. Below ~150 mbsf at Site 985, drilling-related deformation at the onset of extended core barrel drilling precluded magnetostratigraphic interpretation.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 93
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Channell, James E T; Smelror, Morten; Jansen, Eystein; Higgins, Sean M; Lehman, Benoît; Eidvin, Tor; Solheim, Anders (1999): Age models for glacial fan deposits off East Greenland and Svalbard (Sites 986 and 987). In: Raymo, ME; Jansen, E; Blum, P; Herbert, TD (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 162, 1-18, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.162.008.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Cores recovered at Sites 986 and 987 comprise glacial fan sedimentation associated with the Svalbard-Barents Sea and Greenland Ice Sheets, respectively. At Site 986, the top 150 m and the basal 250 m yielded interpretable magnetic stratigraphies. The record from the intervening 550 m is compromised by drilling-related core deformation, poor recovery, and numerous debris flows. The uppermost 150 m appears to record the Brunhes/Matuyama boundary and the Jaramillo Subchron. The base of the drilled section (at ~950 meters below seafloor [mbsf]) is interpreted to lie within the Matuyama Chron (age 〈2.58 Ma) with an apparent normal polarity interval in the ~730-750 mbsf interval. Dinoflagellate cyst biostratigraphy and Sr isotopic ratios are consistent with a Matuyama age for the base of the drilled section and with the normal polarity interval as the Olduvai Subchron. On the other hand, the last occurrence of Neogloboquadrina atlantica (sinistral) and the last common occurrence of the warm-dwelling Globigerina bulloides at 647-650 mbsf in Hole 986D indicate an age for this level of ~2.3 Ma, inconsistent with the designation of the Olduvai Subchron in the ~730-750 mbsf interval. If the age at 647-650 mbsf in Hole 986D is taken as 2.3 Ma and the base of the hole lies within the Matuyama Chron, then the sedimentation rate in the basal 300 m of the cored section averages 1 m/k.y. At Site 987, the magnetic stratigraphy is fairly unambiguous throughout the section and yields an age of 7.5 Ma (Chron 4n) for the base of the drilled section. The paucity of calcareous and siliceous microfossils precludes biostratigraphic corroboration of the magnetostratigraphic interpretation, although dinoflagellate cysts provide general support, particularly at the base of the section. The age model indicates relatively low sedimentation rates (~5 cm/k.y.) at the base of the section with rates at least four to five times greater during intervals of debris flows at ~5-4.6 and ~2.6 Ma.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 94
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Ortiz, Joseph D; Mix, Alan C; Harris, Sara E; O'Connell, Suzanne B (1999): Diffuse spectral reflectance as a proxy for percent carbonate content in North Atlantic sediments. Paleoceanography, 14(2), 171-186, https://doi.org/10.1029/1998PA900021
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Diffuse reflectance records from Feni Drift in the North Atlantic faithfully record sediment percent carbonate. A high-resolution, reflectance-based age model for these sediments derived from an orbitally tuned age model for western equatorial Atlantic, Ceara Rise sediments was generated by spectral frequency mapping. Power spectra of the Feni Drift record indicate statistically significant sub-Milankovitch cyclicity at 7.6-8.4 and 4.8-6.1 kyr. We infer that these ~8 and ~5 kyr cycles document a linkage between North and equatorial Atlantic climate given our ability to correlate these records. These climate cycles influence Atlantic basin carbonate prior to the intensification of Northern Hemisphere glaciation and thus must arise from some portion of the climate system other than the dynamics of large ice sheets. The presence of these peaks, which could be related to equatorial clipped precession, implies a possible non-linear response to Milankovitch forcing.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 95
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Thy, Peter; Lesher, Charles E; Mayfield, J D (1999): Low-pressure melting studies of basalt and basaltic andesite from the Southeast Greenland continental margin and the origin of dacites at Site 917. In: Larsen, HC; Duncan, RA; Allan, JF; Brooks, K (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 163, 1-18, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.114.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: A series of 1-atm. melting experiments on basaltic flows collected from Holes 918D and 989B in the oceanic succession of the East Greenland continental margin can be used to define possible phase equilibria and liquid lines of descent. A sample from Site 918 (Section 152-918D-108R-2) shows the melting order low-Ca pyroxene (1153ºC), augite (1182ºC), olivine (1192ºC), and plagioclase (1192ºC). A sample from Site 989 (Section 163-989B-10R-7) melts in the order of low-Ca pyroxene (1113ºC), augite (1167ºC), plagioclase (1177ºC), and olivine (1184ºC). In particular, the relatively early appearance of low-Ca pyroxene distinguishes the melting relations for the oceanic succession from those observed for the basaltic continental succession at Site 917. A basaltic andesite flow from the Middle Series at Site 917 (Section 152-917A-27R-4) shows the melting order of low-Ca pyroxene (1142ºC), plagioclase (1173ºC), and olivine (1173ºC). This melting order is difficult to reconcile with the observed large compositional variations in SiO2 and FeO for the Middle Series, which imply early magnetite fractionation. Major element considerations and rare-earth element modeling of the dacites of the Middle Series suggest that they formed by low extent of melting (〈20%) of continental hydrated gabbroic or mafic amphibolite at pressures 〈8 kbar. These crustally derived melts represent possible contaminants of basaltic magmas of the Lower and Middle Series at Site 917.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 96
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Hooper, Peter R; Rehacek, Jakub; Morris, George (1999): Data Report: Major and trace element composition, strontium, neodymium, and oxygen isotope ratios, and mineral compositions of samples. In: Larsen, HC; Duncan, RA; Allan, JF; Brooks, K (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 163, 1-5, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.117.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Thirty-five samples from the drill core of the three Leg 163 sites (Sites 988, 989, and 990) off the southeast coast of Greenland were analyzed for 27 major, minor, and trace elements by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and for 25 trace elements, including 14 rare-earth elements (REEs), by an inductively coupled plasma source mass spectrometer (ICP/MS). Sr- and Nd-isotope data are reported for seven samples and oxygen-isotope data are reported for 19 plagioclase separates. In addition, a reconnaissance survey of the composition of the main mineral phases, plagioclase, pyroxene, and oxides was determined on an electron microprobe to provide the basic information required for petrogenetic modeling. Olivine pseudomorphs are present in many of the samples, but in no case was an olivine grain found that was fresh enough to give a reliable analysis. The chemical and isotopic data recorded here were determined to provide a comparison with the larger data sets acquired by the Edinburgh, Copenhagen, and Leicester laboratories from both Legs 152 and 163 drill cores. This will permit a detailed comparison of the North Atlantic flood basalt province as a whole with the better known Columbia River, Deccan, and Karoo continental flood basalt provinces, for which substantial chemical data sets are already available at Washington State University.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 97
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Saunders, Andrew D; Kempton, Pamela D; Fitton, J Godfrey; Larsen, Lotte M (1999): Sr, Nd, and Pb isotopes and trace element geochemistry of basalts from the Southeast Greenland margin. In: Larsen, HC; Duncan, RA; Allan, JF; Brooks, K (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 163, 1-17, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.122.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Voluminous, subaerial magmatism resulted in the formation of extensive seaward-dipping reflector sequences (SDRS) along the Paleogene Southeast Greenland rifted margin. Drilling during Leg 163 recovered basalts from the SDRS at 66ºN (Site 988) and 63ºN (Sites 989 and 990). The basalt from Site 988 is light rare-earth-element (REE) enriched (La(n)/Yb(n) = 3.4), with epsilon-Nd(t=60) = 5.3, 87Sr/86Sr = 0.7034, and 206Pb/204Pb = 17.98. It is similar to tholeiites recovered from the Irminger Basin during Leg 49 and to light-REE-enriched tholeiites from Iceland. Drilling at Site 989, the innermost of the sites on the 63ºN transect, was proposed to extend recovery of the earliest part of the SDRS initiated during Leg 152. These basalts are, however, younger than those from Site 917 and are compositionally similar to basalts from the more seaward Sites 990 and 915. Many of the basalts from Sites 989 and 990 show evidence of contamination by continental crust (e.g., epsilon-Nd(t=60) extends down to -3.7, 206Pb/204Pb extends down to 15.1). We suggest that the contaminant is a mixture of Archean granulite and amphibolite and that the most contaminated basalts have assimilated ~5% of crust. Uncontaminated basalts are isotopically similar to basalts from Site 918, on the main body of the SDRS, and are light-REE depleted. Consistent with previous models of the development of this margin, we show that at the time of formation of the basalts from Sites 989 and 990 (1) melting was at relatively shallow levels in a fully-fledged rift zone; (2) fragments of continental crust were present in the lithosphere above the zones of melt generation; and (3) the sublithospheric mantle was dominated by a depleted Icelandic plume component.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 98
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Teagle, Damon A H; Alt, Jeffrey C (1999): Data Report: Alteration and vein log of Holes 917A and 918D, Southeast Greenland margin. In: Larsen, HC; Duncan, RA; Allan, JF; Brooks, K (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 163, 1-5, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.116.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: This data report provides a systematic documentation of the low-temperature alteration associated with the formation of a volcanic-rifted margin by the quantification of alteration effects and vein mineralogy and distributions in basalts recovered on Leg 152 (Larsen, Saunders, Clift, et al., 1994, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.152.1994). Basaltic rocks from Holes 917A and 918D have been investigated to provide a quantitative description of the extents of recrystallization and secondary mineral abundance resulting from low-temperature alteration and weathering. Only limited descriptions of alteration and secondary mineral distributions were undertaken on board ship during Leg 152, and the data presented here provide an essential complement to the shipboard logs of the limited amount of basalt recovered during Leg 163 from Sites 988, 989, and 990 (Duncan, Larsen, Allan, et al., 1996, doi:10.2973/odp.proc.ir.163.1996).
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 99
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Flower, Benjamin P (1999): Data Report: Planktonic foraminifers from the subpolar North Atlantic and Nordic Seas: Sites 980-987 and 907. In: Raymo, ME; Jansen, E; Blum, P; Herbert, TD (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 162, 1-16, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.162.038.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: During Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 162, five sites were drilled in the subpolar North Atlantic (Sites 980-984), three sites in the Nordic Seas (Sites 985-987), and two holes at Iceland Sea Site 907 (first drilled during ODP Leg 151). Carbonate sediments at the subpolar sites have generally common to abundant and well-preserved planktonic foraminifers, especially at Feni Drift Sites 980/981 and Rockall Plateau Site 982. Gardar Drift Site 983 and Bjorn Drift Site 984 featured greater concentrations of clay material and ice-rafted debris, diluting carbonate material in some intervals (particularly before ~1.8 Ma at Site 984). Nordic Seas Sites 907 and 985-987 feature generally rare to common and moderately well-preserved planktonic foraminifers only within the past 1 m.y., although Pliocene taxa are sparsely recorded at Site 986 on the Svalbard margin. Planktonic foraminifer datum levels are located to the section level where possible for the subpolar North Atlantic sites. Comparison to an integrated magnetostratigraphy and calcareous nannofossil stratigraphy shows that several datum levels are synchronous to within 5% of their published ages. In particular, the start of the Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sinistral) Acme Zone (1.8 Ma), the first occurrence (FO) of Globorotalia inflata (2.09 Ma), the last occurrence (LO) of Globorotalia cf. crassula (3.3 Ma), and the FO of Globorotalia puncticulata (4.5 Ma) are judged synchronous in eastern sections of the subpolar North Atlantic. The LO of Neogloboquadrina atlantica (sinistral) occurs ~100-200 k.y. later relative to its mid-latitude North Atlantic age (2.41 Ma).
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 10 datasets
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  • 100
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Amigo, Alejandro E (1999): Miocene silicoflagellate stratigraphy: Iceland and Rockall Plateaus. In: Raymo, ME; Jansen, E; Blum, P; Herbert, TD (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 162, 1-19, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.162.001.1999
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: Silicoflagellate assemblages were analyzed for the Miocene intervals recovered during Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 162. The middle and late Miocene are represented in Holes 907B (Iceland Plateau) and 982B (Rockall Plateau) by well-preserved silicoflagellates. A zonal scheme is presented, which improves previous attempts to establish a comprehensive silicoflagellate stratigraphy for this realm, based on an increased resolution given by the analysis of this largest-ever number of samples for the given interval (about three times as many as those studied for ODP Leg 104). The most important change is the replacement of the last appearance of Corbisema triacantha by the first appearance of Bachmannocena circulus apiculata as the top of the upper C. triacantha Zone/bottom of the B. c. apiculata Zone. In addition, two important bioevents (the first appearance of Bachmannocena diodon nodosa and the last appearance of Distephanus crux stradneri) allow the subdivision of the B. c. apiculata Zone into three new subzones: Caryocha spp. Subzone, D. c. stradneri Subzone, and B. d. nodosa Subzone (oldest to youngest, respectively). This zonal scheme is correlated with the standard calcareous nannoplankton zonation and tentatively correlated with the magnetic polarity time scale. A qualitative analysis of the changes in surface-water characteristics is given, based on the variation in abundances of the several silicoflagellate groups. This shows a replacement of silicoflagellates that are adapted to warm surface waters by those adapted to temperate surface waters during the middle Miocene. In turn, the latter are gradually replaced by those adapted to cool surface waters during the late Miocene. The taxonomy of the taxa encountered has been revised in an effort to bring together differing schools. Only one new taxon, Distephanus crux lockerii, is described herein.
    Keywords: Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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