Kemp, Alan E. S. et al. (1996): Origins and palaeoceangraphic significance of laminated diatom ooze from the eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 138
DSDP 85
Identifier:
2010-058121
georefid

10.1144/GSL.SP.1996.116.01.19
doi

Creator:
Kemp, Alan E. S.
University of Southampton, Department of Oceanography, Southampton, United Kingdom
author

Baldauf, Jack G.
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Pearce, Richard B.
author

Identification:
Origins and palaeoceangraphic significance of laminated diatom ooze from the eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean
1996
In: Kemp, Alan E. S. (editor), Palaeoclimatology and palaeoceanography from laminated sediments
Geological Society of London, London, United Kingdom
116
243-252
Laminated diatom ooze (LDO) has been recovered from several ODP Leg 138 sites and now is also recognized from several DSDP Leg 85 sites. These remarkable sediments are the result of massive and episodic flux of mats of the diatom Thalassiothrix longissima. By analogy with the Rhizosolenia diatom mat-forming events monitored by JGOFS (Joint Global Ocean Flux Study) in the equatorial Pacific Ocean during cooling conditions in late 1992, these episodes of massive flux of T. Iongissima mats may represent the 'fall out' from major frontal systems generated during La Nina (anti-El Nino) events. Laminations were preserved in the mat deposits because of the rapid mat deposition and high strength of the diatom mat meshwork, that subjugated benthic activity. This new mechanism of preservation of lamination in marine sediments has wide implications for other laminated sequences. The sustained periods of mat deposition documented in Neogene sediments of the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean are part of the major cycles in the relative abundance of carbonate and silica in the region and, possibly, in the case of some intervals, also in the Atlantic Ocean.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:11.1326
West:-133.2010East: -90.2851
South:-3.0548

Oceanography; algae; algal mats; algal structures; biogenic structures; Cenozoic; clastic sediments; climate; Deep Sea Drilling Project; diatoms; Equatorial Pacific; Holocene; IGCP; IPOD; laminations; Leg 138; Leg 85; marine sedimentation; microfossils; modern analogs; Ocean Drilling Program; ooze; Pacific Ocean; planar bedding structures; Plantae; Quaternary; sedimentary structures; sedimentation; sediments;

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