The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)

ODP Leg 199 drilled a latitudinal transect of sites across the position of the early Eocene equator, designed to study the evolution of the equatorial Pacific current and wind system as the Earth went from maximum Cenozoic warmth to initial Antarctic glaciations. The cruise recovered a biogenic sedi...

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Main Authors: Lyle, M., Wilson, P.A., Janecek, T.R., Backman, J., Busch, W.H., Coxall, H.K., Faul, K., Gaillot, P., Hovan, S.A., Knoop, P., Kruse, S., Lanci, L., Lear, C.H., Moore, T.C. Jnr., Nigrini, C.A., Nishi, H., Nomura, R., Norris, R.D., Pälike, H., Parés, J.M., Quintin, L., Raffi, I., Rea, B.R., Rea, D.K., Steiger, T.H., Tripati, A.K., Vanden Berg, M.D., Wade, B.S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/
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http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/SFgate/SFgate?&listenv=table&multiple=1&range=1&directget=1&application=fm02&database=%2Fdata%2Fepubs%2Fwais%2Findexes%2Ffm02%2Ffm02&maxhits=200&=%22PP21D-05%22
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:41879 2024-02-11T09:57:34+01:00 The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002) Lyle, M. Wilson, P.A. Janecek, T.R. Backman, J. Busch, W.H. Coxall, H.K. Faul, K. Gaillot, P. Hovan, S.A. Knoop, P. Kruse, S. Lanci, L. Lear, C.H. Moore, T.C. Jnr. Nigrini, C.A. Nishi, H. Nomura, R. Norris, R.D. Pälike, H. Parés, J.M. Quintin, L. Raffi, I. Rea, B.R. Rea, D.K. Steiger, T.H. Tripati, A.K. Vanden Berg, M.D. Wade, B.S. 2002 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/1/agu2002_lw.pdf https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/2/agu2002_lw.html http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/SFgate/SFgate?&listenv=table&multiple=1&range=1&directget=1&application=fm02&database=%2Fdata%2Fepubs%2Fwais%2Findexes%2Ffm02%2Ffm02&maxhits=200&=%22PP21D-05%22 en eng https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/1/agu2002_lw.pdf https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/2/agu2002_lw.html Lyle, M., Wilson, P.A., Janecek, T.R., Backman, J., Busch, W.H., Coxall, H.K., Faul, K., Gaillot, P., Hovan, S.A., Knoop, P., Kruse, S., Lanci, L., Lear, C.H., Moore, T.C. Jnr., Nigrini, C.A., Nishi, H., Nomura, R., Norris, R.D., Pälike, H., Parés, J.M., Quintin, L., Raffi, I., Rea, B.R., Rea, D.K., Steiger, T.H., Tripati, A.K., Vanden Berg, M.D. and Wade, B.S. (2002) The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002). EOS: Transactions American Geophysical Union, 83 (47, Supplement), p.F946. Article NonPeerReviewed 2002 ftsouthampton 2024-01-25T23:18:55Z ODP Leg 199 drilled a latitudinal transect of sites across the position of the early Eocene equator, designed to study the evolution of the equatorial Pacific current and wind system as the Earth went from maximum Cenozoic warmth to initial Antarctic glaciations. The cruise recovered a biogenic sedimentary record of equatorial processes from the early Miocene to the late Paleocene, roughly from 18 to 56 Ma. Above the biogenic sediments are 10 m or more of nonfossiliferous clay, representing most of the Neogene interval. We found that equatorial deposition patterns were stable for the Eocene but very different from those of the Neogene. The Eocene is marked by a very shallow carbonate compensation depth (CCD) and radiolarian ooze sediments. In contrast, Pleistocene equatorial sediments are carbonate and diatom rich. The Eocene equatorial sedimentation regime was also much wider than modern, expanding in the middle Eocene to about 10 degrees north of the paleoequator. We interpret the Eocene sedimentary environment to indicate significantly more diffuse upwelling than is found in the modern ocean and a deeper-than-modern eastern Pacific thermocline. Eocene deep waters appear to have been well-oxygenated despite being much warmer than modern deep waters . There is an abrupt sedimentological transition coincident with the first major glaciation of Antarctica in the early Oligocene from Eocene equatorial conditions to proto-modern conditions. Over a time period of about 120 kyr the CCD dropped by more than 1.3 km and sedimentation focused into a narrow equatorial band similar to equatorial sedimentation in the Holocene equatorial Pacific. We interpret the change to mark the first Cenozoic appearance of the modern Pacific equatorial upwelling system. We also recovered examples of the Paleocene-Eocene boundary at 3 different drillsites from about 1 degree south of the 55 Ma paleoequator to 11 degrees north of it. The P-E boundary event, one of the largest carbon-isotope excursions of the Cenozoic, is represented by a ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Antarctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description ODP Leg 199 drilled a latitudinal transect of sites across the position of the early Eocene equator, designed to study the evolution of the equatorial Pacific current and wind system as the Earth went from maximum Cenozoic warmth to initial Antarctic glaciations. The cruise recovered a biogenic sedimentary record of equatorial processes from the early Miocene to the late Paleocene, roughly from 18 to 56 Ma. Above the biogenic sediments are 10 m or more of nonfossiliferous clay, representing most of the Neogene interval. We found that equatorial deposition patterns were stable for the Eocene but very different from those of the Neogene. The Eocene is marked by a very shallow carbonate compensation depth (CCD) and radiolarian ooze sediments. In contrast, Pleistocene equatorial sediments are carbonate and diatom rich. The Eocene equatorial sedimentation regime was also much wider than modern, expanding in the middle Eocene to about 10 degrees north of the paleoequator. We interpret the Eocene sedimentary environment to indicate significantly more diffuse upwelling than is found in the modern ocean and a deeper-than-modern eastern Pacific thermocline. Eocene deep waters appear to have been well-oxygenated despite being much warmer than modern deep waters . There is an abrupt sedimentological transition coincident with the first major glaciation of Antarctica in the early Oligocene from Eocene equatorial conditions to proto-modern conditions. Over a time period of about 120 kyr the CCD dropped by more than 1.3 km and sedimentation focused into a narrow equatorial band similar to equatorial sedimentation in the Holocene equatorial Pacific. We interpret the change to mark the first Cenozoic appearance of the modern Pacific equatorial upwelling system. We also recovered examples of the Paleocene-Eocene boundary at 3 different drillsites from about 1 degree south of the 55 Ma paleoequator to 11 degrees north of it. The P-E boundary event, one of the largest carbon-isotope excursions of the Cenozoic, is represented by a ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lyle, M.
Wilson, P.A.
Janecek, T.R.
Backman, J.
Busch, W.H.
Coxall, H.K.
Faul, K.
Gaillot, P.
Hovan, S.A.
Knoop, P.
Kruse, S.
Lanci, L.
Lear, C.H.
Moore, T.C. Jnr.
Nigrini, C.A.
Nishi, H.
Nomura, R.
Norris, R.D.
Pälike, H.
Parés, J.M.
Quintin, L.
Raffi, I.
Rea, B.R.
Rea, D.K.
Steiger, T.H.
Tripati, A.K.
Vanden Berg, M.D.
Wade, B.S.
spellingShingle Lyle, M.
Wilson, P.A.
Janecek, T.R.
Backman, J.
Busch, W.H.
Coxall, H.K.
Faul, K.
Gaillot, P.
Hovan, S.A.
Knoop, P.
Kruse, S.
Lanci, L.
Lear, C.H.
Moore, T.C. Jnr.
Nigrini, C.A.
Nishi, H.
Nomura, R.
Norris, R.D.
Pälike, H.
Parés, J.M.
Quintin, L.
Raffi, I.
Rea, B.R.
Rea, D.K.
Steiger, T.H.
Tripati, A.K.
Vanden Berg, M.D.
Wade, B.S.
The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)
author_facet Lyle, M.
Wilson, P.A.
Janecek, T.R.
Backman, J.
Busch, W.H.
Coxall, H.K.
Faul, K.
Gaillot, P.
Hovan, S.A.
Knoop, P.
Kruse, S.
Lanci, L.
Lear, C.H.
Moore, T.C. Jnr.
Nigrini, C.A.
Nishi, H.
Nomura, R.
Norris, R.D.
Pälike, H.
Parés, J.M.
Quintin, L.
Raffi, I.
Rea, B.R.
Rea, D.K.
Steiger, T.H.
Tripati, A.K.
Vanden Berg, M.D.
Wade, B.S.
author_sort Lyle, M.
title The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)
title_short The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)
title_full The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)
title_fullStr The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)
title_full_unstemmed The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002)
title_sort eocene and oligocene pacific equatorial region from odp leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at agu fall meeting, san francisco, 6-10 dec 2002)
publishDate 2002
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/1/agu2002_lw.pdf
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/2/agu2002_lw.html
http://www.agu.org/cgi-bin/SFgate/SFgate?&listenv=table&multiple=1&range=1&directget=1&application=fm02&database=%2Fdata%2Fepubs%2Fwais%2Findexes%2Ffm02%2Ffm02&maxhits=200&=%22PP21D-05%22
geographic Antarctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Antarctic
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/1/agu2002_lw.pdf
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/41879/2/agu2002_lw.html
Lyle, M., Wilson, P.A., Janecek, T.R., Backman, J., Busch, W.H., Coxall, H.K., Faul, K., Gaillot, P., Hovan, S.A., Knoop, P., Kruse, S., Lanci, L., Lear, C.H., Moore, T.C. Jnr., Nigrini, C.A., Nishi, H., Nomura, R., Norris, R.D., Pälike, H., Parés, J.M., Quintin, L., Raffi, I., Rea, B.R., Rea, D.K., Steiger, T.H., Tripati, A.K., Vanden Berg, M.D. and Wade, B.S. (2002) The Eocene and Oligocene Pacific equatorial region from ODP Leg 199 drilling (abstract of paper presented at AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, 6-10 Dec 2002). EOS: Transactions American Geophysical Union, 83 (47, Supplement), p.F946.
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