Jung, Claudia et al.  (2012): High-resolution carbon-isotope stratigraphy across the Campanian-Maastrichtian boundary at Shatsky Rise (tropical Pacific) 
  
    Leg/Site/Hole: 
    Related Expeditions: 
    ODP 198  DSDP 32  DSDP 32 305 ODP 198 1210
   
  
    Identifier: 
    ID: 
    2013-037713
    
    Type: 
    georefid
    
     
    ID: 
    10.1016/j.cretres.2012.03.015
    
    Type: 
    doi
    
     
   
  
    Creator: 
    Name: 
    Jung, Claudia 
    
    Affiliation: 
    Geothe-University Frankfurt, Institute of Earth Sciences, Frankfurt am Main, Germany 
    
    Role: 
    author 
    
     
    Name: 
    Voigt, Silke 
    
    Affiliation: 
     
    
    Role: 
    author 
    
     
    Name: 
    Friedrich, Oliver 
    
    Affiliation: 
     
    
    Role: 
    author 
    
     
   
  
    Identification: 
    Title: 
    High-resolution carbon-isotope stratigraphy across the Campanian-Maastrichtian boundary at Shatsky Rise (tropical Pacific) 
    
    Year: 
    2012 
    
    Source: 
    Cretaceous Research 
    
    Publisher: 
    Elsevier, United Kingdom 
    
    Volume: 
    37 
    
    Issue: 
     
    
    Pages: 
    177-185 
    
    Abstract: 
    The Campanian-Maastrichtian transition is characterized by a negative carbon-isotope excursion, the so-called Campanian-Maastrichtian Boundary Event (CMBE), thought to have been triggered by climatic cooling and sea-level fall. This event is known from stable isotope datasets around the world, but little is known about the causal mechanisms of the proposed cooling or the exact timing of this event. A tool both to enhance our knowledge about this event and to highlight the relative timing between the cooling and the proposed sea-level fall, is high-resolution carbon-isotope stratigraphy. In this study, an upper Campanian-Maastrichtian high-resolution carbon-isotope record from bulk carbonates of Ocean Drilling Program Hole 1210B at Shatsky Rise is presented. The new carbon-isotope record shows a number of distinct variations on short and longer time scales, which can be calibrated with age-diagnostic planktonic foraminifera and calcareous nannoplankton datum levels. This detailed biostratigraphically calibrated carbon-isotope stratigraphy can be correlated with the carbon-isotope record of Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 305 ( approximately 500 m deeper in palaeodepth than Hole 1210B). One result of this correlation is the detection of two major hiatuses at Site 305 associated with the lower and upper part of the CMBE. As possible mechanisms for these hiatuses, we discuss the effects of erosion as a result of mass wasting and/or of changes in the strength of bottom currents. By reducing stratigraphic uncertainties our new correlation proves the usefulness of biostratigraphically calibrated carbon-isotope stratigraphy, even for time intervals of small changes in the global carbon cycle as in the late Campanian-Maastrichtian. The new carbon-isotope record of Hole 1210B may serve in future as a reference for detailed calibration and correlation with other well-established delta (super 13) C records from shelf seas and open-ocean settings. This will help to enhance our understanding of ocean-climate processes associated with the CMBE. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V. 
    
    Language: 
    English 
    
    Genre: 
    Serial 
    
    Rights: 
     
    
    URL: 
     
    
   
  Coverage: Geographic coordinates: North:32.1300 West:157.5059 East:
        158.1600 South:32.0007 
Keywords: Isotope geochemistry; Stratigraphy; biostratigraphy; C-13/C-12; Campanian; carbon; correlation; Cretaceous; Deep Sea Drilling Project; diagenesis; DSDP Site 305; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 198; Leg 32; Maestrichtian; Mesozoic; microfossils; nannoplankton; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1210; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; plankton; planktonic taxa; Protista; sea-level changes; Shatsky Rise; stable isotopes; stratigraphic boundary; stratigraphic gaps; tropical environment; Upper Cretaceous; West Pacific; 
 
 
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