We present a magnetostratigraphic record from the western Philippine Sea that is tied to a marine δ 18 O record for the past 2.14 million years. The ages of geomagnetic reversals were astronomically calibrated by tuning the oxygen isotopic stratigraphy, yielding a chronology for the following subchrons: Matuyama/Brunhes boundary, 781 ± 3 ka (slightly above δ
Abstract-Microtektites from two deep-sea cores in the South China Sea and the West Philippine Sea are identified as belonging to the Australasian tektite strewn field based on the morphology, chronostratigraphic occurrence, and geographical location of these microtektites. The higher concentrations of microtektites (> 1000/cm2) in the marginal seas of the western Pacific, with the peak concentration in the South China Sea, support the hypothesis of a large impact crater in Indochina. These two new occurrences lead to a more precise dating of the impact event at 793 ka, whereas the size of the Australasian source crater on the Indochina Peninsula is estimated to be 90-1 16 km.
A detailed high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy over the last two glacial-interglacial cycles in the southern South China Sea is presented, based upon analysis of Globigerinoides sacculifer (planktic foraminifera) in Core MD972151. Major characteristic isotopic events were identified and correlated to the standard SPECMAP chronology. In addition, radiocar bon dating and a few biostratigraphic, geomagnetic and tephrochronologic markers were employed to enhance the reliability and resolution of the age model. The tephra layer of the Toba Eruption at 71 ka helps to anchor the boundary of Stages 5/4, and provides a yardstick correlating to the cold period between interstadials 19 and 20 identified in the GISP2 Greenland ice core. The last appearance of pink Globigerinoides ruber and the Blake magnetic polarity event in the lower part of the core helped us to locate the transition of Stage 6/Se. Our high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy, however, indicates that the age of the Blake magnetic reversal occurred during the Stage 6/Se transition instead after the warmth peak of the isoto pic event Se. The resulting age model shows that the 26.54 m sequence from Core MD972151 provides a continuous record from 153 to 0.94 ka, with sedi mentation rates varying between 5.6 and 78 cm/kyr. The temporal resolu tion of the isotopic record is about 60 -150 years per sample for the upper part of the core and 250 years for the lower part, respectively.
The history of meltwater flow from the Laurentide Ice Sheet to the Gulf of Mexico during the last deglaciation, which holds possible implications for the cause of the Younger Dryas cold episode, is not well understood. We propose a new chronology based on using the percentage of reworked calcareous nannofossils in Orca Basin sediments as a proxy for erosion. The period of greatest meltwater flow to the gulf was between 12.7 and 12.1 ka (during the Bølling warm interval), and flow remained high until the beginning of the Younger Dryas cold episode at 11.3 ka; this corresponds to meltwater pulse IA. A sharp meltwater decrease at 12.2 ka may represent the Older Dryas glacial readvance. Little or no meltwater is inferred to have flowed to the gulf from ϳ10 to 9 ka, which is the time of the second major meltwater pulse, IB. Therefore, meltwater must have been permanently diverted away from the Gulf of Mexico at the beginning of the Younger Dryas.
ABSTRACT1 Department of Earth Sciences, National Cheng kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, ROC 2 Department of Earth Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
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