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Pyloniid stratigraphy - A new tool to date tropical radiolarian ooze from the central tropical Indian Ocean

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Pyloniid stratigraphy - A new tool to date tropical radiolarian ooze from the central tropical Indian Ocean
 
Creator Gupta, S.M.
 
Subject radiolarian ooze
tropical environment
stratigraphy
abundance
geographical distribution
monsoons
palaeo studies
palaeontology
Cycladophora davisiana
 
Description Pyloniid stratigraphy, a faunal abundance-variation stratigraphic tool, similar to Cycladophora davisiana stratigraphy employed at high latitudes, is found to work well for tropical radiolarian ooze. The relationship between the spatial distribution of 25 modern radiolarian groups in surface sediments and monsoonal surface salinity from the central Indian Ocean is analyzed. Among them, Pyloniids exhibit the potential to serve in the same way as the C. davisiana stratigraphy. Down-core (temporal) variation of % Pyloniids in a sediment core is compared with (1) the sum of the Earth's orbital eccentricity, axial tilt and precession (ETP), (2) solar insolation at the core site (8 degrees S) and 65 degrees N, and (3) the SPECMAP-delta sup(18)O stratigraphy. The multi-taper (MTM) spectral analysis of Pyloniids for the last 485 ka in a core (AAS 2/3) reveals significant climatic cycles at the eccentricity (100 ka), tilt (41 ka) and precession (23 ka) bands. Cross-spectral analyses suggest coherent (greater than 90%) Pyloniid cycles lag both the ETP and June insolation (65 degrees N) by less than 9 ka at 100-ka eccentricity and are almost (less than 2 ka) in-phase with 41-ka tilt and 23-ka precession cycles. Coherent Pyloniid cycles lag SPECMAP-delta sup(18)O by 14 ka at 41-ka tilt and 6 ka at 23-ka precession, while they lag insolation at the core site by 7 ka at 100-ka, lead 18 ka at 41-ka and show in-phase relation with 23-ka cycles. Marginal lead of less than 10 ka by ETP and insolation over Pyloniids at 100-ka eccentricity and in-phase relation at 41-ka tilt and 23-ka precession cycles suggest Pyloniids variation could be used as a tool to derive age models in tropical radiolarian ooze during the Late Neogene/Quaternary.
 
Date 2008-08-09T11:57:35Z
2008-08-09T11:57:35Z
2002
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Marine Geology, Vol. 184(1-2); 85-93p.
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/1428
 
Language en
 
Rights Elsevier
 
Publisher Elsevier