McCarthy, Francine M. G.; Gostlin, Kevin E.; Mudie, Peta J.; Hopkins, Jennifer A. (2003): Terrestrial and marine palynomorphs as sea-level proxies; an example from Quaternary sediments on the New Jersey margin, U.S.A.. Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM), Tulsa, OK, United States, In: Olson, Hilary Clement (editor), Leckie, R. Mark (editor), Micropaleontologic proxies for sea-level change and stratigraphic discontinuities, 75, 119-129, georefid:2004-068279

Abstract:
Palynomorphs are acid-resistant organic particles which behave aerodynamically and hydrodynamically like silt, and which resist degradation except in oxidizing or highly alkaline conditions. They are present in virtually all marine sediments, from the tropics to the poles and from estuarine to abyssal environments. Reconstructions of Quaternary sea level in cores from the New Jersey shelf (ODP Hole 1072A) and slope (ODP Hole 1073A) based on the modern distribution of palynomorphs across the New Jersey margin as well as the taphonomic alteration of palynological samples agree fairly well with data from other available proxies (e.g., oxygen isotopes). The palynological signatures of sediments on continental margins also provide information about the generation of sequences and sequence boundaries. The palynological character of surfaces identified as sequence boundaries from seismic reflection profiles records the generation of erosional unconformities during extreme lowstand events that altered the geometry of the margin. Very low palynomorph concentrations and presumably oxidized palynological assemblages (containing few protoperidinioid dinocysts or thinwalled pollen grains) characterize erosional unconformities. The strong seismic reflection associated with sequence boundaries results from physical contrast between the transgressive/highstand sediments (with very high palynomorph concentrations, P:D values declining rapidly upcore, and Pinus-dominated pollen assemblages) and underlying the lowstand sediments (with low palynomorph concentrations, high P:D values, taphonomically altered and ecologically mixed palynological assemblages). The palynological content of Quaternary sediments at ODP Sites 1072 and 1073 thus supports the role of eustasy as an important factor in shaping the New Jersey margin.
Coverage:
West: -72.4140 East: -72.1633 North: 39.2156 South: 39.1331
Relations:
Expedition: 174A
Site: 174A-1072
Site: 174A-1073
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2004-068279 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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