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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Description: Site information and leaf wax n-alkane carbon isotope data from sediment samples collected from fossil leaf sites extending from New Mexico to the High Arctic and span 40 million years from the Late Cretaceous to the Oligocene.
    Keywords: after Foster et al., 2017; after Tipple et al., 2010; AGE; Age, maximum/old; Age, minimum/young; Axel_Heiberg_Island; Axel Heiberg Island, Canadian Arctic; Big_Cedar_Ridge; Boulder_Hills; British Columbia, Canada; Calculated; Carbon, organic, total; Carbon dioxide, partial pressure; Carbon dioxide, partial pressure maximum; Carbon dioxide, partial pressure minimum; Cf-1_Carbonaceous_Bed; Colorado, United States of America; Cretaceous; Dorsey_Creek_Fence_Carbonaceous_Bed; Driftwood_Canyon,_British_Columbia; Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic Archipelago; Epoch; Event label; Falkland; Fifteenmile_Carbonaceous_Bed; Florissant_Fossil_Beds_National_Monument; Formation; Fosheim_Anticline; fossil leaves; Grimy_Gulch; Honeycombs_Carbonaceous_Bed; Hot_Weather_Creek; Kaiparowitz; Kissinger_Lake; Lake_Hazen_9-US261; Latest_Paleocene_level; LATITUDE; leaf waxes; Lithology/composition/facies; Location; LONGITUDE; Method comment; Mosquito_Creek; n-Alkane C12, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C13, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C14, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C15, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C16, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C17, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C18, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C19, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C20, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C21, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C22, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C23, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C24, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C25, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C26, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C27, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C28, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C29, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C29, δ13C; n-Alkane C30, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C31, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C31, δ13C; n-Alkane C32, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C33, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C34, per unit sediment mass; n-Alkane C35, per unit sediment mass; n-alkanes; New Mexico, United States of America; Organic Geochemistry; paleobotany; Paleogene; Pitch_Pinnacle; Precipitation, annual mean; Precipitation, annual mean, maximum; Precipitation, annual mean, minimum; Sample ID; San_Juan_Basin; Site; Split_Lake; Stenkul_Fiord; Strathcona_Fiord_11-US422; Temperature, annual mean; Temperature, annual mean, maximum; Temperature, annual mean, minimum; Utah, United States of America; WCS7; Wind_River_Basin; Wyoming, United States of America; δ13C, carbon dioxide, atmospheric; δ13C, carbon dioxide, standard deviation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 9292 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Stable isotope analyses of rocks and minerals associated with the detachment fault and underlying mylonite zone exposed at Secret Creek gorge and other localities in the Ruby-East Humboldt Range metamorphic core complex in northeastern Nevada provide convincing evidence for meteoric water infiltration during mylonitization. Whole-rock δ18O values of the lower plate quartzite mylonites (≥95% modal quartz) have been lowered by up to 10 per mil compared with structurally lower, compositionally similar, unmylonitized material. Biotite from these rocks has δD values ranging from -125 to -175, compared to values of -55 to-70 in biotite from unmylonitized rocks. Mylonitized leucogranites have large disequilibrium oxygen isotope fractionations (Δ quartz-feldspar up to ∼8 per mil) relative to magmatic values (Δ quartz-feldspar∼1 to 2 per mil)). Meteoric water is the only major oxygen and hydrogen reservoir with an isotopic composition capable of generating the observed values. Fluid inclusion water from unstrained quartz in silicified breccia has a δD value of-119 which provides a plausible estimate of the δD of the infiltrating fluid, and is similar to the isotopic composition of present-day and Tertiary local meteoric water. The quartzite mylonite biotites would have been in equilibrium with such a fluid at temperatures of 480–620° C, similar to independent estimates of the temperature of mylonitization. The relatively high temperatures required for isotopic exchange between quartz and water, the occurrence of fluid inclusion trails and deformed veins in quartzite mylonites, and the spatial association of the low-18O, low-D rocks with the shear zone all constrain isotopic exchange to the mylonitic (plastic) deformation event. These observations suggest thata significant amount of meteoric water infiltrated the shear zone during mylonitization to depths of at least 5 to 10 km below the surface. The depth of penetration of meteoric fluids into the lower plate mylonites was at least 70 meters below the detachment fault. In contrast, the upper-plate unmylonitized fault slices are dominated by brittle fracture and are often intensely veined (carbonates) or silicified (volcanic rocks and breccias). The fluids associated with the veining and silicification were also meteoric as evidenced by low δ18O values of the veins, which are often 10 per mil lower than the adjacent carbonate matrix, and the exceptionally low δ18O values (down to-4.4) of the breccias. Several previous studies have documented the infiltration of meteoric fluids into the brittley deformed upper plate rocks of core complexes, but this study provides convincing evidence that surface fluids have penetrated lower plate rocks undergoing plastic deformation. It is proposed that infiltration took place as the shear zone began the transition from plastic flow to brittle fracture while the lower plate rocks were being uplifted. During this period, plastic flow and brittle fracture were operating simultaneously, perhaps allowing upper plate meteoric fluids to be seismically pumped down into the lower plate mylonites.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-09-01
    Description: Robust isotopic reconstructions of climate, elevation, and biology require a reasonable capture of the range of isotopic variability across a paleolandscape. Here, we illustrate how integrating multiple proxies derived from a variety of paleoenvironments aids in this effort. We determined {delta}18O and {delta}13C values from lake and soil carbonates, unionid shells, gar scales, and crocodile teeth from multiple depositional environments (lakes, soils, ponds, streams, and large rivers) spanning a 300 km proximal-to-distal transect within the Late Cretaceous foreland basin of Montana. Two major patterns emerge. First, quiet water environments display higher {delta}18O and lower {delta}13C values than large rivers, which indicates greater input from local precipitation compared to high-altitude runoff, and a relatively larger contribution of degraded vegetative matter to the dissolved inorganic carbon load. Second, proxies with seasonal biases toward late spring and summer growth display lower {delta}18O and {delta}13C values in the basin proximal setting compared to the distal coastal setting, which is linked to the rainout history of vapor masses moving across the foreland basin. Overall these isotopic patterns mirror those in modern catchments, support hypotheses of monsoonal rainfall within the basin, and suggest a hypsometric mean elevation of [~]2.6 km within the Sevier orogenic belt. Furthermore, our results indicate a potential to subdivide freshwater paleoecosystems to refine paleobiologic studies of habitat preference and migration patterns.
    Print ISSN: 0883-1351
    Electronic ISSN: 0883-1351
    Topics: Geosciences
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