Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project 1987
DOI: 10.2973/dsdp.proc.95.132.1987
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The New Jersey Transect: Stratigraphic Framework and Depositional History of a Sediment-Rich Passive Margin

Abstract: The results from Leg 95 of the Deep Sea Drilling Project bring to completion a series of geological and geophysical studies along a 700-km transect of the New Jersey continental margin. Integration of outcrop, borehole, and seismic reflection data along this transect has revealed the regional stratigraphic framework and has allowed a comprehensive interpretation of the depositional history of the Baltimore Canyon Trough and the adjacent North American Basin. The depositional sequences documented at the borehol… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…While these estimates obviously need refinement, it is immediately clear that the periodicity of these upper Eocene lithologic cycles is far shorter than that usually attributed to tectonic forcings (Vail et al, 1977). This in turn tends to support Poag's (1987) assertion that upper Eocene sediment dispersion on the New Jersey Margin was strongly influenced by glacioeustatic forces.…”
Section: Discussion and Summarysupporting
confidence: 58%
“…While these estimates obviously need refinement, it is immediately clear that the periodicity of these upper Eocene lithologic cycles is far shorter than that usually attributed to tectonic forcings (Vail et al, 1977). This in turn tends to support Poag's (1987) assertion that upper Eocene sediment dispersion on the New Jersey Margin was strongly influenced by glacioeustatic forces.…”
Section: Discussion and Summarysupporting
confidence: 58%
“…That these species are common at Site 647 and apparently absent from the eastern North Atlantic may suggest an affinity between the south western North Atlantic and Site 647 that is not shared with the eastern North Atlantic. Perhaps the distribution of these species in the North Atlantic and contiguous areas is related to the in tensification of the proto-Gulf Stream that occurred from mid dle Eocene time (Poag, 1987). Dinocyst assemblages from the Oligocene include a cosmopolitan component, together with a number of species that have been recorded from high northern latitudes, suggesting a partial influence of arctic water masses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elsewhere, the early/middle Eocene boundary coincides with an increased surface-water organic productivity and a temperature decrease of 1° to 2°C in both surface and bottom waters of the Atlantic (Kaminski, Gradstein, and Berggren, this volume, and references therein). Hiatuses spanning the early/middle Eocene boundary occur in a number of DSDP sites in the western and northwestern North Atlantic and may be related to an intensifi cation of the proto-Gulf Stream and a decrease in eustatic sea level (Poag, 1987), which may in turn be related to a reduction in the rate of seafloor spreading in the North Atlantic and Lab rador Sea (Miller et al, 1987;Kaminski, Gradstein, and Berg gren, this volume). At Site 647 the hiatus is not defined precisely by calcareous microfossils as these are absent across the bound ary.…”
Section: General Background and Objectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The oldest occurs in Core 150-904A-60X, but the contact between the upper lower or lower middle (Subzone NP14a) and middle (Subzone NP15b) Eocene chalks was not recovered. Unconformable contacts in the same interval have been described from other sections on the New Jersey Margin, at such offshore sites as DSDP Sites 605, 612, and 613 Wise, 1987a, 1987b;Poag and Low, 1987;Aubry, 1991) and onshore sites such as the AGCS #4 well (Miller et al, 1990;Aubry, 1991) and the Island Beach well . The next obvious unconformity separates either middle (Zone NP16) from upper Eocene (Zone NP18) chalks or middle Eocene (Zone NP16) from middle Eocene (Zone NP17) chalks.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%