Atlantic Deep-Sea Stratigraphy: Extension of Absolute Chronology to 320,000 Years
- 28 January 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 151 (3709) , 448-450
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.151.3709.448
Abstract
Thorium-230 measurements on a core of globigerina ooze from the Caribbean Sea substantiate the prediction of Ericson et al. that the paleontological boundary U-V (Sangamon-Illinoian boundary in their scheme) in the Atlantic sediments has an age of close to 320,000 years. As the ages derived by Ericson et al. were based on extrapolations of mean sedimentation rates established by carbon-14 and protactinium-231 dating of the upper sections of this and other cores, this result confirms the assumption that sedimentation rates in the Caribbean Sea have not changed significantly during the past several hundred thousand years. The uranium content of the ocean as indicated by the deposition rate of thorium-230 was no more than 30 percent higher during glacial than during interglacial periods.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Support for Italian ScienceScience, 1965
- The Pleistocene Epoch in Deep-Sea SedimentsScience, 1964
- Paleotemperature Analysis of the Caribbean Cores A254-BR-C and CP-28GSA Bulletin, 1964
- "Absolute Dating of Deep-Sea Cores by the Pa231/Th230 Method" and Accumulation Rates: A ReplyThe Journal of Geology, 1963
- A CALORIMETRIC DETERMINATION OF THE HALF-LIFE OF THORIUM-230 AND A CONSEQUENT REVISION TO ITS NEUTRON CAPTURE CROSS SECTIONCanadian Journal of Physics, 1962
- Atlantic Deep-Sea Sediment CoresGSA Bulletin, 1961
- Evidence for an abrupt change in climate close to 11,000 years agoAmerican Journal of Science, 1960
- The relation of deep sea [Atlantic Ocean] sedimentation rates to variations in climateAmerican Journal of Science, 1958
- Pleistocene TemperaturesThe Journal of Geology, 1955
- Radiocarbon Concentration in Modern WoodScience, 1955