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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Earth Sciences
Stratigraphy And Porosity Modeling Of Southern Centeral Illinois Chester (Upper Missisippian) Series Sandstones Usng Petrel, Darren Kimple, Eric Peterson, David Malone
Stratigraphy And Porosity Modeling Of Southern Centeral Illinois Chester (Upper Missisippian) Series Sandstones Usng Petrel, Darren Kimple, Eric Peterson, David Malone
Eric Wade Peterson
Identification Of Potential Vertical Gas Migration Pathways Above Gas Storage Reservoirs, Eric Peterson, Lauren Martin, David Malone
Identification Of Potential Vertical Gas Migration Pathways Above Gas Storage Reservoirs, Eric Peterson, Lauren Martin, David Malone
Eric Wade Peterson
Middle Paleozoic Sequence Stratigraphy And Paleontology Of The Cincinnati Arch: Part 2 Northern Kentucky And Se Indiana, Carlton Brett, Benjamin Dattilo, Patrick Mclaughlin, Thomas Schramm, James Thomka, Bradley Cramer
Middle Paleozoic Sequence Stratigraphy And Paleontology Of The Cincinnati Arch: Part 2 Northern Kentucky And Se Indiana, Carlton Brett, Benjamin Dattilo, Patrick Mclaughlin, Thomas Schramm, James Thomka, Bradley Cramer
Benjamin F. Dattilo
No abstract provided.
Upper Ordovician Strata Of Southern Ohio-Indiana: Shales, Shell Beds, Storms, Sediment Starvation, And Cycles, Carlton Brett, Thomas Schramm, Benjamin Dattilo, Nathan Marshall
Upper Ordovician Strata Of Southern Ohio-Indiana: Shales, Shell Beds, Storms, Sediment Starvation, And Cycles, Carlton Brett, Thomas Schramm, Benjamin Dattilo, Nathan Marshall
Benjamin F. Dattilo
The Cincinnatian Series (ca. 450 to 442 Ma) of the Cincinnati Arch features some of the most spectacular Ordovician fossils in the world. The rich faunas of bryozoans, brachiopods, molluscs, echinoderms, and trilobites are preserved as discrete shell-rich limestones, cyclically interbedded with sparsely fossiliferous shales and mudstones that may yield exceptionally preserved trilobites and crinoids. Similar successions of shell beds interbedded with mudstones are common components of Paleozoic successions. In such successions, the genesis of the highly concentrated shell beds is often attributed to storm-winnowing, but is this the whole story? This trip will offer an overview of the classic …
Meteoric 10Be, FeD, And Clay In Critical Zone Soils, Front Range, Colorado, Cianna Wyshnytzky, James Mccarthy
Meteoric 10Be, FeD, And Clay In Critical Zone Soils, Front Range, Colorado, Cianna Wyshnytzky, James Mccarthy
Cianna E Wyshnytzky
The critical zone is the zone within which meteoric water, atmospheric gases, soil, and bedrock interact, encompassing the zone of soil formation (Anderson et al., 2007). The concentrations of various pedogenic compounds at a given location indicate the degree of weathering that has taken place in the Critical Zone. Among the products of chemical weathering are secondary phyllosilicate minerals (clays) and iron (Birkeland, 1999). At stable sites, chronosequence studies have shown that the amount of pedogenic iron oxide and clay increase as soils become older (McFadden and Hendricks, 1985).
Meteoric ¹⁰Be is a cosmogenic nuclide produced from oxygen and nitrogen …
Holocene Sediment Distribution On The Inner Continental Shelf Of Northeastern South Carolina: Implications For The Regional Sediment Budget And Long-Term Shoreline Response, Jenny Denny, William Schwab, Wayne Baldwain, Walter Barnhadt, Paul Gayes, Robert Morton, John Warner, Neil Driscoll, George Voulgaris
Holocene Sediment Distribution On The Inner Continental Shelf Of Northeastern South Carolina: Implications For The Regional Sediment Budget And Long-Term Shoreline Response, Jenny Denny, William Schwab, Wayne Baldwain, Walter Barnhadt, Paul Gayes, Robert Morton, John Warner, Neil Driscoll, George Voulgaris
George Voulgaris
High-resolution geophysical and sediment sampling surveys were conducted offshore of the Grand Strand, South Carolina to define the shallow geologic framework of the inner shelf. Results are used to identify and map Holocene sediment deposits, infer sediment transport pathways, and discuss implications for the regional coastal sediment budget.
The thickest deposits of Holocene sediment observed on the inner shelf form shoal complexes composed of moderately sorted fine sand, which are primarily located offshore of modern tidal inlets. These shoal deposits contain ∼67 M m3 of sediment, approximately 96% of Holocene sediment stored on the inner shelf. Due to the lack …
The “Curse Of Rafinesquina:” Negative Taphonomic Feedback Exerted By Strophomenid Shells On Storm-Buried Lingulids In The Cincinnatian Series (Katian, Ordovician) Of Ohio, Rebecca Freeman, Benjamin Dattilo, Aaron Morse, Michael Blair, Steve Felton, John Pojeta
The “Curse Of Rafinesquina:” Negative Taphonomic Feedback Exerted By Strophomenid Shells On Storm-Buried Lingulids In The Cincinnatian Series (Katian, Ordovician) Of Ohio, Rebecca Freeman, Benjamin Dattilo, Aaron Morse, Michael Blair, Steve Felton, John Pojeta
Benjamin F. Dattilo
Taphonomic feedback is the idea that accumulation of organic remains either enhances the habitat for some organisms (positive taphonomic feedback), and/or degrades the habitat for others (negative taphonomic feedback). Examples of epibionts living on skeletal remains are direct evidence of positive taphonomic feedback. Disruption of infaunal burrowing activities by skeletal fragments is an example of negative taphonomic feedback; direct fossil evidence of this phenomenon has not been documented previously. Infaunal organisms are vulnerable to exhumation or entombment during storms, but organisms that burrow can also re-establish viable life positions subsequently. For example, when modern lingulids re-burrow after exhumation, they first …
Mountain Building Across A Lithospheric Boundary During Arc Construction: The Cretaceous Peninsular Ranges Batholith In The Sierra San Pedro Martir Of Baja California, Mexico, K Schmidt, S Paterson, Ann Blythe, C Kopf
Mountain Building Across A Lithospheric Boundary During Arc Construction: The Cretaceous Peninsular Ranges Batholith In The Sierra San Pedro Martir Of Baja California, Mexico, K Schmidt, S Paterson, Ann Blythe, C Kopf
Ann Blythe
The Jura-Cretaceous Peninsular Ranges batholith (PRB) of Southern and Baja California contains a remarkable example of variation in crustal composition and structure across a batholith-parallel lithospheric-scale discontinuity. This lithospheric boundary between western oceanic-floored and eastern continental-floored crust influenced contractional deformation, arc magmatism, and differential exhumation of western and eastern zones in the batholith during its evolution. In the Sierra San Pedro Martir of Baja California, Mexico, a ca. 20 km wide, doubly vergent fan structure occurs across the PRB basement transition that consists of inward-dipping mylonite thrust sheets on the sides of the fan that gradually transition to a steeply-dipping …
The Diachroneity Of Alluvial-Fan Lithostratigraphy?: A Test Case From Southeastern Ebro Basin Magnetostratigraphy, Nicholas Swanson-Hysell, David Barbeau
The Diachroneity Of Alluvial-Fan Lithostratigraphy?: A Test Case From Southeastern Ebro Basin Magnetostratigraphy, Nicholas Swanson-Hysell, David Barbeau
David L Barbeau Jr
Alluvial-fan strata contain valuable proxy data for kinematic, climatic and sediment-flux phenomena associated with high-relief source regions. Proper application of this data is dependent upon acquisition of accurate high-resolution chronostratigraphic data, best achieved through magnetostratigraphy. Collection of magnetostratigraphic and other proxy data from composite alluvial-fan sections assumes the chronostratigraphic significance of lithostratigraphy. We present the first test of this assumption with new magnetostratigraphy collected from Paleogene rocks of the southeastern Ebro basin. We report five new magnetostratigraphic sections that collectively sample 850 m of alluvial-fan and associated fluvial strata. One-hundred meters of lithostratigraphic overlap between these sections reveals equivalent magnetic …