Carbonate spikes and displaced components at Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 515: Pliocene/ Pleistocene depositional processes in the southern Brazil Basin.

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Abstract

Late Pliocene to Recent sediments were analyzed for evidence of episodic flow of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) through the Vema Channel. Carbonate-enriched layers punctuate the post-Pliocene section, otherwise composed predominantly of terrigenous silt and clay. Carbonate enrichment is thought to result from rapid deposition of fine-grained calcareous turbidites, originating in canyons incised on the N margin of the Rio Grande Rise. The composition of benthic foraminiferal assemblages and the presence of stratigraphically displaced discoasters is consistent with a turbidite origin. Based on the presence of displaced Antarctic diatoms, AABW flow through the Vema Channel apparently has had a major influence on this site for only four periods during the last 2.7 Ma. -Authors

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Shor, A. N., Jones, G. A., Rasmussen, K. A., & Burckle, L. H. (1983). Carbonate spikes and displaced components at Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 515: Pliocene/ Pleistocene depositional processes in the southern Brazil Basin. Initial Reports DSDP, Leg 72, Santos, Brazil, 885–893. https://doi.org/10.2973/dsdp.proc.72.144.1983

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