Rea, David K. et al. (1990): Paleoceanography of the eastern Indian Ocean from ODP Leg 121 drilling on Broken Ridge

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 121
Identifier:
1990-030250
georefid

10.1130/0016-7606(1990)102<0679:POTEIO>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
Rea, David K.
author

Dehn, Jonathan
author

Driscoll, Neal W.
author

Farrell, John W.
author

Janecek, Thomas R.
author

Owen, Robert M.
author

Pospichal, James J.
author

Resiwati, Purtyasti
author

Peirce, John W.
author

Weissel, Jeffrey K.
author

Fourtanier, Elisabeth
author

Frey, Frederick A.
author

Gamson, Paul D.
author

Gee, Jeffrey S.
author

Gibson, Ian L.
author

Klootwijk, Chris
author

Lawrence, James R.
author

Littke, Ralf
author

Newman, Jerry S.
author

Nomura, Ritsuo
author

Saunders, Andrew D.
author

Smit, Jan
author

Smith, Guy M.
author

Tamaki, Kensaku
author

Taylor, Elliott
author

Weis, Dominique
author

Wilkinson, Craig
author

Identification:
Paleoceanography of the eastern Indian Ocean from ODP Leg 121 drilling on Broken Ridge
1990
Geological Society of America Bulletin
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
102
5
679-690
Broken Ridge, in the eastern Indian Ocean,is overlain by about 1,600 m of middle Cretaceous to Pleistocene tuffaceous and carbonate sediments that record the oceanographic history of southern hemisphere mid-to high-latitude regions. Prior to about 42 Ma, Broken Ridge formed the northern part of the broad Kerguelen-Broken Ridge Plateau. During the middle Eocene, this feature was split by the newly forming Southeast Indian Ocean Ridge; since then, Broken Ridge has drifted north from about 55 degrees to 31 degrees S.The lower part of the sedimentary section is characterized by Turonian to Santonian tuffs that contain abundant glauconite and some carbonate. The tuffs record a large but apparently local volcanic input that characterized the central part of Broken Ridge into the early Tertiary. Maestrichtian shallow-water(several hundred to 1,000 m depth) limestones and cherts accumulated at some of the highest rates ever documented from the open ocean, 4 to 5 g (cm (super 2) . 10 (super 3) yr) (super -1) . A complete (with all biostratigraphic zones) Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary section was recovered from site 752. The first 1.5 m.y. of the Tertiary is characterized by an order-of-magnitude reduction in the flux of biogenic sediments, indicating a period of sharply reduced biological productivity at 55 degrees S, following which the carbonate and silica sedimentation rates almost reach the previous high values of the latest Cretaceous. We recovered a complete section through the Paleocene that contains all major fossil groups and is more than 300 m thick, perhaps the best pelagic Paleocene section encountered in ocean drilling. About 42 Ma, Broken Ridge was uplifted 2,500 m in response to the intra-plateau rifting event; subsequent erosion and deposition has resulted in a prominent Eocene angular unconformity atop the ridge. An Oligocene disconformity characterized by a widespread pebble layer probably represents the 30 Ma sea-level fall. The Neogene pelagic ooze on Broken Ridge has been winnowed, and thus its grain size provides a direct physical record of the energy of the southern hemisphere drift current in the Indian Ocean for the past 30 m.y.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-30.3000
West:93.0000East: 94.0000
South:-31.3000

Stratigraphy; Oceanography; Broken Ridge; carbonate rocks; Cenozoic; chemically precipitated rocks; chert; continental drift; cores; Cretaceous; depositional environment; Indian Ocean; Kerguelen Plateau; Leg 121; limestone; lithostratigraphy; marine environment; marine sedimentation; marine sediments; Mesozoic; Mid-Indian Ridge; mid-ocean ridges; Ocean Drilling Program; paleo-oceanography; paleocurrents; plate tectonics; sedimentary rocks; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; Southeast Indian Ridge; southeastern Indian Ocean; stratigraphic boundary; stratigraphy; volcaniclastics; volcanism;

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