Exon, Neville et al. (2002): Drilling reveals climatic consequences of Tasmanian Gateway opening

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 189
ODP 189 1169
ODP 189 1172
Identifier:
2006-060002
georefid

Creator:
Exon, Neville
Geoscience Australia, Canberra, Australia
author

Kennett, Jim
University of California at Santa Barbaraaa, United States
author

Malone, Mitch
author

Brinkhuis, Henk
author

Chaproniere, George
author

Ennyu, Atsuhito
author

Fothergill, Patrick
author

Fuller, Michael
author

Grauert, Marianne
author

Hill, Peter
author

Janecek, Thomas R.
author

Kelly, Clay
author

Latimer, Jennifer
author

McGonigal, Kristeen L.
author

Nees, Stefan
author

Ninnemann, Ulysses
author

Nuernberg, Dirk
author

Pekar, Stephen
author

Pellaton, Caroline
author

Pfuhl, Helen
author

Robert, Christian
author

Rohl, Ursula
author

Schellenberg, Stephen
author

Shevenell, Amelia
author

Stickley, Catherine
author

Suzuki, Noritoshi
author

Touchard, Yannick
author

Wei, Wuchang
author

White, Tim
author

Identification:
Drilling reveals climatic consequences of Tasmanian Gateway opening
2002
Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union
American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, United States
83
23
253, 258-259
The drilling of the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 189 provides detailed evidence of the breakup of Gondwana in the Tasmanian Gateway region. The drilling between Australia and Antarctica continued under the Deep Sea Drilling Project. Here is presented a brief summary of the application of these data. (mte)
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-43.5700
West:145.1400East: 149.5600
South:-47.0400

Stratigraphy; Antarctic ice sheet; Antarctica; Australasia; Australia; Cenozoic; climate effects; continental drift; Cretaceous; drilling; environmental analysis; glaciation; Gondwana; greenhouse effect; icehouse effect; Indian Ocean; Leg 189; Mesozoic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1169; ODP Site 1172; Oligocene; paleoclimatology; paleocurrents; paleoenvironment; Paleogene; paleogeography; plate tectonics; rifting; sea-floor spreading; South Tasman Rise; spreading centers; Tasmania Australia; Tasmanian Gateway; Tertiary; Upper Cretaceous;

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