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Impact effects and regional tectonic insights: Backstripping the Chesapeake Bay impact structure

The Chesapeake Bay impact structure is a ca. 35.4 Ma crater located on the eastern seaboard of North America. Deposition returned to normal shortly after impact, resulting in a unique record of both impact-related and subsequent passive margin sedimentation. We use backstripping to show that the impact strongly affected sedimentation for 7 m.y. through impact-derived crustal-scale tectonics, domin
Authors
T. Hayden, M. Kominz, David S. Powars, Lucy E. Edwards, K.G. Miller, J.V. Browning, A.A. Kulpecz

Reevaluation of mid-Pliocene North Atlantic sea surface temperatures

Multiproxy temperature estimation requires careful attention to biological, chemical, physical, temporal, and calibration differences of each proxy and paleothermometry method. We evaluated mid-Pliocene sea surface temperature (SST) estimates from multiple proxies at Deep Sea Drilling Project Holes 552A, 609B, 607, and 606, transecting the North Atlantic Drift. SST estimates derived from faunal as
Authors
Marci M. Robinson, Harry J. Dowsett, Gary S. Dwyer, Kira T. Lawrence

Hydrologic connections and dynamics of water movement in the classical Karst (Kras) aquifer: Evidence from frequent chemical and stable isotope sampling

A review of past researchon the hydrogeology of the Classical Karst (Kras) region and new information obtained from a two-year study using environmental tracers are presented in this paper. The main problems addressed are 1) the sources of water to the Kras aquifer resurgence zone—including the famous Ti­mavo springs—under changing flow regimes; 2) a quantifica­tion of the storage volumes of the k
Authors
Daniel H. Doctor

Anatomy of a shoreface sand ridge revisted using foraminifera: False Cape Shoals, Virginia/North Carolina inner shelf

Certain details regarding the origin and evolution of shelf sand ridges remain elusive. Knowledge of their internal stratigraphy and microfossil distribution is necessary to define the origin and to determine the processes that modify sand ridges. Fourteen vibracores from False Cape Shoal A, a well-developed shoreface-attached sand ridge on the Virginia/North Carolina inner continental shelf, were
Authors
Marci M. Robinson, Randolph A. McBride

A 26 million year gap in the central Arctic record at the greenhouse-icehouse transition: Looking for clues

The Cenozoic record of the Lomonosov Ridge (central Arctic Ocean) recovered during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 302 revealed an unexpected 26 Ma hiatus, separating middle Eocene (∼44.4 Ma) from lower Miocene sediments (∼18.2 Ma). To elucidate the nature of this unconformity, we performed a multiproxy palynological (dinoflagellate cysts, pollen, and spores), micropaleontologi
Authors
Francesca Sangiorgi, Hans-Juergen Brumsack, Debra A. Willard, Stefan Schouten, Catherine E. Stickley, Matthew O'Regan, Gert-Jan Reichart, Jaap S. Sinninghe Damste, Henk Brinkhuis

Hydrogeology and Simulated Ground-Water Flow in the Salt Pond Region of Southern Rhode Island

The Salt Pond region of southern Rhode Island extends from Westerly to Narragansett Bay and forms the natural boundary between the Atlantic Ocean and the shallow, highly permeable freshwater aquifer of the South Coastal Basin. Large inputs of fresh ground water coupled with the low flushing rates to the open ocean make the salt ponds particularly susceptible to eutrophication and bacterial contami
Authors
John P. Masterson, Jason R. Sorenson, Janet Radway Stone, S. Bradley Moran, Andrea Hougham

Synthesis of age data and chronology for Florida Bay and Biscayne Bay cores collected for ecosystem history of South Florida’s estuaries project

210Pb, 14C, and pollen biostratigraphic data have been compiled and synthesized to develop age models for cores collected from Florida Bay and Biscayne Bay. These cores are being used to interpret the ecosystem history of south Florida’s estuaries by examining the physical, chemical, and biological record preserved within the cores. The beginning of the 20th century, which marks an important turni
Authors
G. Lynn Wingard, J.W. Hudley, C. W. Holmes, Debra A. Willard, M. Marot

Corrigendum to “Age model for a continuous, ca 250-ka Quaternary lacustrine record from Bear Lake, Utah–Idaho” [Quaternary Science Reviews 25 (2006) 2271–2282]

No abstract available. 
Authors
S.M. Colman, D. S. Kaufman, C. Heil, J.W. King, Walter E. Dean, Joseph G. Rosenbaum, R. M. Forester, J.L. Bishcoff, M. E. Perkins, John McGeehin

Integrated multi‐scale characterization of ground‐water flow and chemical transport in fractured crystalline rock at the Mirror Lake Site, New Hampshire

This chapter contains sections titled:IntroductionMirror Lake SiteFractures and Geologic MappingHydraulic Properties of Fractured Rock From Meters to KilometersChemical Migration in Fractured RockFracture Controls on Ground‐Water Flow and Chemical Transport at the Mirror Lake SiteSummary
Authors
Allen M. Shapiro, Paul A. Hsieh, William C. Burton, Gregory J. Walsh

The PRISM palaeoclimate reconstruction and Pliocene sea-surface temperature

In this paper, I present a summary of the Pliocene Research, Interpretation and Synoptic Mapping (PRISM) palaeoenvironmental reconstruction, with emphasis on its historical development and range of boundary condition datasets. Sea-surface temperature (SST), sea level, sea ice, land cover (vegetation and ice) and topography are discussed as well as many of the assumptions required to create an inte
Authors
H.J. Dowsett

Cytherellid species (Ostracoda) and their significance to the Late Quaternary events in the Santos Basin, Brazil

Four autochthonous cytherellid species (Cytherella serratula (BRADY, 1880), C. hermargentina WHATLEY et al. 1998, C. pleistocenica sp. nov. and C. santosensis sp. nov.) have been identified from two offshore cores (44 samples) within the Santos Basin. The distribution of these ostracodes is controlled by local hydrological conditions such as the temperature and, possibly, the oxygen minimum zone (
Authors
C.T. Bergue, J.C. Coimbra, T. M. Cronin

Sea level rise in Tampa Bay

Understanding relative sea level (RSL) rise during periods of rapid climatic change is critical for evaluating modern sea level rise given the vulnerability of Antarctic ice shelves to collapse [Hodgson et al, 2006], the retreat of the world's glaciers [Oerlemans, 2005], and mass balance trends of the Greenland ice sheet [Rignot and Kanagaratnam, 2006]. The first-order pattern of global sea level
Authors
T. Cronin, N.T. Edgar, Gillian L. Brooks, D. Hastings, R. Larson, A. Hine, S. Locker, B. Suthard, B. Flower, D. Hollander, J. Wehmiller, D. Willard, S. Smith
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