Brief Display | Full Display
Olav Eldholm and Ellen Thomas
Environmental impact of volcanic margin formation
Earth and Planetary Science Letters (June 1993), 117(3-4):319-329
Abstract: Index Terms/Descriptors: Latitude & Longitude:
GeoRef, Copyright 2004, American Geological Institute. Reference includes data from CAPCAS, Elsevier Scientific Publishers, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Late rift stage uplift and subsequent massive, transient volcanism during breakup of rifted volcanic continental margins constrain paleoenvironments by modifying basin geometry and the composition of the atmosphere, hydrosphere and thus biosphere on regional and global scales. The early Tertiary North Atlantic breakup history shows that lava emplacement was accompanied by regional ashfalls, and that extrusive complexes influenced Paleogene oceanic and continental margin circulation and sedimentation. Temporal correspondence with the terminal Paleocene deep-sea extinction event and the earliest Eocene greenhouse suggests a global impact, possibly by enhanced atmospheric CO 2 levels, leading to polar warming and thereby changing patterns of deep-water formation. In this context, transient subaerial volcanism at continental margins should be considered with the much discussed continental flood basalt provinces and oceanic plateaus.
Atlantic Ocean; atmosphere; basins; carbon dioxide; Cenozoic; continental margin; effects; extinction; Leg 104; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 642; ODP Site 643; Paleocene; paleoenvironment; Paleogene; stratigraphy; Tertiary; uplifts; volcanism
N0°00'00" -
N75°00'00" and
W80°00'00" -
E20°00'00" (Search for maps and images at Alexandria Digital Library)
N67°13'12" -
N67°13'30" and
E2°55'42" -
E2°55'48" (Search for maps and images at Alexandria Digital Library)
N67°42'54" -
N67°42'54" and
E1°02'00" -
E1°02'00" (Search for maps and images at Alexandria Digital Library)