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  • 1
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    Elsevier
    In:  Continental Shelf Research, 11 (8-10). pp. 1155-1179.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: The inner Scotian Shelf off the Eastern Shore of Nova Scotia forms an irregular surface that extends some 25–30 km seaward of the present coastline to water depths of about 100 m where it drops off into Emerald Basin. The distribution of Late Quaternary deposits is highly variable both along and across the shelf. These sediments preserve a record of Late Wisconsinan glaciation, ice recession, and late- and post-glacial changes of relative sea level. Glaciomarine deposits occur in a valley complex extending seaward from Halifax Harbour. East of Halifax, we observe a three-part zonation across the inner shelf. The innermost zone extends to water depths of about 50 m. It is characterized by acoustic basement (Meguma Group metasediments), either outcropping or overlain by acoustically unstratified deposits, interpreted as glacial diamict, and by a unit interpreted as stratified outwash. These units are overlain by stratified valleyfill deposits representing Holocene lacustrine and estuarine facies, which have been sampled in a number of cores. Much of the inner shelf is covered by a thin veneer of sand and gravel, generally less than 1 m thick. Further seaward, the sea floor is an erosional unconformity that truncates acoustic units interpreted as glacial diamict and stratified drift. The stratified estuarine deposits found in the inner zone appear to be absent here, but thin patches of transgressive lag deposits occur throughout the area. The outer part of the inner shelf is dominated by outcrop of acoustic basement, with very limited surficial sediment cover. This zone of rugged outcrop occupies half or more of the inner shelf width over much of the study area. The extensive outcrop is attributed to a combination of glacial and/or glaciofluvial erosion, limited recessional deposition, and reworking of any remaining sediment cover by energetic long-period surface gravity waves under lower postglacial sea levels. Seaward of the outcrop zone, there is a transitional area between the inner shelf and Emerald Basin. This zone is characterized by high relief, with exposures of acoustic basement rising up to 60 m above intervening depressions. The depressions are partially filled by stratified glaciomarine and marine deposits up to 55 m thick. Lateral transitions between stratified and unstratified facies along a morainal ridge in northern Emerald Basin suggest the presence of a partially grounded floating ice margin in this area. Late-glacial relative sea level changes remain poorly defined. Several lines of evidence suggest high relative sea level early in the process of glacial recession from the inner shelf, followed by a rapid drop resulting from glacio-isostatic rebound. Samples of estuarine and salt-marsh deposits collected in cores from the inner part of the inner shelf provide evidence of Holocene marine transgression from below −40 m at 11,000 years BP, continuing to the present.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-03-14
    Description: Helium (RA = 3.0 to 5.6) and carbon (δ13C from −7.2 to −3.4‰) isotopic compositions, and relative CO2, CH4, N2, He and Ar contents of CO2-rich gases from Lakes Nyos and Monoun, Cameroon; Laacher See, Germany; Dieng Volcanic Plateau, Indonesia, and a well at Mt. Gambier, Australia, point to a common, essentially magmatic origin. Absorption of the original magmatic gases into deeply circulating groundwater and equilibration of the resulting solutions with crustal rock at temperatures of about 300°C fix CO2 and CH4 contents. On further rise, the solutions start to boil separating gas-rich vapors which, on encountering an impermeable barrier, may accumulate to form gas pockets with steadily increasing pressures. In the case of sufficiently high gas contents, the pressures may exceed lithostatic pressures leading to a blow-out or a “pneumatic” eruption (Dieng). Otherwise, gas may accumulate to form a stable pocket (Mt. Gambier). Minor leakage from such pockets may lead to surface discharges of CO2-rich gases as at Laacher See, re-absorption into shallow groundwater to the formation of the low-salinity, CO2-charged waters encountered at Lakes Nyos and Monoun. The occurrence of these high-CO2, low-temperature systems is likely to be favored in tectonically active regions, allowing deep, possibly mantle gases to rise, but with sufficiently low regional heat flows to prevent the establishment of large-scale geothermal activity.
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  • 3
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    Elsevier
    In:  Marine Geology, 102 (1-4). pp. 311-361.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-31
    Description: Regional terrane analysis has been combined with a global evaluation of plate kinematics to produce a new tectonic model for the Mesozoic evolution of western North America and its associated marginal seas. The model employs a two-tiered data reliability ranking system to resolve conflicts within data sets. The lower tier of the ranking system involves the assignment of a numerical rank to paleomagnetic and/or paleobiogeographic data based on each data set's reliability. The upper tier of the ranking system places the paleomagnetic and paleobiogeographic data in perspective by assigning a relative order of importance to different types of data. The most reliable data are considered to be “departure” (rift) and “arrival” (collision) times that are tightly constrained by independent data sets. Evidence of subduction and/or strike-slip motion also ranks high in the master ranking system. Paleomagnetic and vertebrate paleobiogeographic data come next in the hierarchy, followed by invertebrate and floral paleobiogeographic data. Application of this approach to a case study, the “Baja British Columbia” controversy, has resulted in a coherent model for the entire region.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-02-22
    Description: Sediments obtained from the NE Thetis Deep during the Sonne cruise SO-29 consist of a manganite-facies and various types of Fe-facies (hematite, magnetite, goethite, and lepidocrocite facies). The sediments have a chemical and mineralogical composition similar to some of the lithological units previously described from the Atlantis II Deep, 160 km to the southeast. In contrast to the Atlantis II Deep, no stable brine pool recently exists in the NE Thetis Deep. However, based on the Fe/Mn fractionation in the Fe-facies types an intermittent brine filling of the NE Thetis Deep has probably existed. We propose that the formation of the brine pools correlate to the volume of discharging fluids. The chronology of hydrothermal deposition in the NE Thetis Deep seems to correlate with similar events in the Atlantis II Deep, suggesting that major tectonic events in the Red Sea may have caused large-scale pulses of hydrothermal activity.
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  • 5
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    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 107 (2). pp. 243-255.
    Publication Date: 2016-11-14
    Description: Iceland straddles the mid-Atlantic spreading axis, between the Kolbeinsey Ridge to the north and the Reykjanes Ridge to the south. Published geochemical data from the Reykjanes Ridge show evidence for mixing between a MORB component and the Iceland plume. Available data from the Kolbeinsey Ridge suggest that similar mixing may not be occurring there. To investigate in detail the relationship between the Iceland plume and MORB along the Kolbeinsey Ridge, we have collected and analysed samples between the Tjo¨rnes and Spar fracture zones (ca. 67°–69°N). The 16 Kolbeinsey Ridge samples show limited isotopic variation and are characterised by relatively unradiogenic Pb (206Pb/204Pb= 17.912 to 18.053, 207Pb/204Pb= 15.404 to 15.453 and 208Pb/204Pb= 37.543 to 37.690, 87Sr/86Sr= 0.70280 to 0.70298, 143Nd/144Nd= 0.51307 to 0.51323). On the basis of their Rb, Sr, Nd, Sm, U, Th and Pb concentrations, the basalts are N-type MORB. Sr and Nd isotope ratios show significant systematic variations with latitude, becoming more enriched (87Sr/86Sr increases, 143Nd/144Nd decreases) towards Iceland, apparently supporting the classical model of plume-asthenosphere mixing. However, the Pb isotopes show no such relationship, and are thus inconsistent with this mixing model. On the basis of Pb and Sr isotope data it is possible to exclude the Iceland source as an end-member in the genesis of the Kolbeinsey Ridge basalts, implying that Iceland plume material does not flow northward along the Kolbeinsey Ridge. The isotopic variations within the Kolbeinsey data set can be attributed to heterogeneities in the MORB source. The boundary between the plume and MORB sources appears to coincide with the Tjo¨rnes Fracture Zone. This fracture zone may, by analogy with the Australia-Antarctic Discordance, overlie a zone of mantle convergence. The topographic anomalies over the Kolbeinsey and Reykjanes Ridges imply that hot, less dense material underlies them both. The absence of an Icelandic plume signature in the Kolbeinsey geochemistry, however, leads us to propose an asymmetrical shape for the plume, generated by a southerly component of flow in the Kolbeinsey MORB source. A similar flow direction has previously been proposed for the whole North Atlantic on the basis of independent mantle mass-balance calculations
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2016-09-28
    Description: A comparative study of the mineralogy and geochemistry of sulfide deposits on mid-ocean ridges in the Northeast Pacific and the Mid-Atlantic reveals common characteristics associated with primary gold enrichment. Average gold contents of 0.8 to 5 ppm Au occur in sulfides from Southern Explorer Ridge and Axial Seamount (Northeast Pacific) and from the TAG hydrothermal field and Snakepit vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge). The enrichment of gold in these deposits is consistently related to a phase of late-stage, low-temperature (〈 300°C) venting. Concentrations 〉 1 ppm Au occur exclusively in pyritic assemblages and commonly with abundant Fe-poor sphalerite and a suite of complex Pb—Sb—As sulfosalts. Amorphous silica and, locally, barite or carbonate are important constituents of the gold-rich precipitates but do not contain gold themselves. High-temperature (350°C) black smoker assemblages, consisting dominantly of pyrite, chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, isocubanite and abundant anhydrite are uniformly gold-poor (≤0.2 ppm Au). To the extent that individual sulfides can be mechanically separated, chemical analyses by neutron activation indicate that gold is most abundant in sphalerite (up to 5.7 ppm Au) but also occurs in pyrite and marcasite. Samples of sphalerite with abundant inclusions of fine-grained sulfosalts locally contain up to 18 ppm Au, suggesting that sulfosalts may be repositories for gold. No free gold has been observed at 4000 × magnification of polished specimens, indicating that the gold is present only as submicroscopic inclusions or as a chemical constituent within the sulfides. Samples from gold-rich deposits in the Northeast Pacific and Mid-Atlantic are compared with similar but relatively gold-poor sulfides from the Galapagos Rift and 13°N on the East Pacific Rise (EPR), and with barren sulfides from 11°N EPR, 21°N EPR, the Endeavour Ridge, and the Southern Juan de Fuca Ridge. Trace element analyses of more than 170 samples show that gold enrichment in almost all of the deposits is associated with high concentrations of Ag, As, Sb, Pb and Zn, and locally with high Cd, Hg, Tl, and Ga. In contrast, gold is typically depleted in samples with high Co, Se, and Mo. The close association of Au with Ag, As, Sb, and Pb may reflect the common behavior of these metals as aqueous sulfur complexes (e.g., [Au(HS)−2]) at low temperatures. Similar mineralogical and geochemical associations are observed in sulfide deposits from modern back-arc settings and in the ancient geologic record.
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  • 7
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    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 107 (3-4). pp. 550-558.
    Publication Date: 2018-01-17
    Description: The dewatering of fine grained sediment piles in accretionary wedges is controlled by zones of active deformation. Episodic hydrofracture in these zones enhances permeability, enabling fluid flow to be faster than the speed of underthrusting. Here I investigate the mechanics of simultaneous shear failure and hydrofracture in muddy rocks as a function of the faulting mode. The physical properties of model rock types are chosen to represent uncemented mud or cherty/marly mudstones that have undergone significant diagenesis. During thrust faulting, hydrofracture always requires pore fluid pressures in excess of the lithostatic load, whereas shallow level wrenching or normal faulting permits hydrofracture at hydrostatic pressures significantly lower than lithostatic load. All three faulting modes are expected to occur in an accretionary wedge attempting to dynamically maintain its critical taper. The model computations indicate that in the upper 80-120 m of a section of "soft'' mudstone hydrofracture inevitably accompanies wrench or normal faulting. "Hard'' mudstones inevitably hydrofracture to depths of up to 1400 m during normal faulting. These differences in mechanical behaviour have profound consequences for fluid venting capabilities of accretionary wedges. They influence hydrocarbon trapping, and play a role in the localisation of mud diapirs and mud volcanism.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2018-03-01
    Description: A closely spaced grid of seismic reflection profiles has permitted a description of the structure of the Vesterisbanken Seamount (Greenland Sea) and the distribution of the surrounding sediments. This isolated seamount is situated at 73°30′N, 9°10′W in the Greenland Basin and rises from the basin floor at a water depth of about 3100 m to ∼ 130 m below sea level; the maximum inclination of its slope is 26°. It is of basaltic origin, and reveals chaotic reflectors on the seismic profiles. No inhomogeneities are visible within the volcanic rocks of Vesterisbanken and the basement complex surrounding it. Dredge samples from the summit of Vesterisbanken reveal an age of ∼ 100,000 years. In the seismic records, there was no sediment cover discernable on top of or on the flanks of the seamount. At the base of Vesterisbanken, the seismic reflection characteristics suggest an alternation of sediments and basaltic rocks, the latter probably being the result of young lava flows. In some places the volcanic rocks disturb the sedimentary sequence to such a high degree, that the stratification is virtually eliminated. Volcanic activity also occurs in the vicinity of the seamount: for example, about 20 km northwest of Vesterisbanken an intrusion has pierced through 1000 m of sediment, almost reaching the seafloor. The sediment thickness is variable and it smooths the irregular basement topography. In addition, the sediment is characterized by local unconformities associated with onlap structures.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: Carbonate deposition at two core sites in the subarctic Pacific (48°N, 133°W; 2.9 km and 3.7 km water depth) follows the standard Pacific carbonate cycles, with glacial values being increased over interglacial values. Benthicδ13C follows the global trend; that is, glacial values are more negative than interglacial values. Comparison with the benthicδ13C record of North Atlantic DSDP Site 552 (56°N, 23°W; 2.3 km water depth) shows the North Pacific records to be nearly in phase with and continuously more negative relative to the North Atlantic record. This suggests that concentrations of∑CO2(org) were permanently higher in the North Pacific than in the North Atlantic during the past 750,000 years conceivably supporting the hypothesis that there was no deep-water forming in the late Pleistocene North Pacific. Whereas one would expect that the North Pacific deep waters were continuously more corrosive to carbonates than deep waters in the North Atlantic, carbonate deposition at the deep North Pacific core sites is enhanced during glacial periods, and occasionally higher than at shallow North Atlantic Site 552 even though Site 552 was probably above lysocline-depth during most of the late Pleistocene. This apparent paradox can be resolved only by invoking an increase in alkalinity in the glacial North Pacific which would have increased the degree of carbonate ion saturation and thereby improved the state of carbonate preservation.
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  • 10
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    Elsevier
    In:  Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 145 (1). pp. 49-63.
    Publication Date: 2014-01-23
    Description: Polysyncraton lacazei (Giard), a colonial tunicate of the western Mediterranean, seems to be well-protected against epibiosis. Out of several thousand potential colonizers estimated, only one kamptozoan species, Loxocalyx sp., is found with some regularity (less-than-or-equal-to 21%) on the colonial surface. The results in this paper suggest the existence of overlapping mechanical, chemical and extrinsic adaptations with a good antifouling potential.
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  • 11
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    Elsevier
    In:  Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 106 (1-4). pp. 44-63.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: We report the Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic compositions (1) of 66 lava flows and dikes spanning the circa 15 Myr subaerial volcanic history of Gran Canaria and (2) of five Miocene through Cretaceous sediment samples from DSDP site 397, located 100 km south of Gran Canaria. The isotope ratios of the Gran Canaria samples vary for 87Sr/86Sr: 0.70302–0.70346, for 143Nd/144Nd: 0.51275–0.51298, and for 206Pb/204Pb: 18.76–20.01. The Miocene and the Pliocene-Recent volcanics form distinct trends on isotope correlation diagrams. The most SiO2-undersaturated volcanics from each group have the least radiogenic Sr and most radiogenic Pb, whereas evolved volcanics from each group have the most radiogenic Sr and least radiogenic Pb. In the Pliocene-Recent group, the most undersaturated basalts also have the most radiogenic Nd, and the evolved volcanics have the least radiogenic Nd. The most SiO2-saturated basalts have intermediate compositions within each age group. Although the two age groups have overlapping Sr and Nd isotope ratios, the Pliocene-Recent volcanics have less radiogenic Pb than the Miocene volcanics. At least four components are required to explain the isotope systematics of Gran Canaria by mixing. There is no evidence for crustal contamination in any of the volcanics. The most undersaturated Miocene volcanics fall within the field for the two youngest and westernmost Canary Islands in all isotope correlation diagrams and thus appear to have the most plume-like (high 238U/204Pb) HIMU-like composition. During the Pliocene-Recent epochs, the plume was located to the west of Gran Canaria. The isotopic composition of the most undersaturated Pliocene-Recent volcanics may reflect entrainment of asthenospheric material (with a depleted mantle (DM)-like composition), as plume material was transported through the upper asthenosphere to the base of the lithosphere beneath Gran Canaria. The shift in isotopic composition with increasing SiO2-saturation in the basalts and degree of differentiation for all volcanics is interpreted to reflect assimilation of enriched mantle (EM1 and EM2) (cf. [1]) in the lithosphere beneath Gran Canaria. This enriched mantle may have been derived from the continental lithospheric mantle beneath the West African Craton by thermal erosion or delamination during rifting of Pangaea. This study suggests that the enriched mantle components (EM1 and EM2) may be stored in the shallow mantle, whereas the HIMU component may have a deeper origin.
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: During cruise ARK IV/3 with RV Polarstern (1987) volcanic rocks were recovered from the Nansen-Gakkel Ridge (NGR), a slow spreading (half rate approximately 0.5 cm) ridge with an axial depth of more than 5000 m. The NGR is one of the slowest and deepest mid-ocean ridges so far known and calculations based on the distance of sampling location from the axial valley yielded ages of approximately 600 ka for the rocks investigated here. According to petrographic and geochemical results i.e. spinifex textures, mg 〉 70 and MgO 〉 9 wt.%, the volcanics are termed komatiitic basalts. Dark spherical droplets of basanitic composition within the komatiitic basalts are believed to be relicts of an incomplete magma-mixing whose basanitic end-member could well account for the enriched character of the NGR basalts in terms of rare earth elements, Ti and incompatible trace elements. Based on Nd-isotope as well as high Sm/Nd ratios, mantle metasomatism (i.e. veined-mantle model) could be responsible for the enrichment of incompatible trace elements in the source region of komatiitic basalts of the NGR.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2019-05-08
    Description: Crustal xenoliths in three Cenozoic volcanic fields of West Germany, the Northern Hessian Depression (NHD), the Eifel and the Urach/Hegau, include medium to high-grade meta sedimentary and felsic to mafic meta-igneous rocks. Also present in all three suites are pyroxenites and hornblendites. For each volcanic field, a model crustal profile is proposed based on calculated or measured P-wave velocities of xenoliths and depth-Vp relationships (EGT Central Segment and Rhenish Massif traverses). The xenolith lithologies from the NHD and the Eifel show some similarities. The middle crust between the depths of about 10 and 25 km consists mainly of meta-sediments, felsic gneisses and granulites. Meta-sedimentary rock types are particularly abundant in the Eifel at depths of between about 5 and 15 km but are less common within the NHD xenolith collection. The felsic gneisses range from meta-granites to meta-tonalites (I-and S-type). Eifel meta-sediments range from meta-pelites to meta-greywackes and meta-quartzites. The NHD xenolith suite contains a few highly depleted granulite-facies meta-sedimentary fragments. At depths between 24 and 26 km, the increase in Vp from about 6.8 to 〉 8 km s−1 (28–34 km) is correlated with the presence of mafic granulites intercalated with eclogites, pyroxenites and hornblendites. Beneath North Hessia, the granulite layer problably grades into a composite eclogite-peridotite layer at the lower part of this transition zone. The crust beneath the Urach/Hegau consists largely of meta-sediments with subordinate felsic meta-igneous rocks. Most of the meta-sedimentary samples seem to be depleted in felsic components, suggesting intra-crustal differentiation by partial melting. The Urach crust contains lithologies which are similar to the outcropping Moldanubian-type para-gneisses of the Black Forest. Mafic and ultramafic xenoliths from the Urach/Hegau differ in their mineralogy and chemical composition from the Eifel and NHD mafic granulites. They represent meta-cumulates derived from alkaline magmas which intruded the base of the crust and underwent deformation and recrystallization. Petrographic and chemical differences between Urach/Hegau and Eifel/NHD are believed to reflect the contrasting styles of crustal evolution in the Rhenohercynian and the Moldanubian belts of the Variscan orogen.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2019-07-01
    Description: The flux of reactive organic carbon (C(org)) into sediments of the southern and eastern Weddell Sea was estimated by modelling measured oxygen and nitrate pore-water profiles. Highest flux of reactive organic carbon into the sediment was calculated for the shelf region (500 and 600 mmol C m-2 year-1), whereas for pelagic and continental slope sediments C(org) fluxes of less than 60 mmol C m-2 year-1 and 100-200 mmol C m-2 year-1 respectively were calculated. The oxygen penetration depth (OPD) ranged from less than 2 cm in shelf sediments to much greater than 40 cm in pelagic sediments. For the first time, sediments covered by the Filchner Ice Shelf (probably cut off from a source of primary production for a few decades) were sampled. In this area a restricted vertical flux of reactive organic carbon was expected. However, the C(org), content of these sediments was as high as that of Antarctic shelf sediments, which suggests lateral transport of organic matter. In contrast, pore-water profiles and calculated reactive organic carbon fluxes off Filchner Ice Shelf are similar to those of much deeper depositional environments (3000-4000 m water depth).
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  • 15
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    Elsevier
    In:  Tectonophysics, 191 . pp. 27-53.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: An improved tectonic database for the South Atlantic has been compiled by combining magnetic anomaly, Geosat altimetry and onshore geologic data. We used this database to obtain a revised plate-kinematic model. Starting with a new fit-reconstruction for the continents around the South Atlantic, we present a high-resolution isochron map from Chron M4 to present. Fit reconstructions of South America and Africa that require rigid continental plates result in substantial misfits either in the southern South Atlantic or in the equatorial Atlantic. To achieve a fit without gaps, we assume a combination of complex rift and strike-slip movements: (1) along the South American Parana-Chacos Basin deformation zone (2) within marginal basins in South America (Salado, Colorado Basin) and (3) along the Benue Trough/Niger Rift system in Africa. These faults are presumed to have been active before or during the breakup of the continents. Our model describes a successive “unzipping” of rift zones starting in the southern South Atlantic. Between 150 Ma (Tithonian) and approximately 130 Ma (Hauterivian), rifting propagated to 38 °S, causing tectonic movements within the Colorado and Salado basins. Subsequently, between 130 Ma and Chron M4 (126.5 Ma), the tip of the South Atlantic rift moved to 28 °S, resulting in intracontinental deformation along the Parana-Chacos Basin deformation zone. Between Chron M4 and Chron MO (118.7 Ma) rifting propagated into the Benue Trough and Niger Rift, inducing rift and strike-slip motion. After Chron MO, the equatorial Atlantic began to open, while rifting and strike-slip motion still occurred in the Benue Trough and Niger Rift. Since Chron 34 (84 Ma), the opening of the South Atlantic is characterized by simple divergence of two rigid continental plates.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: In order to characterize the sediments of the South Kolbeinsey Ridge and to determine the influence of morpho- and hydrodynamic conditions in this area, a comprehensive sedimentological investigation was combined with detailed geochemical analyses. Lithological composition and grain size are mainly controlled by the input from two different sources: the submarine, active mid-ocean ridge and Iceland. Coarse-grained volcanic material dominates in the ridge area, whereas fine-grained detritus from Iceland characterizes the adjacent basin. Further, the distribution of these sediments is largely influenced by hydrodynamic conditions and redeposition processes. Strong bottom-water currents indicated by the benthic foraminifer species Cibicides lobatulus prevent extensive deposition of fine-grained material on the top of the ridge. The ridge slope is characterized by redeposited sediments of various grain sizes. Bulk-sediment chemical analyses show element distribution patterns that are strongly correlated with the ratio of volcanic vs. detritic particle composition. This ratio reflects particle input and distribution processes. Two element associations are notable: elements coupled with (1) ridge-derived volcanic particles and (2) the detrital 〈2 μm fraction which reflects weathered material from Iceland.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2020-07-29
    Description: The oxygen isotopic composition of bulk chalk samples, the planktonic foraminifers Globotruncana and Rugoglobigerina, and the benthic bivalve Inoceramus are reported from the standard section of the Upper Cretaceous white chalk of Lägerdorf-Kronsmoor, NW Germany (Middle Coniacian to Lower Maastrichtian). The section shows the increasing impact of burial diagenesis with depth expressed by a significant negative trend in the oxygen isotopic values and increasing amounts of secondary, precipitated microspar. However, the biogenic components studied show different diagenetic characteristics. The planktonic foraminifers are completely recrystallized, whereas the prisms of Inoceramus are well preserved and only slightly overgrown by negligible amounts of secondary calcite. The original oxygen isotopic composition of the chalk is estimated on the basis of numerical elimination of the diagenetic trend and by use of a normalized carbonate content. It appears that the corrected isotopic signal of the bulk sediment, which primarily consisted of calcareous nannoplankton, significantly correlates with the isotopic composition of the Inoceramus prisms. Thus, the benthic bivalve Inoceramus and the nannoplankton probably lived in a water mass of the same isotopic composition. The Inoceramus oxygen isotope values suggest a mean temperature of approximately 16°C for the NW European Basin during the late Campanian and early Maastrichtian.
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  • 18
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    Elsevier
    In:  Progress in Oceanography, 26 (1). pp. 1-73.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-02
    Description: In this paper we present a literature survey of the South Atlantic's climate and its oceanic upper-layer circulation and meridional heat transport. The opening section deals with climate and is focused upon those elements having greatest oceanic relevance, i.e., distributions of atmospheric sea level pressure, the wind fields they produce, and the net surface energy fluxes. The various geostrophic currents comprising the upper-level general circulation are then reviewed in a manner organized around the subtropical gyre, beginning off southern Africa with the Agulhas Current Retroflection and then progressing to the Benguela Current, the equatorial current system and circulation in the Angola Basin, the large-scale variability and interannual warmings at low latitudes, the Brazil Current, the South Atlantic Current, and finally to the Antarctic Circumpolar Current system in which the Falkland (Malvinas) Current is included. A summary of estimates of the meridional heat transport at various latitudes in the South Atlantic ends of the survey
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