Shackleton, Nicholas J. et al. (1999): Astronomical calibration of Oligocene-Miocene time

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 154
Identifier:
2002-011575
georefid

Creator:
Shackleton, Nicholas J.
University of Cambridge, Department of Earth Sciences, Cambridge, United Kingdom
author

Crowhurst, S. J.
University of Luton, United Kingdom
author

Weedon, Graham P.
Bureau des Longitudes, France
author

Laskar, Jacques
author

Identification:
Astronomical calibration of Oligocene-Miocene time
1999
In: Shackleton, Nicholas J. (editor), McCave, I. N. (editor), Weedon, Graham P. (editor), Astronomical (Milankovitch) calibration of the geological time-scale
Royal Society of London, London, United Kingdom
357
1757
1907-1929
Lithological cyclicity was observed aboard the JOIDES Resolution in sediment sequences recovered from the Ceara Rise during ODP Leg 154. Shipboard work led to the conclusion that the Oligocene was probably characterized by ca. 41 ka cycles. Weedon and others were able to confirm this, and created a provisional time-scale for the Oligocene by assuming that the cyclicity is a response to orbital obliquity variation, and by using spectral analysis to estimate the mean wavelength and hence the sedimentation rate of successive intervals of core. We have extended this work by intercorrelating almost all the 9.5 m sediment cores from each of the four sites that recovered Oligocene sediment. We have successfully correlated all the material covering a time-interval of ca. 10 Ma from 18 Ma to 28 Ma, as well as most of the sediment from the 14-18 Ma and 28-34 Ma intervals. Although variability is dominated by the 41 ka cycle there is sufficient variability at the precession period (amplitude-modulated by eccentricity) to permit an absolute placement of this section with reference to the calculated orbital history. Further work is needed to establish precisely the implications of this calibration for the geological time-scale but it appears that the true ages of events close to the Oligocene-Miocene boundary are ca. 0.9 Ma younger than they appear on recently published time-scales. The sedimentary record preserves information concerning the amplitude modulation of the obliquity signal that is of astronomical as well as geological significance.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:60.0000
West:-62.0000East: 3.0000
South:-57.0000

Stratigraphy; algae; Atlantic Ocean; biostratigraphy; calibration; Ceara Rise; Cenozoic; climate forcing; cyclostratigraphy; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; Leg 154; magnetostratigraphy; microfossils; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; Milankovitch theory; Miocene; nannofossils; Neogene; North Atlantic; oblique orientation; Ocean Drilling Program; Oligocene; orbital forcing; Paleogene; Plantae; Protista; Tertiary; time scales;

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