Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6445279 Proceedings of the Geologists' Association 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Chronostratigraphically-justified records of regional transgressions and regressions are important for understanding the nature of the Paleocene shoreline shifts on a global scale. Review of previously synthesized data from 7 tectonically “stable” regions, namely the eastern Russian Platform, Northwestern Europe, Northwestern Africa, Northeastern Africa, the Arabian Platform, the northern Gulf of Mexico, and Southern Australia, allows a comparison of transgressions and regressions interpreted in these regions. No common patterns are found in the early Danian and late Selandian, which reflects small or zero eustatic fluctuations that are overwhelmed locally on coastlines by regional tectonic motions and local changes in dynamic support of surface topography by mantle flow. Sea level was stabilized during these stages by a warm climate and a lack of planetary-scale tectonic changes. We have detected a middle-late Danian regression that occurred in 5 of 7 study regions, and can be explained by glacial advance at ∼62-63 Ma or by concurrent subduction of the Izanagi-Pacific ridge beneath eastern Asia. An early-middle Selandian transgression also occurred in 5 regions, probably, as a result of a hyperthermal at ∼61 Ma that coincided with emplacement of large igneous provinces in the oceanic domain. Both events are characterized by significant diachroneity, which can also be explained by the influence of regional tectonic subsidence or uplift. Results of the present study permit us to propose a tentative framework for a new Paleocene eustatic curve that is constrained globally using available records of transgressions and regressions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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