Seafloor spreading magnetic anomaly isochron map compilation for the Weddell Sea and Scotia Sea ...

The deep sea sedimentary record is an archive of the pre-glacial to glacial development of Antarctica and changes in climate, tectonics and ocean circulation. Identification of the pre-glacial, transitional and full glacial components in the sedimentary record is necessary for ice sheet reconstructi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lindeque, Ansa, Martos, Yasmina M, Gohl, Karsten, Maldonado, Andrés
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.1594/pangaea.777453
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.777453
Description
Summary:The deep sea sedimentary record is an archive of the pre-glacial to glacial development of Antarctica and changes in climate, tectonics and ocean circulation. Identification of the pre-glacial, transitional and full glacial components in the sedimentary record is necessary for ice sheet reconstruction and to build circum-Antarctic sediment thickness grids for past topography and bathymetry reconstructions, which constrain paleoclimate models. A ~3300 km long Weddell Sea to Scotia Sea transect consisting of multichannel seismic reflection data from various organisations, were used to interpret new horizons to define the initial basin-wide seismostratigraphy and to identify the pre-glacial to glacial components. We mapped seven main units of which three are in the inferred Cretaceous-Paleocene pre-glacial regime, one in the Eocene-Oligocene transitional regime and three units in the Miocene-Pleistocene full glacial climate regime. Sparse borehole data from ODP leg 113 and SHALDRIL constrain the ages of the ... : We compiled a seafloor spreading magnetic anomaly isochron map for the Weddell Sea and Scotia Sea from published literature to:1. constrain basement ages,2. obtain a spreading age range for each basin that the WS-SS seismic transect crosses and3. to deduct the ages of the oldest sediments that lie on the basement.Magnetic anomaly picks were sourced from authors where available (e.g. König and Jokat, 2006) and imported into GIS ArcMap 10. Published anomaly and isochron maps (e.g. Bohoyo et al., 2002; Maldonado et al., 2007) were georeferenced and the isochrons precisely digitized, to fill the regions where actual magnetic data picks were unavailable.Conflicting opinions exist between studies in the same basin e.g. in the Powell basin between Eagles and Livermore (2002) and Suriñach et al. (1997) due to ambiguous data and allow for alternative age interpretations. In such cases where isochrons of different authors overlapped or disagreed, the most recent publication or data that fitted best with the regional ...