Early Tertiary hiatuses in the north-eastern Indian Ocean

Nature ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 252 (5482) ◽  
pp. 362-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Pimm ◽  
J. G. Sclater
2019 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 269-274
Author(s):  
Aneesh KV ◽  
Sileesh M ◽  
RajeeshKumar MP ◽  
Bineesh KK ◽  
Hashim Manjebrayakath ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 393-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. McCarthy

AbstractTwenty-six taxa of Trichotheliaceae are reported from rock, bark and leaves on Christmas Island in the north-eastern Indian Ocean. Trichothelium oceanicum P. M. McCarthy sp. nov., a common foliicolous species, is described.


1977 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 593 ◽  
Author(s):  
DJ Tranter

Seasonal changes in 82 species of epiplanktonic copepods along a longitudinal section in the eastern Indian Ocean (meridian 110°) were studied so that the main structural features of the pelagic ecosystem could be identified. Counts were made of 46 species of Eucalanidae, Euchaetidae, and Sapphirinidae, and the presence or absence of the remainder was recorded. This mixture of qualitative and quantitative data was used to identify the major niche complexes ('biocenoses') and habitat complexes (geocenoses') in the study area. Many species were ubiquitous. The greatest proportion of endemic species occurred in a narrow fringe to the south of Java; these included neritic species such as Acartia erythraea and Eucalanus dentatus, upwelling species such as Calanoides carinatus, and other species of less certain origin (e.g. Eucalanus crassus, Euchaeta concinna, and Candacia catula). The best indicator of tropical water was Candacia pachydactyla, and the best indicator of its mixtures with subtropical water was Euchneta wolfendeni. Whereas presence-absence data were sufficient to group many tropical species which had a limited range, numerical data were needed to classify subtropical species such as Eucalanus subtenuis, Euchaeta longicornis, and Copilia mediterranea. Diurnally separate, as well as seasonally separate, biocenoses could be recognized; these were characterized, in particular, by species of the genus Pleuromamma. The agglomerative program MULTCLAS, using quantitative as well as qualitative data, defined plankton geocenoses more clearly than did the simple divisive program DIVINF using qualitative (presence-absence) data alone. Six systems could be recognized. Their latitudinal and seasonal distribution, and their temperature-salinity properties showed that two were tropical, two were subtropical, and two were tropical-subtropical mixtures. The tropical geocenoses were early and late phases of the 'Java Dome', a south-east monsoon upwelling system. The subtropical geocenoses corresponded to the central water mass and the west wind drift transition zone. The tropical-subtropical mixtures were seasonal phases, the south-east monsoon phase being generally richer than its successor, due probably to lateral advection from the north, possibly from coastal upwelling off the north-west Australian shelf. The west wind drift transition zone had unusual biological properties due, apparently, to its characteristic turbulence and deep mixed layer. Using the scaled exponent of the Shannon-Wiener entropy function H, a diversity maximum was located at about 20�S. in the tropical convergence. Eucalanus subtenuis was responsible for diversity minima in the subtropics. A variety of species was responsible for diversity minima in the tropics, in particular Rhincalanus cornutus and Euchaeta russelli, the latter swarming in the upper layers in midsummer and reducing diversity to practically zero.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip Hayward

Christmas Island, in the north-eastern Indian Ocean, remained uninhabited until 1888 when British entrepreneurs established a phosphate mining operation that has continued to the present. Over the last 132 years, the island has experienced a series of impacts that typify the effects of extractivism globally. Acquired by Australia in 1958, the island has also been the site of a major immigration detention centre, set up in 2006 to process and deter Asian asylum seekers. In recent decades, tourism has also been added to the economic mix in a form primarily orientated to the island’s distinct fauna, an enterprise that co-exists uneasily with established mining and internment operations. In these regards, the island has rapidly experienced a range of transnational pressures that have distorted and compromised its environment. As such, the island’s recent ‘biography’ exemplifies the impact and scale of integrated Anthropocene factors. Drawing on recent work on the nature of human ecodynamics, this article examines the character and role of the island’s eco-assets – and its crustaceans, in particular – in the emerging experience economy of eco-tourism, illustrating the tensions and instability underlying the latter and its awkward co-existence with mining and detention operations. In this manner, the article characterises the Anthropocene as the central determinant of the present and of possible futures for the island.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 49-52
Author(s):  
Lisa McNeill ◽  
Brandon Dugan ◽  
Katerina Petronotis ◽  
Kitty Milliken ◽  
Jane Francis ◽  
...  

Abstract. Drilling and coring during IODP Expedition 362 in the eastern Indian Ocean encountered probably the largest wood fragment ever recovered in scientific ocean drilling. The wood is Late Miocene in age and buried beneath ∼800 m of siliciclastic mud and sand of the Bengal–Nicobar Fan. The wood is well preserved. Possible origins include the hinterland to the north, with sediment transported as part of the submarine fan sedimentary processes, or the Sunda subduction zone to the east, potentially as a megathrust tsunami deposit.


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