Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada

In the North Atlantic Ocean, contour-following deep currents have created regional erosional unconformities and deposited contourite drifts that exceed 2 km in thickness and extend for 100 s of km. The stratigraphic records in the drifts have been used to reconstruct variations in North Atlantic dee...

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Published in:Marine Geology
Main Authors: Boyle, Patrick R., Romans, Brian W., Tucholke, Brian E., Norris, Richard D., Swift, Stephen A., Sexton, Philip F.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/1/Boyle%20etal%202017.pdf
https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/8/cenozoic%29_1-s2.0-S002532271630161X-main.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2016.12.014
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:48441 2023-06-11T04:14:09+02:00 Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada Boyle, Patrick R. Romans, Brian W. Tucholke, Brian E. Norris, Richard D. Swift, Stephen A. Sexton, Philip F. 2017-03-01 application/pdf https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/ https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/1/Boyle%20etal%202017.pdf https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/8/cenozoic%29_1-s2.0-S002532271630161X-main.pdf https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2016.12.014 unknown https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/1/Boyle%20etal%202017.pdf https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/8/cenozoic%29_1-s2.0-S002532271630161X-main.pdf Boyle, Patrick R.; Romans, Brian W.; Tucholke, Brian E.; Norris, Richard D.; Swift, Stephen A. and Sexton, Philip F. <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/pfs67.html> (2017). Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada. Marine Geology, 385 pp. 185–203. Journal Item Public PeerReviewed 2017 ftopenunivgb https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2016.12.014 2023-05-28T05:54:54Z In the North Atlantic Ocean, contour-following deep currents have created regional erosional unconformities and deposited contourite drifts that exceed 2 km in thickness and extend for 100 s of km. The stratigraphic records in the drifts have been used to reconstruct variations in North Atlantic deep-water circulation throughout the Cenozoic; however, uncertainties remain about certain aspects of the timing, intensity, depth distribution, and region- al impact of these currents. Here, we use an integrated dataset of seismic-reflection profiles and IODP core data (lithology, biostratigraphy, and magnetostratigraphy) to document sedimentation history and the development of current effects in the Cretaceous to present sedimentary record on the J-Anomaly Ridge and Southeast Newfoundland Ridge, offshore Newfoundland, Canada. The Newfoundland ridges are in a key location, lying between well-studied areas in the northern and western North Atlantic and under the path of both the modern Deep Western Boundary Current and the Gulf Stream. Late Cretaceous through Early Eocene sedimentation on the ridges was dominated by biogenic pelagic sedimentation, but at ~47 Ma, near the Early-Middle Eocene boundary, well developed contourite drifts began to accrete in paleo-water depths of ~4000–4500 m, accompanied by an order-of-magnitude increase in terrigenous sediment mass accumulation rates. From this time forward, drift deposition, interrupted by brief episodes of erosion, continued unabated. This timing for the onset of persistent deep currents is coincident with reorganization of Atlantic circulation inferred from a change from biosiliceous to non-biosiliceous sedimentation in the western North Atlantic (Horizon A C ) and with the current-eroded Intra-Eocene Unconformity (IEU) in the northern North Atlantic. A change in sedimentation style occurred within the Middle Eocene to upper Oligocene drift sequence, and it likely was related to a shift to deeper, more intense currents that eroded the widespread Horizon A U along the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland North Atlantic Deep Water North Atlantic The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Canada Marine Geology 385 185 203
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description In the North Atlantic Ocean, contour-following deep currents have created regional erosional unconformities and deposited contourite drifts that exceed 2 km in thickness and extend for 100 s of km. The stratigraphic records in the drifts have been used to reconstruct variations in North Atlantic deep-water circulation throughout the Cenozoic; however, uncertainties remain about certain aspects of the timing, intensity, depth distribution, and region- al impact of these currents. Here, we use an integrated dataset of seismic-reflection profiles and IODP core data (lithology, biostratigraphy, and magnetostratigraphy) to document sedimentation history and the development of current effects in the Cretaceous to present sedimentary record on the J-Anomaly Ridge and Southeast Newfoundland Ridge, offshore Newfoundland, Canada. The Newfoundland ridges are in a key location, lying between well-studied areas in the northern and western North Atlantic and under the path of both the modern Deep Western Boundary Current and the Gulf Stream. Late Cretaceous through Early Eocene sedimentation on the ridges was dominated by biogenic pelagic sedimentation, but at ~47 Ma, near the Early-Middle Eocene boundary, well developed contourite drifts began to accrete in paleo-water depths of ~4000–4500 m, accompanied by an order-of-magnitude increase in terrigenous sediment mass accumulation rates. From this time forward, drift deposition, interrupted by brief episodes of erosion, continued unabated. This timing for the onset of persistent deep currents is coincident with reorganization of Atlantic circulation inferred from a change from biosiliceous to non-biosiliceous sedimentation in the western North Atlantic (Horizon A C ) and with the current-eroded Intra-Eocene Unconformity (IEU) in the northern North Atlantic. A change in sedimentation style occurred within the Middle Eocene to upper Oligocene drift sequence, and it likely was related to a shift to deeper, more intense currents that eroded the widespread Horizon A U along the ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Boyle, Patrick R.
Romans, Brian W.
Tucholke, Brian E.
Norris, Richard D.
Swift, Stephen A.
Sexton, Philip F.
spellingShingle Boyle, Patrick R.
Romans, Brian W.
Tucholke, Brian E.
Norris, Richard D.
Swift, Stephen A.
Sexton, Philip F.
Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada
author_facet Boyle, Patrick R.
Romans, Brian W.
Tucholke, Brian E.
Norris, Richard D.
Swift, Stephen A.
Sexton, Philip F.
author_sort Boyle, Patrick R.
title Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada
title_short Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada
title_full Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada
title_fullStr Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada
title_sort cenozoic north atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore newfoundland, canada
publishDate 2017
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/
https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/1/Boyle%20etal%202017.pdf
https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/8/cenozoic%29_1-s2.0-S002532271630161X-main.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2016.12.014
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic
genre_facet Newfoundland
North Atlantic Deep Water
North Atlantic
op_relation https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/1/Boyle%20etal%202017.pdf
https://oro.open.ac.uk/48441/8/cenozoic%29_1-s2.0-S002532271630161X-main.pdf
Boyle, Patrick R.; Romans, Brian W.; Tucholke, Brian E.; Norris, Richard D.; Swift, Stephen A. and Sexton, Philip F. <http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/pfs67.html> (2017). Cenozoic North Atlantic deep circulation history recorded in contourite drifts, offshore Newfoundland, Canada. Marine Geology, 385 pp. 185–203.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2016.12.014
container_title Marine Geology
container_volume 385
container_start_page 185
op_container_end_page 203
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