--> Abstract: Past Climate Clues from Anoxic Basin Sediments: Cariaco Basin (Venezuela) as a Tropical Climate Type Section, by Larry C. Peterson; #90073 (2007)
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Past Previous HitClimateNext Hit Clues from Anoxic Basin Sediments: Cariaco Basin (Venezuela) as a Tropical Previous HitClimateNext Hit Type Section

Larry C. Peterson
University of Miami, Miami, Florida ([email protected])

Anoxic basins are typically considered good models for understanding the accumulation of organic-rich source rocks. However, anoxic basins can also be valuable for the study of past climates since oxygen-free conditions on the sea floor can lead to virtually undisturbed sediment sequences that preserve high-frequency Previous HitclimateNext Hit information.
The Cariaco Basin, a modern pull-apart basin on the northern continental margin of Venezuela, is the second largest anoxic basin on Earth today after the Black Sea. Here, high sedimentation rates, a strong seasonal depositional signal, and the lack of biological mixing has produced an annually laminated sediment sequence which has yielded one of our most important records of tropical Previous HitclimateNext Hit history and abrupt Previous HitclimateNext Hit change in the late Pleistocene.
Our understanding of the nature of late Pleistocene Previous HitclimateNext Hit variability has changed dramatically during the last decade. We now know that the Previous HitclimateNext Hit system can undergo large amplitude fluctuations on much shorter timescales than previously thought, an observation that has important implications for future Previous HitclimateNext Hit change.
This talk will review the evidence for abrupt Previous HitclimateNext Hit change as first identified in Greenland ice cores and subsequently from around the world, summarize current thinking as to its origins, and discuss how the Cariaco Basin sediment record fits into a growing global picture of how Previous HitclimateTop and oceanographic conditions can shift rapidly between states.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90073 © 2007 AAPG Foundation Distinguished Lecturer Series 2007-2008