Early diagenetic bedded cherts of the Tuscan sequence (Miocene) near Città di Castello, Italy

1983 ◽  
Vol 120 (4) ◽  
pp. 363-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Molenaar ◽  
A. J. De Feyter

Summary. A distinctive level of bedded, internally laminated, deep-sea cherts in the area west of Città di Castello, central Apennins, has been studied. These cherts form part of the Lower Miocene Monte Santa Maria Tiberina Formation, and belong to the Tuscan sequence, consisting of pelagic and turbidic sediments. The sediment is enriched in diatoms and Radiolaria. The diatoms provided silica as well as barium, now present as submicroscopical baryte concretions. Synsedimentary volcanism could have provided silica as well, through calcitization of volcanic fragments within the sediment. Since the laminations display early diagenetic microdeformations,. it can be concluded that the cherts themselves are an early diagenetic feature.

The geographical field in which most of the Discovery Committee’s work has been carried out during the past 25 years is the Southern Ocean. This zone of continuous deep water, very rich in marine fife, supports one major industry—the whaling industry—but is otherwise little developed as yet, and seldom visited. It is not easy to find a short descriptive label for the work itself, but nearly all of it comes under the headings of deep-sea oceanography, whales and whaling, or Antarctic geography, and much of it is concerned with the interrelations of these subjects. Since the beginning in 1924 the Discovery Committee has worked under the Colonial Office, but in 1949 the Committee’s functions, together with the scientific staff, the ships, and other assets, were taken over by the Admiralty, and now form part of the new National Institute of Oceanography. The Discovery Committee, in its original form, has been dissolved, but it is encouraging to know that the continuation of its work is assured.


2011 ◽  
Vol 443 ◽  
pp. 95-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
G D’Onghia ◽  
A Indennidate ◽  
A Giove ◽  
A Savini ◽  
F Capezzuto ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Deep Sea ◽  

This book compiles seven essays concerning changes to merchant shipping over the hundred and fifty years between 1850 and 2000, and spanning a range of countries, with particular focus on Norway, Greece, Japan, and England. The essays are linked by the theme of change: from traditional to modern shipping; in fluctuating cargo demands; from sail to steam; wood to iron; in improvements in communication technologies; in political natures and affiliations; in seafaring skillsets; in the advent of containerisation and advent of globalisation. The overall aim is to construct a solid international context for the merchant shipping industry in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries - primarily to aid a major Norwegian deep-sea merchant marine project. The book contains an introduction that sets out these aims, and seven essays by maritime historians which form part of the international contextual whole, though all can be approached individually.


1872 ◽  
Vol 20 (130-138) ◽  
pp. 491-497 ◽  

The deep-sea dredging-cruises of H. M. Ships 'Lightning' and 'Porcupine’ during the summers of 1868, 1869, and 1870 in the North Atlantic, were comprehended within a belt 1500 miles in length by from 100 to 150 miles in width, extending from the Faeroe Islands along the northern and western coasts of Scotland and Ireland and the coasts of Portugal and Spain to the Strait of Gibraltar. In this area fifty-seven successful hauls of the dredge were made during the three summers in water exceeding 500 fathoms in depth, sixteen beyond 1000 fathoms, and two beyond 2000 fathoms. Even at the latter extreme depth Echinodermata appeared to be abunant. At 2435 and at 2090 fathoms all the Echinoderm orders were represented -the Echinidea by a small variety of Echinus norvegicus , D. & K., and a young example of Brissopsis lyrifea , Forbes; the Asteridea by a species of the genus Archaster; the Ophiuridea by Ophiocten sericeum , Forbes, and Ophiacantha spinulosa , M. & T.; the Holothuridea by Echinocucumis ypica , Sars; and the Crinoidea by a very remarkable new form of the pwcrinidae, which has been described under the name of Bathyerinus gracilisi Wy. T, From 2000 fathoms upwards the number of Echinoerms seems to increase rapidly; but this apparent increase may possibly be due to our wider knowledge of the fauna of the shallower later; from 300 to 800 fathoms along the coast of Britain many species of all the orders are enormously abundant, so much so as to give a very marked 1 character to the fauna of that special zone. Several of these species, such as Cidaris papillata , Leske, Toxopneustes drobachiensis , Müller, Echinus norvegicus , D. & K., Astropecten tennispinus , D. & K., Archaster Parellii ,D. & K., A. Andromeda , M. & T., and Euryale Linkii M. & T., have been long known to inhabit the deep water of the British area, and form part of a fauna which will be probably found to have a very wide lateral extension at temperatures whose minimum ranges from 0° C. to +2° C.,a fauna which crops up, as it were, within the ordinary limits of observation in the seas of Scandinavia, and which has consequently been carefully studied by the Scandinavian naturalists.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. e44509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianfranco D'Onghia ◽  
Porzia Maiorano ◽  
Roberto Carlucci ◽  
Francesca Capezzuto ◽  
Angela Carluccio ◽  
...  

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