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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Effects of Volcanic Ash Deposition and the Manson Impact on Marine Paleoredox and Paleoproductivity| Geochemical Evidence from the Cretaceous Pierre Shale

Cross-Najafi, Isabella 23 May 2017 (has links)
<p> Cretaceous Period. There is limited research on organic carbon content of the Pierre Shale in South Dakota. Frequent volcanic eruptions combined with climate change resulted in an increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, leading to decreases in marine oxygen content. Decreasing marine oxygen has been attributed to higher amounts of preserved organic matter in marine sediment. Impact of volcanic ash deposition in the Cretaceous Interior Seaway has not been thoroughly studied. The Pierre Shale also contains the Crow Creek Member, a 5 foot thick layer of unconsolidated sand and rip-up clasts which may indicate a high-energy depositional event. Some hypothesize that it was deposited by a tsunami generated by the Manson impact. Others believe the Crow Creek Member is evidence of a marine low-stand that occurred before the Bearpaw Cyclothem. It is possible that the depositional event that deposited the Crow Creek Member may have led to increases in organic carbon preservation depending on the burial rates and amount of organic carbon preserved. </p><p> To investigate the connection between volcanic ash deposition, the Crow Creek Member deposition, and organic matter preservation of the coastal Cretaceous Interior Seaway, stable isotope geochemistry, trace element geochemistry, and total organic carbon analyses were performed on a 500 foot core drilled near Fort Pierre, South Dakota. Ash beds were identified using X-ray diffraction analysis. Core sampling was driven by location of the Crow Creek Member (above below and within one foot) and by location of ash beds (above below and within one inch), but samples were also taken based on highest and lowest gamma ray values for each five foot (1.52m) core segment. Core sampling was restricted because every other five foot (1.52 meter) section of the Treedam core segement was available for sampling. Statistical T-tests and Z-tests were performed on sample data to determine if there was a significant difference in geochemical signatures between core deposited before and after ash bed deposition and Crow Creek Member deposition. Results and T and Z statistical analyses show no significant changes in stable isotopes nor trace elements as a result of ash bed deposition nor the Crow Creek Member depositional event. Results also indicate that variability of the coastal brackish marine system made any significant trends harder to isolate on such a small scale. Overall &delta;<sup>13</sup>C<sub> org</sub> signatures ( -27 to -26 &permil;) indicate that the Cretaceous Interior Seaway was deposited in a brackish shallow marine environment and that there were no drastic changes in sea level throughout the deposition of the Pierre Shale Group that was sampled (Gregory Member up through Virgin Creek Member). The &delta;<p style="font-variant: small-caps">15</p>N data range (-6 to +1 &permil;) show that fixed nitrogen was scarce during the deposition of the Pierre Shale and that most of the available marine nitrogen was likely fixed by cyanobacteria.</p>
2

Ancient sedimentary fill of the Waucobi Lake Beds as an archive owens valley, California tectonics and climate

De Masi, Conni L. 18 April 2014 (has links)
<p> The Waucobi Lake Beds in Owens Valley, California contain two distinct facies representing saline-alkaline and fresh water environments. The potential cause for the change in lacustrine facies is examined through geomorphic, geochemical and sedimentological analyses. An age range for the lake beds was constrained with the dating and &ldquo;fingerprinting&rdquo; of 13 tuffs throughout the Waucobi Lake Bed exposures. 40Ar/39Ar dating completed for this study provides ages of 2.63 to 2.06 Ma for tuff layers found within the lake beds, with the transition from saline-alkaline facies to fresh water facies occurring around 2.5-2.4 Ma. Regional climate during the late Pliocene-early Pleistocene is reflected by the saline-alkaline environment within Waucobi. However, the Waucobi environment deviates from regional climate after 2.5 Ma, implying that the fresh water facies represents a change in lacustrine hydrology. Given the coincidence between a prominent seismite recorded in the lake beds with the facies change, tectonic activity rather than climate is postulated as the cause for the transition in the lake environment.</p>
3

A test of diagenetic ordering in siliceous lithofacies, monterey formation, southwestern Casmalia Hills, Santa Maria Basin, California

Ijeoma, Idu Opral C. 02 December 2014 (has links)
<p> A study of 230 samples of porcelanite and siliceous mudstone from a single stratigraphic section containing all three silica phases in the Sisquoc and Monterey formations, Casmalia Hills, California, tested established models of silica diagenesis. Analysis of composition, silica phase, and d<sub> 101</sub>-spacing using combined EDS/XRF and XRD documented a broad distribution of opal-CT d<sub>101</sub>-spacing values rather than a linear progression for any particular compositional range predicted by prior studies. The data from this thesis study strongly suggest that other variables (e.g., carbonate, organic matter) besides burial depth/temperature and normalized silica:detritus ratios are critical to diagenetic ordering and that the opal-CT d<sub>101 </sub>-spacing and silica content of a single sample cannot be used as a geothermometer. Instead, the maximum opal-CT d<sub>101</sub>-spacing in a set of samples for any normalized silica:detritus ratio in a stratigraphic interval may be useful to determine the minimum temperature or maximum burial depth reached prior to tectonic uplift.</p>

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