ABSTRACT
Previous work by many authors has implied that the Antarctic ice
sheet underwent a major expansion in the latest Miocene. It was
intended in the present study to use the oxygen isotope event,
which could be expected to accompany this glacial expansion, as a
stratigraphic marker to aid in the correlation of several DSDP
Sites. Samples were taken at approximately 100,000 year intervals
throughout the latest Miocene and early Pliocene sections at Sites
237 and 249 in the western Indian Ocean, Site 360 in the South
Atlantic and Site 231 in the Gulf of Aden. Oxygen isotope analyses
were done on bulk samples of juvenile planktonic foraminifera and
calcium carbonate analyses, size separations, and
dissolution/fragmentation studies were done by conventional
techniques.
A cool period is recognized between about 5.7 m.y. and 4.9 m.y. at
all four sites, but it is not consistently observed in the oxygen
isotope records from these sites. This implies that the latest
Miocene expansion of the Antarctic ice sheet did not produce an
oxygen isotopic anomaly of sufficient magnitude to be a reliable
world-wide stratigraphic marker. Attempts to correlate
sedimentologic events between sites have revealed that the
biostratigraphy currently available in the Initial Reports of the
Deep Sea Drilling Project for the late Miocene and early Pliocene
is not precise to more than about 300,000 years.
Scanlon, K.M., 1979. Paleoclimatic Implications of Oxygen Isotope
and Sedimentological Study of Late Miocene and Early Pliocene
Sediments from the South Atlantic, Western Indian Ocean, and the
Gulf of Aden. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New
York at Albany. 73pp., +vii.
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