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Rhythmic bedding in Upper Cretaceous pelagic carbonate sequences: Varying sedimentary response to climatic forcing

January 9, 1986

Rhythmic bedding is a prominent feature of North American and European Upper Cretaceous pelagic carbonate sequences deposited in epicontinental and continental-edge settings. Such bedding rhythms can result from variations in carbonate productivity, terrigenous dilution, redox conditions, or bottom currents. Each type of bedding cycle is expressed differently in the stratigraphic record but probably was caused by climatic cycles that are linked to variations in the Earth's orbital characteristics (Milankovitch cycles). Thus, pelagic carbonates of Cretaceous age acted as particularly sensitive recorders of orbitally induced changes in climate. Documentation of these bedding rhythms will permit detailed chronostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic correlations and will further illuminate depositional processes in Upper Cretaceous carbonate sequences.

Publication Year 1986
Title Rhythmic bedding in Upper Cretaceous pelagic carbonate sequences: Varying sedimentary response to climatic forcing
DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(1986)14<153:RBIUCP>2.0.CO;2
Authors M.A. Arthur, D.J. Bottjer, Walter E. Dean, A.G. Fischer, D.E. Hattin, E.G. Kauffman, L.M. Pratt
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geology
Index ID 70207750
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center