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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

High Resolution Stratigraphy of the Lower Silurian (Rhuddanian-Aeronian) Paleotropical Neritic Carbonates, Anticosti Island, Québec

Daoust, Pascale January 2017 (has links)
Anticosti Island, located in Eastern Canada, displays one of the most complete, best exposed, and most fossiliferous carbonate successions spanning the Ordovician-Silurian (O/S) Boundary in the World. This study develops a new high-resolution framework for the post End-Ordovician extinction strata (~ 260 m thick) exposed in coastal outcrops and recovered from a continuous drill core (La Loutre #1), both located in the western part of the island. In total, eight facies, all associated with a storm-dominated carbonate system, were recognized and organized into a multi-order depositional cycles. A new high resolution isotopic curve with more than 300 data points from well-preserved bulk micrite samples covers the late Hirnantian to Early Aeronian time interval and corresponds to the upper Ellis Bay, Becscie, Merrimack and lower Gun River formations. Two distinct positive carbon isotope excursions are present in the late Hirnantian part of the Ellis Bay Formation (+5‰) and in the lower Aeronian part of the Gun River Formation (+2‰). These positive isotopic carbon excursions provide a distinctive chemostratigraphic signature for regional and global correlations with other O/S sections. Like the Quaternary δ18O marine signal, our δ18O record is largely coupled with multi-order cyclic facies changes. This study demonstrates the importance of glacio-eustasy following the End-Ordovician glacial maxima as one of the primary factors controlling the stratigraphic architecture of paleotropical neritic carbonates during the Early Silurian.
2

Integrated High-Resolution Chemostratigraphic and Cyclostratigraphic Analysis of the Paleotropical Carbonates Spanning the Ordovician-Silurian Boundary at the West End of Anticosti Island, Eastern Canada

Mauviel, Alain January 2017 (has links)
The carbonate storm-dominated sedimentary succession superbly exposed on Anticosti Island in Eastern Canada represents one of the most complete and well-preserved paleotropical stratigraphic records spanning the Ordovician-Silurian (O-S) boundary. We sampled the nearly continuous coastal outcrop exposed at low tide along the west coast of Anticosti Island for high-resolution δ13C and δ18O chemostratigraphy. These new isotopic curves comprise more than 500 data points spaced at ~0.6 m intervals; for a total of 320 m of strata across the O-S boundary. The δ13C curve displays two distinctive positive excursions in the Hirnantian Ellis Bay Formation; a small lower excursion (+2.5‰) and an upper larger excursion (+4.5‰). These two positive isotopic carbon excursions provide a distinctive chemostratigraphic signature for regional and global correlations with other Hirnantian sections. The continuing descending δ13C trend, at least 30 m above the currently interpreted O-S boundary, suggests a readjustment of that boundary on the Anticosti succession. The δ18O curve, similarly to the Quaternary δ18O marine curve, is tightly coupled with multi-order cyclic facies changes. Our tightly coupled lithological and oxygen isotopic data suggest that the Anticosti succession was influenced by glacio-eustatic fluctuations during the end-Ordovician. Furthermore, the estimated duration of these multi-order cycles supports an astronomical forcing. A primary isotopic signal record is also supported by the lack of significant covariance between δ13C and δ18O, by the excellent microfabric preservation of both macro and microfossils in petrographic, cathodoluminescence, and SEM microscopy, and by little or no diagenetic resetting as suggested by the trace element geochemistry, which is unusual in the deep geological time.
3

New radiometric age constraints on the Ordovician-Silurian boundary from Anticosti Island (eastern Canada) and the Siljan district (Sweden)

Cappello, Mariko 30 August 2019 (has links)
The transition from the end of the Ordovician to the beginning of the Silurian Period is characterized by the glaciation of the Gondwana paleocontinent, eustatic sea level change, a perturbation to the global carbon cycle and one of the ve major mass extinctions of the Phanerozoic Eon. Due to signi cant sea level fall, the Ordovician-Silurian (O-S) boundary is often marked by hiatus and exposure in the shallow marine geologic record (e.g., Copper et al. [2013]). Two locations that host stratigraphic succession close to the boudary are Anticosti Basin of Quebec (Canada, e.g., Desrochers et al. [2010]), and the carbonate mounds of the Siljan ring district (Dalarna County, Sweden, e.g., Ebbestad et al. [2015]). The exact timing and dynamics of the glaciation and mass extinction are yet to be understood. Similarly, the interplay between those events and the carbon cycle perturbation are still unclear. As a result, there is a serious need for radiometric age constraints in this crucial part of the Paleozoic Era. The acquisition of more radiometric dates, achieved in this study, aims to address the present dearth of absolute dates close to the boundary. The dates produced in this study represent the first modern geochronologic constraints on the O-S boundary, leveraging the development of the EARTHTIME initiative and the latest U-Pb dating techniques that have improved accuracy and allowed for dating of single zircon crystals at <=0.1% precision level. Here I present two new U-Pb zircon ages obtained via bentonite dating. The first bentonite, 443.61+-0.52 Ma (2, including analytical, tracer calibration and decay constant uncertainties) was collected from the base of the Lousy Cove Member, Ellis Bay Formation (Anticosti Island, Quebec, Canada). The second one, 443.28+-0.50 Ma (including analytical, tracer calibration and decay constant uncertainties) comes from a karstic void within the Boda Core Facies of the Boda Formation (Dalarna County, Sweden). U-Pb geochronology (chemical abrasion, isotope dilution, thermal ionization mass spectrometry: CA-ID-TIMS) on single zircons was used to obtain these ages. These results are the closest radiometric ages to the current O-S boundary (compared to any time constraints in the 2012 Geologic Time Scale) and allow to signifcantly reduce the uncertainty of the current age boundary (443.8+-1.5, Cohen et al. [2018]). Furthermore these absolute ages have been used to make models that explore drivers of Earth system change, such as an end-Ordovician global carbon cycle perturbation. / Graduate / 2022-07-07
4

Faunal Distribution Across the Ordovician-Silurian Boundary in Ohio and Ontario

Fuentes, Stephanie Renee 07 July 2003 (has links)
No description available.

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