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Pacific Equatorial Age Transect : expeditions 320 and 321 of the riserless drilling platform from and to Honolulu, Hawaii (USA), Sites U1331–U1336, 5 March–4 May 2009 and Honolulu, Hawaii (USA), to San Diego, California (USA), Sites U1337–U1338, 4 May–22 June 2009.
Pälike, Heiko, Lyle, Mitchell W., Nishi, Hiroshi, Gamage, Kusali, Klaus, Adam and Hathorne, Ed C. and Expedition 320/321 Scientists (2010) Pacific Equatorial Age Transect : expeditions 320 and 321 of the riserless drilling platform from and to Honolulu, Hawaii (USA), Sites U1331–U1336, 5 March–4 May 2009 and Honolulu, Hawaii (USA), to San Diego, California (USA), Sites U1337–U1338, 4 May–22 June 2009. . Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program, 320/321 . Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc., Tokyo, Japan, Diverse Zählungen pp. DOI 10.2204/iodp.proc.320321.2010.
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Abstract
Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 320/321, "Pacific Equatorial Age Transect" (Sites U1331–U1338), was designed to recover a continuous Cenozoic record of the equatorial Pacific by coring above the paleoposition of the Equator at successive crustal ages on the Pacific plate. These sediments record the evolution of the equatorial climate system throughout the Cenozoic. As we gained more information about the past movement of plates and when in Earth's history "critical" climate events took place, it became possible to drill an age transect ("flow-line") along the position of the paleoequator in the Pacific, targeting important time slices where the sedimentary archive allows us to reconstruct past climatic and tectonic conditions. The Pacific Equatorial Age Transect (PEAT) program cored eight sites from the sediment surface to basement, with basalt aged between 53 and 18 Ma, covering the time period following maximum Cenozoic warmth, through initial major glaciations, to today. The PEAT program allows the reconstruction of extreme changes of the calcium carbonate compensation depth (CCD) across major geological boundaries during the last 53 m.y. A very shallow CCD during most of the Paleogene makes it difficult to obtain well-preserved carbonate sediments during these stratigraphic intervals, but Expedition 320 recovered a unique sedimentary biogenic sediment archive for time periods just after the Paleocene/Eocene boundary event, the Eocene cooling, the Eocene–Oligocene transition, the "one cold pole" Oligocene, the Oligocene–Miocene transition, and the middle Miocene cooling. Expedition 321, the second part of the PEAT program, recovered sediments from the time period roughly from 25 Ma forward, including sediments crossing the Oligocene/Miocene boundary and two major Neogene equatorial Pacific sediment sections. Together with older Deep Sea Drilling Project and Ocean Drilling Program drilling in the equatorial Pacific, we can delineate the position of the paleoequator and variations in sediment thickness from ~150°W to 110°W longitude.
Document Type: | Report (Cruise Report) |
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Keywords: | ODP Expedition 320/321, Equatorial Pacific, paleoceanography |
Research affiliation: | OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB1 Ocean Circulation and Climate Dynamics > FB1-P-OZ Paleo-Oceanography |
Open Access Journal?: | Yes |
Publisher: | Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Management International, Inc. |
Projects: | Integrated Ocean Drilling Program |
Date Deposited: | 17 Dec 2010 12:29 |
Last Modified: | 25 Jun 2019 10:06 |
URI: | https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/10588 |
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