event stratigraphy
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2021 ◽  
pp. 127083
Author(s):  
Yuqin Li ◽  
Chunchang Huang ◽  
Huu Hao Ngo ◽  
Shuyan Yin ◽  
Zhibao Dong ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 246-260
Author(s):  
N. V. Sennikov ◽  
O. T. Obut ◽  
E. V. Lykova ◽  
A. V. Timokhin ◽  
R. A. Khabibulina ◽  
...  

Study of the Ordovician sedimentary sequences of Gorny Altai and Salair has revealed lithological and paleontological features correlating with global sedimentary events:(1) The Acerocare Regressive Event (an initial event in the Early Tremadocian);(2) Black Mountain Transgressive Event (Early Tremadocian);(3) Peltocare Regressive Event (Tremadocian);(4) Kelly Creek Regressive Event (Late Tremadocian);(5) Ceratopyge Regressive Event (Late Tremadocian);(6) Billingen Transgressive Event (Early Floian);(7) Stein Lowstand Event (Middle Darriwilian);(8) Vollen Lowstand Event (Sandbian);(9) Arestad Drowning Event (Middle Sandbian);(10) Frognerkilen Lowstand Event (Early Katian);(11) Linearis Drowning Events 1 and 2 (Middle Katian);(12) Terminal Husbergoya Lowstand Event (Hirnantian); and(13) Hirnantian Lowstand Event (HICE) (Late Ordovician).The chronostratigraphic levels with traces of the global sedimentary events in the Uymen-Lebed structural-facies zone (SFZ) (Gorny Altai) differ from those in the Charysh-Inya and Anui-Chuya SFZ (Altai). In the Ordovician, the Altai basin located in the Charysh-Inya and Anui-Chuya SFZ was a marine area separated from both the Uymen-Lebed basin and the coeval Salair basin. The traces of the global sedimentary and/or biotic events in the Altai and Salair sections can be used as a precise basis for direct correlation of the local stratigraphic units with the units of the International Stratigraphic Chart.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Tournier ◽  
Hendrik Vogel ◽  
Stefano C. Fabbri ◽  
Flavio S. Anselmetti ◽  
James M. Russell ◽  
...  

<p>Located at the triple junction of the Pacific, Eurasian and Sunda plates, the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia is one of the most tectonically active places on Earth. This is highlighted by the recurrence of devastating earthquakes such as the 2018 Mw 7.5 earthquake that destroyed the city of Palu and caused several thousand deaths in central Sulawesi. The majority of large magnitude earthquakes on Sulawesi are related to stress release along major strike-slip faults such as the Palu-Koro fault and its southern extensions the Matano and Lawanopo faults. To date, information on the frequency and magnitude of major events on these faults is limited to instrumental records, whereas information from historical sources and natural archives is completely lacking. Considering the increase in population density and its extension into distant areas, it is important to better quantify the seismic hazard. Therefore, a systemic catalogue of past earthquakes is essential for the understanding of tectonic dynamics of the area.</p><p>            Lake Towuti, situated in Eastern Sulawesi, is a key site to study the paleoseismology on the island. The lake lies close to the Matano strike-slip fault and is hence an ideal archive for past earthquakes that have occurred in the surrounding area. Moreover, its morphology allows a temporally continuous sedimentary succession. The large and deep central basins of the lake preserve the deposits linked to seismic activity. We combine high-resolution Chirp seismic data with sedimentary analyses of sediment piston cores to assess the recurrence of major earthquakes (Mw > 6) in the area, which are expressed by earthquake-triggered Mass Wasting Deposits (MWD). Five major seismic-stratigraphic units are identified in the upper 200 milliseconds TWT and show different depositional mechanisms. MWD’s and associated seismoturbidites can be easily distinguished in seismic data and are well preserved in the cored sedimentary successions in the topmost Unit 1.1. Chronologically Unit 1.1 covers the last 15 kyrs and enables the establishment of an event chronostratigraphy for Lake Towuti’s recent past. The most recent MWD likely corresponds to an AD 1924 Mw 6.5 earthquake, which was recorded to the south of Lake Towuti. In addition, 11 seismoturbidites have been observed in the Late Glacial to Holocene (~15 kyrs) sediment succession. These results tentatively suggest an average recurrence of major events every 1300 to 1400 years.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 001-005
Author(s):  
Jonathan Bujak ◽  
Robert Fensome ◽  
Gunn Mangerud ◽  
Graham Williams

Palynomorphs are one of the few groups of fossils that provide biostratigraphic control in marine to nonmarine rocks and can be applied as proxies for paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic interpretations. Their utility is enhanced by their microscopic size, which is usually less than 200 micrometres; they are thus easily recovered from small rock samples. They occur throughout the Phanerozoic and are therefore invaluable in refining biostratigraphic control of Arctic successions in Alaska, Arctic Canada, Greenland, northern Europe, and northern Russia. The objective of the Circum-Arctic Palynological Event (CAPE) Stratigraphy series of papers is to integrate data published on Arctic palynomorphs to delineate palynological events (palynoevents) across the Arctic for the Silurian to Cenozoic. Once the series of papers is complete, the data will also be used to compile a TimeScale Creator datapack that can be updated and calibrated on an ongoing basis. Palynoevents include taxon originations (first occurrences or FOs) and extinctions (last occurrences, or LOs) and some abundance events. The palynoevents are correlated with established chronostratigraphic horizons such as bases of ammonoid zones or stages, and hence their chronostratigraphy is independent of the absolute time scale in millions of years. In addition to the palynostratigraphic papers, the series includes a paper detailing the paleogeography of the circum-Arctic regions, including informative maps, as well as a paper providing a palynological perspective of the Cenozoic shift from greenhouse to icehouse conditions.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Peter C. Almond ◽  
Sándor Gulyás ◽  
Pál Sümegi ◽  
Balázs P. Sümegi ◽  
Stephen Covey-Crump ◽  
...  

Abstract Calcareous loess in North Canterbury, eastern South Island, New Zealand (NZ), preserves subfossil bird bone, terrestrial gastropods, and eggshell, whose abundances and radiocarbon ages allowed us to reconstruct aspects of palaeoenvironment at high resolution through 25 to 21 cal ka BP. This interval includes millennial-scale climatic variability during the extended last glacial maximum (30–18 ka) of Australasia. Our loess palaeoclimatic record shows good correspondence with stadial and interstadial climate events of the NZ Climate Event Stratigraphy, which were defined from a pollen record on the western side of South Island. An interstade from 25.4 to 24 cal ka BP was warm but also relatively humid on eastern South Island, and loess grain size may indicate reduced vigour of the Southern Hemisphere westerly winds. The subsequent stade (24–22.6 cal ka BP) was drier, colder, and probably windier. The next interstade remained relatively dry on eastern South Island, and westerly winds remained vigorous. The 25.4–24 ka interstade is synchronous with Heinrich stade 2, which may have driven a southward migration of the subtropical front, leading to warming and wetting of northern and central South Island and retreat of Southern Alps glaciers at ca. 26.5 ka.


Palaeoworld ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang-Min Yu ◽  
Huu Hung Nguyen ◽  
Wen-Kun Qie ◽  
Wen Guo ◽  
Ba Hung Nguyen

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Blockley ◽  
Dustin White ◽  
Rhys Timms ◽  
Paul Lincoln ◽  
Simon Armitage ◽  
...  

<p>The nature and expression of climate change in the Eastern Mediterranean, the Levant and further into Arabia is of considerable interest across a range of communities. This is in part due to the need to understand the potential for future climate forcing on environments given the complex range of climatic forcing factors that play out in the region. These include the role of prevailing winds across the Mediterranean, Northerly winds pushing down into the region during cold glacial conditions, and the influence of the Afro-Arabian Monsoon. The last glacial to interglacial period is a critical window to examine such processes, as a range of climatic signals are recorded, many of which have been proposed as correlatives of events seen in the North Atlantic. Dating issues are as ever an issue when trying to precisely compare different climate archives. To address such, the INTIMATE event stratigraphy has been developed for the North Atlantic region, with recent extensions into parts of the Mediterranean. This couples the stratigraphic framework of the Greenland Ice core records as a regional stratotype, with  a number of tephra horizons in the North Atlantic and Europe, aiding the process of correlation. The last INTIMATE event stratigraphy coupled the extended GICC05 timescale for Greenland back to 128 b2k (Blockley et al., 2014). This paper reports on attempts to test the potential for tephrochronology to be extended into the Levant and potentially Arabia, through the identification of tephra layers in sediment focussing archives, such as archaeological cave sequences. We have examined tephra presence in archaeological sites, principally in Israel, that record sediment deposition from ~30ka BP through to >100ka BP. Analyses of these records show that tephra is present in almost all of the studied sites (e.g., Kebara, Tabun, Amud, Shovakh). Moreover, tephra in these sequences can be chemically correlated to known volcanic systems, demonstrating the potential going forward to analyse long lake and marine records around the region for cryptotephra. At the same time clear challenges are emerging. Firstly, there is a range of chemistry in many of the layers and careful analyses is needed to pick apart the geochemical signal and to identify reworking, as opposed to chemically heterogeneous ash layers from a single volcano. This process is complicated by the relatively limited range of published geochemical data from some volcanic centres. This presentation will outline the current state of knowledge of key volcanic centres, particularly in the Aegean and Turkey, alongside the new Levantine data, to consider the steps needed to establish a secure extension of the INTIMATE approach into this region.</p><p>Blockley, S., et al., 2014. Quaternary Science Reviews. 106, 88-100. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.11.002.</p>


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