Exon, Neville F. et al. (2001): Leg 189 Summary

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 189
Identifier:
2001-075838
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.ir.189.101.2001
doi

Creator:
Exon, Neville F.
Australian Geological Survey Organisation, Petroleum and Marine Division, Canberra, Australia
author

Kennett, James P.
University of California at Santa Barbara, United States
author

Malone, Mitchell J.
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Brinkhuis, Henk
Utrecht University, Netherlands
author

Chaproniere, George C. H.
Australian National University, Australia
author

Ennyu, Atsuhito
Pennsylvania State University, United States
author

Fothergill, Patrick
University of Leicester, United Kingdom
author

Fuller, Michael D.
University of Hawaii at Manoa, United States
author

Grauert, Marianne
University of Copenhagen, Denmark
author

Hill, Peter J.
Florida State University, United States
author

Janecek, Thomas R.
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, United States
author

Kelly, Daniel C.
Indiana University/Purdue University, United States
author

Latimer, Jennifer C.
Christian-Albrechts-Universitaet zu Kiel, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Nees, Stefan
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, United States
author

Ninnemann, Ulysses S.
Rutgers State University of New Jersey, United States
author

Nuernberg, Dirk
Universite de Geneve, Switzerland
author

Pekar, Stephen F.
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
author

Pellaton, Caroline C.
Centre d'Oceanologie de Marseille, France
author

Pfuhl, Helen A.
Universitaet Bremen, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Robert, Christian M.
University of California at Santa Cruz, United States
author

Roessig, Kristeen L. McGonigal
University College London, United Kingdom
author

Roehl, Ursula
Tohoku University, Japan
author

Schellenberg, Stephen A.
CEREGE, France
author

Shevenell, Amelia E.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, United States
author

Stickley, Catherine E.
University of California at Santa Barbara, United States
author

Suzuki, Noritoshi
Texas A&M University, United States
author

Touchard, Yannick
Utrecht University, Netherlands
author

Wei, Wuchang
Australian National University, Australia
author

White, Timothy S.
author

Identification:
Leg 189 Summary
2001
In: Exon, Neville F., Kennett, James P., Malone, Mitchell J., Brinkhuis, Henk, Chaproniere, George C. H., Ennyu, Atsuhito, Fothergill, Patrick, Fuller, Michael D., Grauert, Marianne, Hill, Peter J., Janecek, Thomas R., Kelly, Daniel C., Latimer, Jennifer C., Nees, Stefan, Ninnemann, Ulysses S., Nuernberg, Dirk, Pekar, Stephen F., Pellaton, Caroline C., Pfuhl, Helen A., Robert, Christian M., Roessig, Kristeen L. McGonigal, Roehl, Ursula, Schellenberg, Stephen A., Shevenell, Amelia E., Stickley, Catherine E., Suzuki, Noritoshi, Touchard, Yannick, Wei, Wuchang, White, Timothy S., Scroggs, John M. (editor), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, initial reports, the Tasmanian Gateway, Cenozoic climatic and oceanographic development; covering Leg 189 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution; Hobart, Tasmania, to Sydney, Australia; sites 1168-1172, 11 March-6 May 2000
Texas A & M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
189
The Cenozoic Era is unusual in its development of major ice sheets. Progressive high-latitude cooling during the Cenozoic eventually formed major ice sheets. initially on Antarctica and later in the Northern hemisphere. In the early 1970, a hypothesis was proposed that climatic cooling and an Antarctic cryosphere developed as the Antarctic Circumpolar Current progressively thermally isolated the Antarctic continent. This current resulted from the opening of the Tasmanian Gateway south of Tasmania during the Paleogene and the Drake Passage during the earliest Neogene. The five Leg 189 drill sites, in 2463 to 3568 m water depths, tested, refined, and extended the above hypothesis, greatly improving understanding of Southern Ocean evolution and its relation with Antarctic climatic development. The relatively shallow region off Tasmania is one of the few places where well-preserved and almost-complete marine Cenozoic carbonate-rich sequences can be drilled in present-day latitudes of 40 degrees -50 degrees S and paleolatitudes of up to 70 degrees S. The broad geological history of all the sites was comparable, although there are important differences among the three sites in the Indian Ocean and the two sites in the Pacific Ocean, as well as from north to south.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-42.3000
West:144.0000East: 150.0000
South:-48.3000

Stratigraphy; Antarctic Ocean; Antarctica; Australasia; Australia; biostratigraphy; Cenozoic; climate change; cores; Cretaceous; cycles; Leg 189; lithostratigraphy; Mesozoic; Neogene; ocean circulation; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; paleoenvironment; Paleogene; paleogeography; paleomagnetism; plate tectonics; Quaternary; reconstruction; South Pacific; Southwest Pacific; Tasman Sea; Tasmania Australia; Tertiary; Upper Cretaceous; West Pacific;

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