2003
DOI: 10.1029/137gm13
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Caribbean carbonate crash in Pedro Channel at subthermoclinal depth during Marine Isotope Stage 11: A case of basin-to-shelf carbonate fractionation?

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Cited by 8 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Zeigler et al, 2003), atmospheric CO 2 concentrations were broadly similar to the Holocene (Siegenthaler et al, 2005). In agreement with this, the vertical δ 13 C gradient between GeoB1720-2 (near to Site-1085 at 1995 m depth) and Site-1089 has an almost identical magnitude of change over termination 1 as during termination 5, and similar interglacial values (Fig.…”
Section: 42supporting
confidence: 69%
“…Zeigler et al, 2003), atmospheric CO 2 concentrations were broadly similar to the Holocene (Siegenthaler et al, 2005). In agreement with this, the vertical δ 13 C gradient between GeoB1720-2 (near to Site-1085 at 1995 m depth) and Site-1089 has an almost identical magnitude of change over termination 1 as during termination 5, and similar interglacial values (Fig.…”
Section: 42supporting
confidence: 69%
“…Lea et al, 2002). Many clever attempts have been made to convert δ 18 O to its sea-level equivalent by Chappell (1974), Shackleton and Chappell (1986), Shackleton (1987), Waelbroeck et al (2002), McManus et al (2003), and Zeigler et al (2003) believed that ocean core SITE 849 from the NE Pacific may provide a close approximation for sea-levels of the last 0.5 Ma (Mix et al, 1995). More recently, correlations have been made between oxygen isotope, temperature and carbon dioxide variability in Antarctic ice cores with sealevel (Rohling et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lea et al, 2002). Many clever attempts have been made to convert δ 18 O to its sea-level equivalent by Chappell (1974), Shackleton and Chappell (1986), Shackleton (1987), Waelbroeck et al (2002), McManus et al (2003), and Zeigler et al (2003) believed that ocean core SITE 849 from the NE Pacific may provide a close approximation for sea-levels of the last 0.5 Ma (Mix et al, 1995). More recently, correlations have been made between oxygen isotope, temperature and carbon dioxide variability in Antarctic ice cores with sealevel (Rohling et al, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%