Kroon, Dick et al. (2000): Coupled early Pliocene-middle Miocene bio-cyclostratigraphy of Site 1006 reveals orbitally induced cyclicity patterns of Great Bahama Bank carbonate production

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 166
ODP 166 1006
Identifier:
2001-002894
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.166.127.2000
doi

Creator:
Kroon, Dick
University of Edinburgh, Department of Geology and Geophysics, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
author

Williams, Trevor
Ocean Drilling Program, United States
author

Pirmez, Carlos
Geological Survey of Japan, Japan
author

Spezzaferri, S.
Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitaet, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Sato, Tokiyuki
University of South Carolina, United States
author

Wright, James D.
University of Hawaii, United States
author

Identification:
Coupled early Pliocene-middle Miocene bio-cyclostratigraphy of Site 1006 reveals orbitally induced cyclicity patterns of Great Bahama Bank carbonate production
2000
In: Swart, Peter K., Eberli, Gregor P., Malone, Mitchell J., Anselmetti, Flavio S., Arai, Kohsaku, Bernet, Karin H., Betzler, Christian, Christensen, Beth A., De Carlo, Eric Heinen, Dejardin, Pascale M., Emmanuel, Laurent, Frank, Tracy D., Haddad, Geoffrey A., Isern, Alexandra R., Katz, Miriam E., Kenter, Jeroen A. M., Kramer, Philip A., Kroon, Dick, McKenzie, Judith A., McNeill, Donald F., Montgomery, Paul, Nagihara, Seiichi, Pirmez, Carlos, Reijmer, John J. G., Sato, Tokiyuki, Schovsbo, Niels H., Williams, Trevor, Wright, James D., Lowe, Ginny (editor), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, scientific results, Bahamas Transect; covering Leg 166 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution, San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Balboa Harbor, Panama, sites 1003-1009, 17 February-10 April 1996
Texas A & M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
166
155-166
Detailed biostratigraphy in Site 1006 based on planktonic foraminifers and nannofossils shows large-scale sedimentation rate variability in the Florida Strait west of the Great Bahama Bank. A "floating" cyclostratigraphy based mainly on resistivity logs and magnetic susceptibility data has been fixed to the biostratigraphy in the absence of magnetostratigraphy. The strongest orbital cycle present is the precessional beat, which is present in the borehole logs throughout the record. Counting the cycles resulted in an accurate time scale and thus a sedimentation rate time series. Spectral analysis of the sedimentation rate time series shows that the short-term cycle of eccentricity ( approximately 125 k.y.) and the long term cycle of eccentricity ( approximately 400 k.y.) are pervasive throughout the Miocene record, together with the long-term approximately 2-m.y. eccentricity cycle. The Great Bahama Bank produced pulses of shallow carbonate input once every precessional (sea level) cycle during the Miocene and perhaps two pulses per cycle in the early Pliocene. The amount of sediment exported in these pulses appears to be controlled by eccentricity modulation of the precessional amplitude and therefore the amplitude of the sea-level rise. Finally, an increase in sedimentation rate just after the Miocene/Pliocene boundary is attributed to a change in the location and strength of sediment drift currents in the Florida Strait due to reorganization of the currents following the closure of the Panama Isthmus.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:24.2359
West:-79.2733East: -79.2733
South:24.2359

Stratigraphy; algae; Atlantic Ocean; biostratigraphy; biozones; carbonate sediments; carbonates; Caribbean Sea; Cenozoic; climate change; climate forcing; cycles; cyclostratigraphy; eccentricity; Foraminifera; frequency; Great Bahama Bank; Invertebrata; Leg 166; lower Pliocene; marine sediments; microfossils; middle Miocene; Miocene; nannofossils; Neogene; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1006; orbital forcing; paleoclimatology; planktonic taxa; Plantae; Pliocene; precession; Protista; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; Straits of Florida; Tertiary;

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