(Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14

Palmer Deep is a series of three glacially overdeepened basins on the Antarctic Peninsula shelf, ~20 km southwest of Anvers Island. Site 1098 (64°51.72'S, 64°12.48'W) was drilled in the shallowest basin, Basin I, at 1012 m water depth. The sediment recovered was primarily laminated, silice...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Weinheimer, Amy L
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.142770
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.142770
id ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.142770
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic DEPTH, sediment/rock
Sample code/label
Abundance
Radiolarian preservation
Plectacantha oikiskos
Phormacantha hystrix
Lithomelissa setosa
Antarctissa strelkovi
Antarctissa denticulata
Lithomelissa sp.
Spongodiscid sp.
Rhizoplegma boreale
Dictyophimus gracilipes
Helotholus histricosa
Phormostichoartus corbula
Cromyechinus antarctica
Phorticium clevei
Larcopyle buetschlii
Peridium spinipes
Spongopyle osculosa
Spyrid group
Saccospyris antarctica
Spongotrochus glacialis group
Cycladophora bicornis
Stylodictya multispina
Sethoconus tabulatus
Lithelius nautiloides
Botryostrobus auritus/australis group
Spongurus pylomaticus
Spongurus sp.
Siphocampe arachnea group
Arachnocorallium calvata
Spongotrochus sp.
Lithelius minor
Druppatractis irregularis
Acanthosphaera corlocae
Actinomma spp.
Cycladophora davisiana
Actinomma sp.
Plectacantha sp.
Theocalyptra bicornis
Triceraspyris antarctica
Porodiscus sp.
Octopyle stenozona
Eucyrtidium hexastichum
Lithomelissa thoracites
Eucyrtidium cf. teuscheri
Euceryphalus histricosus
Dictyophimus sp.
Lithelius sp.
Amphiplecta sp.
Cycladophora sp.
Stylochlamydium astericus
Antarctissa brevispina
Tetrapyle octacantha
Cyrtopera laguncula
Total counts
Drilling/drill rig
DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation
Counting >45 µm fraction
Leg178
Joides Resolution
Ocean Drilling Program ODP
spellingShingle DEPTH, sediment/rock
Sample code/label
Abundance
Radiolarian preservation
Plectacantha oikiskos
Phormacantha hystrix
Lithomelissa setosa
Antarctissa strelkovi
Antarctissa denticulata
Lithomelissa sp.
Spongodiscid sp.
Rhizoplegma boreale
Dictyophimus gracilipes
Helotholus histricosa
Phormostichoartus corbula
Cromyechinus antarctica
Phorticium clevei
Larcopyle buetschlii
Peridium spinipes
Spongopyle osculosa
Spyrid group
Saccospyris antarctica
Spongotrochus glacialis group
Cycladophora bicornis
Stylodictya multispina
Sethoconus tabulatus
Lithelius nautiloides
Botryostrobus auritus/australis group
Spongurus pylomaticus
Spongurus sp.
Siphocampe arachnea group
Arachnocorallium calvata
Spongotrochus sp.
Lithelius minor
Druppatractis irregularis
Acanthosphaera corlocae
Actinomma spp.
Cycladophora davisiana
Actinomma sp.
Plectacantha sp.
Theocalyptra bicornis
Triceraspyris antarctica
Porodiscus sp.
Octopyle stenozona
Eucyrtidium hexastichum
Lithomelissa thoracites
Eucyrtidium cf. teuscheri
Euceryphalus histricosus
Dictyophimus sp.
Lithelius sp.
Amphiplecta sp.
Cycladophora sp.
Stylochlamydium astericus
Antarctissa brevispina
Tetrapyle octacantha
Cyrtopera laguncula
Total counts
Drilling/drill rig
DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation
Counting >45 µm fraction
Leg178
Joides Resolution
Ocean Drilling Program ODP
Weinheimer, Amy L
(Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14
topic_facet DEPTH, sediment/rock
Sample code/label
Abundance
Radiolarian preservation
Plectacantha oikiskos
Phormacantha hystrix
Lithomelissa setosa
Antarctissa strelkovi
Antarctissa denticulata
Lithomelissa sp.
Spongodiscid sp.
Rhizoplegma boreale
Dictyophimus gracilipes
Helotholus histricosa
Phormostichoartus corbula
Cromyechinus antarctica
Phorticium clevei
Larcopyle buetschlii
Peridium spinipes
Spongopyle osculosa
Spyrid group
Saccospyris antarctica
Spongotrochus glacialis group
Cycladophora bicornis
Stylodictya multispina
Sethoconus tabulatus
Lithelius nautiloides
Botryostrobus auritus/australis group
Spongurus pylomaticus
Spongurus sp.
Siphocampe arachnea group
Arachnocorallium calvata
Spongotrochus sp.
Lithelius minor
Druppatractis irregularis
Acanthosphaera corlocae
Actinomma spp.
Cycladophora davisiana
Actinomma sp.
Plectacantha sp.
Theocalyptra bicornis
Triceraspyris antarctica
Porodiscus sp.
Octopyle stenozona
Eucyrtidium hexastichum
Lithomelissa thoracites
Eucyrtidium cf. teuscheri
Euceryphalus histricosus
Dictyophimus sp.
Lithelius sp.
Amphiplecta sp.
Cycladophora sp.
Stylochlamydium astericus
Antarctissa brevispina
Tetrapyle octacantha
Cyrtopera laguncula
Total counts
Drilling/drill rig
DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation
Counting >45 µm fraction
Leg178
Joides Resolution
Ocean Drilling Program ODP
description Palmer Deep is a series of three glacially overdeepened basins on the Antarctic Peninsula shelf, ~20 km southwest of Anvers Island. Site 1098 (64°51.72'S, 64°12.48'W) was drilled in the shallowest basin, Basin I, at 1012 m water depth. The sediment recovered was primarily laminated, siliceous, biogenic, pelagic muds alternating with siliciclastic hemipelagic sediments (Barker, Camerlenghi, Acton, et al., 1999). Sedimentation rates of 0.1725 cm/yr in the upper 25 m and 0.7-0.80 cm/yr in the lower 25 m of the core have been estimated from 14C (Domack et al., 2001). The oldest datable sediments have an age of ~13 ka and were underlain by diamicton sediments of the last glacial maximum (Domack et al., 2001).The large-scale water-mass distribution and circulation in the vicinity of Palmer Deep is dominated by Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) below 200 m (Hofmann et al., 1996). Palmer Deep is too far from the coast to be influenced by glacial meltwater and cold-tongue generation associated with it (Domack and Williams, 1990; Dixon and Domack, 1991). Circulation patterns in the Palmer Deep area are not well understood, but evidence suggests southward flow across Palmer Deep from Anvers Island to Renaud Island (Kock and Stein, 1978). The water south of Anvers Island is nearly open with loose pack ice from February through May. The area is covered with sea ice beginning in June (Gloersen et al., 1992; Leventer et al., 1996).Micropaleontologic data from the work of Leventer et al. (1996) on a 9-m piston core has revealed circulation and climate patterns for the past 3700 yr in the Palmer Deep. The benthic foraminifer assemblage is dominated by two taxa, Bulimina aculeata and Bolivina pseudopunctata, which are inversely related. High relative abundances of B. aculeata occur cyclically over a period of ~230 yr. The assemblage associated with high abundance of B. aculeata in Palmer Deep resembles that from the Bellingshausen shelf, which is associated with CDW. In addition to the faunal evidence, hydrographic data indicate incursions of CDW into Palmer Deep (Leventer et al., 1996). A distinctive diatom assemblage dominated by a single genus was associated with peaks in B. aculeata, whereas a few different assemblages were associated with lows in B. aculeata. Leventer et al. (1996) interpreted the variability in diatom assemblages as an indication of changes in productivity associated with changes in water column stability.Abelmann and Gowing (1997) studied the horizontal and vertical distributions of radiolarians in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. They show that the spatial distribution of radiolarian assemblages reflects hydrographic boundaries. In a transect from the subtropical Atlantic to polar Antarctic zones, radiolarians in the upper 1000 m of the water column occurred in distinct surface and deep-living assemblages related to water depth, temperature, salinity, and nutrient content. Living assemblages resembled those preserved in underlying surface sediments (Abelmann and Gowing, 1997).Circumantarctic coastal sediments from neritic environments contained a distinctive assemblage dominated by the Phormacantha hystrix/Plectacantha oikiskos group and Rhizoplegma boreale (Nishimura et al., 1997). Low diversity and species compositions distinguished the coastal sediments from the typical pelagic Antarctic assemblages. Factors that controlled the assemblages were water depth, proximity to the coast, occurrence of sea ice, and steepness of topography, rather than temperature and salinity. Nishimura et al. (1997) found a gradient of sorts from deep-water sites containing diverse assemblages typical of pelagic environments to coastal sites with low diversity assemblages dominated by P. hystrix/P. oikiskos group and R. boreale. In general, sites between these two extremes had increased proportions of the coastal assemblage with decreasing water depth (Nishimura et al., 1997). At a site near Hole 1098 (GC905), they showed that the relative abundance of the coastal assemblage increased downcore (Nishimura et al., 1997). The purpose of the research presented here was to make a cursory investigation into the radiolarian assemblages as possible paleoenvironmental indicators.
format Dataset
author Weinheimer, Amy L
author_facet Weinheimer, Amy L
author_sort Weinheimer, Amy L
title (Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14
title_short (Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14
title_full (Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14
title_fullStr (Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14
title_full_unstemmed (Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14
title_sort (table t1) abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of odp hole 178-1098b, supplement to: weinheimer, amy l (2002): data report: radiolarians in sediments from palmer deep, antarctica, leg 178, site 1098. in: barker, pf; camerlenghi, a; acton, gd; ramsay, ats (eds.) proceedings of the ocean drilling program, scientific results, college station, tx (ocean drilling program), 178, 1-14
publisher PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science
publishDate 2002
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.142770
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.142770
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.500,-63.500,-64.600,-64.600)
ENVELOPE(-67.950,-67.950,-65.700,-65.700)
ENVELOPE(-63.500,-63.500,-64.600,-64.600)
ENVELOPE(-44.733,-44.733,-60.733,-60.733)
ENVELOPE(-64.400,-64.400,-64.950,-64.950)
ENVELOPE(160.600,160.600,-82.667,-82.667)
ENVELOPE(-66.000,-66.000,-66.167,-66.167)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Anvers
Renaud
Anvers Island
Ramsay
Palmer Deep
Hofmann
Renaud Island
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Anvers
Renaud
Anvers Island
Ramsay
Palmer Deep
Hofmann
Renaud Island
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Anvers Island
Renaud Island
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Anvers Island
Renaud Island
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.178.221.2002
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
cc-by-3.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.142770
https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.178.221.2002
_version_ 1766143065588760576
spelling ftdatacite:10.1594/pangaea.142770 2023-05-15T13:40:55+02:00 (Table T1) Abundance of radiolarian skeletons in scrape samples of ODP Hole 178-1098B, supplement to: Weinheimer, Amy L (2002): Data report: Radiolarians in sediments from Palmer Deep, Antarctica, Leg 178, Site 1098. In: Barker, PF; Camerlenghi, A; Acton, GD; Ramsay, ATS (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 178, 1-14 Weinheimer, Amy L 2002 text/tab-separated-values https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.142770 https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.142770 en eng PANGAEA - Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science https://dx.doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.178.221.2002 Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode cc-by-3.0 CC-BY DEPTH, sediment/rock Sample code/label Abundance Radiolarian preservation Plectacantha oikiskos Phormacantha hystrix Lithomelissa setosa Antarctissa strelkovi Antarctissa denticulata Lithomelissa sp. Spongodiscid sp. Rhizoplegma boreale Dictyophimus gracilipes Helotholus histricosa Phormostichoartus corbula Cromyechinus antarctica Phorticium clevei Larcopyle buetschlii Peridium spinipes Spongopyle osculosa Spyrid group Saccospyris antarctica Spongotrochus glacialis group Cycladophora bicornis Stylodictya multispina Sethoconus tabulatus Lithelius nautiloides Botryostrobus auritus/australis group Spongurus pylomaticus Spongurus sp. Siphocampe arachnea group Arachnocorallium calvata Spongotrochus sp. Lithelius minor Druppatractis irregularis Acanthosphaera corlocae Actinomma spp. Cycladophora davisiana Actinomma sp. Plectacantha sp. Theocalyptra bicornis Triceraspyris antarctica Porodiscus sp. Octopyle stenozona Eucyrtidium hexastichum Lithomelissa thoracites Eucyrtidium cf. teuscheri Euceryphalus histricosus Dictyophimus sp. Lithelius sp. Amphiplecta sp. Cycladophora sp. Stylochlamydium astericus Antarctissa brevispina Tetrapyle octacantha Cyrtopera laguncula Total counts Drilling/drill rig DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation Counting >45 µm fraction Leg178 Joides Resolution Ocean Drilling Program ODP Supplementary Dataset dataset Dataset 2002 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.142770 https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.178.221.2002 2022-02-08T16:24:46Z Palmer Deep is a series of three glacially overdeepened basins on the Antarctic Peninsula shelf, ~20 km southwest of Anvers Island. Site 1098 (64°51.72'S, 64°12.48'W) was drilled in the shallowest basin, Basin I, at 1012 m water depth. The sediment recovered was primarily laminated, siliceous, biogenic, pelagic muds alternating with siliciclastic hemipelagic sediments (Barker, Camerlenghi, Acton, et al., 1999). Sedimentation rates of 0.1725 cm/yr in the upper 25 m and 0.7-0.80 cm/yr in the lower 25 m of the core have been estimated from 14C (Domack et al., 2001). The oldest datable sediments have an age of ~13 ka and were underlain by diamicton sediments of the last glacial maximum (Domack et al., 2001).The large-scale water-mass distribution and circulation in the vicinity of Palmer Deep is dominated by Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) below 200 m (Hofmann et al., 1996). Palmer Deep is too far from the coast to be influenced by glacial meltwater and cold-tongue generation associated with it (Domack and Williams, 1990; Dixon and Domack, 1991). Circulation patterns in the Palmer Deep area are not well understood, but evidence suggests southward flow across Palmer Deep from Anvers Island to Renaud Island (Kock and Stein, 1978). The water south of Anvers Island is nearly open with loose pack ice from February through May. The area is covered with sea ice beginning in June (Gloersen et al., 1992; Leventer et al., 1996).Micropaleontologic data from the work of Leventer et al. (1996) on a 9-m piston core has revealed circulation and climate patterns for the past 3700 yr in the Palmer Deep. The benthic foraminifer assemblage is dominated by two taxa, Bulimina aculeata and Bolivina pseudopunctata, which are inversely related. High relative abundances of B. aculeata occur cyclically over a period of ~230 yr. The assemblage associated with high abundance of B. aculeata in Palmer Deep resembles that from the Bellingshausen shelf, which is associated with CDW. In addition to the faunal evidence, hydrographic data indicate incursions of CDW into Palmer Deep (Leventer et al., 1996). A distinctive diatom assemblage dominated by a single genus was associated with peaks in B. aculeata, whereas a few different assemblages were associated with lows in B. aculeata. Leventer et al. (1996) interpreted the variability in diatom assemblages as an indication of changes in productivity associated with changes in water column stability.Abelmann and Gowing (1997) studied the horizontal and vertical distributions of radiolarians in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. They show that the spatial distribution of radiolarian assemblages reflects hydrographic boundaries. In a transect from the subtropical Atlantic to polar Antarctic zones, radiolarians in the upper 1000 m of the water column occurred in distinct surface and deep-living assemblages related to water depth, temperature, salinity, and nutrient content. Living assemblages resembled those preserved in underlying surface sediments (Abelmann and Gowing, 1997).Circumantarctic coastal sediments from neritic environments contained a distinctive assemblage dominated by the Phormacantha hystrix/Plectacantha oikiskos group and Rhizoplegma boreale (Nishimura et al., 1997). Low diversity and species compositions distinguished the coastal sediments from the typical pelagic Antarctic assemblages. Factors that controlled the assemblages were water depth, proximity to the coast, occurrence of sea ice, and steepness of topography, rather than temperature and salinity. Nishimura et al. (1997) found a gradient of sorts from deep-water sites containing diverse assemblages typical of pelagic environments to coastal sites with low diversity assemblages dominated by P. hystrix/P. oikiskos group and R. boreale. In general, sites between these two extremes had increased proportions of the coastal assemblage with decreasing water depth (Nishimura et al., 1997). At a site near Hole 1098 (GC905), they showed that the relative abundance of the coastal assemblage increased downcore (Nishimura et al., 1997). The purpose of the research presented here was to make a cursory investigation into the radiolarian assemblages as possible paleoenvironmental indicators. Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica Anvers Island Renaud Island Sea ice Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Anvers ENVELOPE(-63.500,-63.500,-64.600,-64.600) Renaud ENVELOPE(-67.950,-67.950,-65.700,-65.700) Anvers Island ENVELOPE(-63.500,-63.500,-64.600,-64.600) Ramsay ENVELOPE(-44.733,-44.733,-60.733,-60.733) Palmer Deep ENVELOPE(-64.400,-64.400,-64.950,-64.950) Hofmann ENVELOPE(160.600,160.600,-82.667,-82.667) Renaud Island ENVELOPE(-66.000,-66.000,-66.167,-66.167)