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Argentum Potorium in Romano-Campanian Wall-PaintingTamm, John A. 04 1900 (has links)
The first centuries BC and AD encompassed the first great period of Roman silverware
production. Wall-paintings, surviving pieces, and textual references all testify to the importance
of silverware, in particular the silver vessels and implements used in the preparation, service, and
drinking of wine, during this period. Besides the functional aspects, possession of silverware
served also as an indicator of one's wealth and status.
In a number of wall-paintings with banqueting or related themes, primarily from
Campania but also from Rome, silverware plays a prominent role. The painted vessels are often
viewed, by modern scholars, as representative of the kinds of vessels then current in the Roman
world, as if the painters were using actual pieces for models. This provides the point of departure
for this dissertation, a detailed study of drinking silver in Romano-Campanian wall-painting.
Such a study reveals more than just whether or not the painters were closely copying
actual vessels; it is, in fact, argued here that such copying was not part of their usual procedure.
The paintings also reveal what kinds of vessels were considered relevant in a banqueting context,
and at times, how these vessels were used. Other areas onto which the paintings cast light include
the working methods in general of the painters, the question of prototypes and their possible
contents, and the role of the patron.
The paintings studied in this dissertation cannot be divorced from Roman wall-paintings
as a whole. The conclusions drawn here, therefore, have relevance for all Roman wall-paintings
and, to some degree, for Roman art in general. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
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Late cretaceous (Campanian and Maastrichtian) sequence stratigraphy, southeastern North Carolina, USA /Pierson, Jessica A. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of North Carolina at Wilmington, 2003. / Vita. Includes appendixes. Includes bibliographical references (leaves : [60]-65).
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Fluvial, shoreline, and clastic wedge responses to foreland basin and Laramide style subsidence: Examples from experimental studies and the Greater Green River Basin, southern WyomingLeva Lopez, Julio 15 October 2014 (has links)
Subsidence is one of the main factors controlling the stratigraphy and overall stratal architecture in tectonically active basins. This was particularly important in the Western US Cordilleran foreland and Laramide basins when some other controls were minor, e.g. reduced eustatic fluctuations in the late Cretaceous greenhouse period. The first part of the dissertation examines the upper Campanian Williams Fork Clastic Wedge (WFCW) in southern Wyoming and northern Colorado, through an outcrop and subsurface database. The WFCW built out from the Sevier orogenic belt like earlier clastic wedges, but its large-scale geometry changed as basement involved Laramide structures partitioned it. At the center of the WFCW there is an extensive fluvial sandstone sheet, the Canyon Creek Member of the Ericson Formation. From its proximal to distal reaches (~200 km) there is a first order trend of stratigraphic thickening and net-to-gross reduction, and a change from braided to meandering depositional style. These trends are caused by isostatic rebound of the foreland basin during periods of relative quiescence in the Sevier orogenic belt and by the eastward migration of dynamic subsidence. However, this long spatial trend was markedly modified by differential subsidence across Laramide-style structures. The Campanian age initiation of the Laramide structures appears to be earlier than the Maastrichtian to Paleogene age commonly attributed to the initiation of this orogeny. The second part of this research focuses on the transgressive limb of the WFCW, particularly on two sandstone bodies isolated in marine mudstones in the uppermost Almond Formation. The sandstone bodies previously interpreted as lowstand shoreline deposits are re-interpreted as transgressive shelf ridges generated by tidal currents and storm waves. There are limited examples of ancient tidal shelf ridges published and no facies model was described. Using Almond Fm. outcrops and examples from the literature, the diagnostic characteristics of storm and tidal shelf ridges are presented. The third part of the dissertation investigates the effects of differential subsidence on the large scale stratigraphic infill of a foreland basin through a geometric model and a series of flume experiments. The mathematical model and flume experiments show that despite constant allogenic forcing, three distinct autogenic responses in stratal architecture, associated with the imposed tectonic and sediment supply conditions are possible. The first response was “autoretreat”, where shoreline migration switched from initial progradation to retrogradation. The second response was progradation followed by constant aggradation. The third response was maintained progradation with a markedly accelerating rate, a new autogenic behavior termed “shoreline autoacceleration”. / text
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Correlated biostratigraphy and palaeoecology of microplankton from the Bearpaw Formation (Campanian-Maastrichtian) of Alberta, CanadaDalzell, Matthew Thomas John 28 March 2007
Marine palynomorph assemblages from the Campanian-Maastrichtian Bearpaw Formation, consisting of 34 genera and 69 species of dinoflagellate cysts and 8 forms of acritarchs, were recovered from a composite section in the Cypress Hills and the Research Council of Alberta Castor borehole in southern Alberta, Canada. Correlation of the sections with magnetostratigraphy and radiometric dates of bentonites within the Bearpaw Formation provided a chronostratigraphic control that enabled correlation between the two sections and the Campanian-Maastrichtian Boundary Global Stratotype Section and Point at Tercis les Bains, France. Correlation of first and last occurrence data of key taxa in the boundary section at Tercis with the same taxa in the studied sections support the placement of the Campanian-Maastrichtian Boundary at the transition between magnetochrons 32n.1n and 31r within the <i>Baculites baculus</i> ammonoid range zone of the Western Interior of North America.<p>Semi-quantitative analyses of the assemblages record the transgressive-regressive episodes of the Bearpaw cyclothem. Increases in the relative abundances of gonyaulacacean cysts, numbers of dinocysts compared to terrestrial palynomorphs and assemblage diversity correlate with transgressive episodes, with the richest assemblages occurring during periods of open, offshore to neritic conditions correlated with the cyclothems transgressive peak.<p>Two new species of dinoflagellate cyst are described. The first, Dinoflagellate sp. 1, is a novel taxon, while the second, Downiesphaeridium sp. A, is a chorate cyst similar to Mesozoic forms previously ascribed to <i>Cleistosphaerdium diversispinosum</i> Davey et al. emend. Eaton et al.
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Correlated biostratigraphy and palaeoecology of microplankton from the Bearpaw Formation (Campanian-Maastrichtian) of Alberta, CanadaDalzell, Matthew Thomas John 28 March 2007 (has links)
Marine palynomorph assemblages from the Campanian-Maastrichtian Bearpaw Formation, consisting of 34 genera and 69 species of dinoflagellate cysts and 8 forms of acritarchs, were recovered from a composite section in the Cypress Hills and the Research Council of Alberta Castor borehole in southern Alberta, Canada. Correlation of the sections with magnetostratigraphy and radiometric dates of bentonites within the Bearpaw Formation provided a chronostratigraphic control that enabled correlation between the two sections and the Campanian-Maastrichtian Boundary Global Stratotype Section and Point at Tercis les Bains, France. Correlation of first and last occurrence data of key taxa in the boundary section at Tercis with the same taxa in the studied sections support the placement of the Campanian-Maastrichtian Boundary at the transition between magnetochrons 32n.1n and 31r within the <i>Baculites baculus</i> ammonoid range zone of the Western Interior of North America.<p>Semi-quantitative analyses of the assemblages record the transgressive-regressive episodes of the Bearpaw cyclothem. Increases in the relative abundances of gonyaulacacean cysts, numbers of dinocysts compared to terrestrial palynomorphs and assemblage diversity correlate with transgressive episodes, with the richest assemblages occurring during periods of open, offshore to neritic conditions correlated with the cyclothems transgressive peak.<p>Two new species of dinoflagellate cyst are described. The first, Dinoflagellate sp. 1, is a novel taxon, while the second, Downiesphaeridium sp. A, is a chorate cyst similar to Mesozoic forms previously ascribed to <i>Cleistosphaerdium diversispinosum</i> Davey et al. emend. Eaton et al.
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The molluscan and brachiopod fauna of the Late Cretaceous Pierre Shale (Baculites compressus/Baculites cuneatus biozones) near Kremmling, ColoradoSava, Lanora Ann 01 June 2007 (has links)
The Kremmling Paleontological Resource Area (KPRA) contains one of the most fossiliferous units within the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway of North America. It was deposited during the late Campanian Baculites compressus/cuneatus ammonite biozones ((\approx) 72.5 Ma) and records slightly less than one million years of depositional history. Examination of the fauna, its dominant preservational mode and taphonomy as well as the lithologic evidence from measured stratigraphic sections strongly suggests that the depositional environment of the KPRA was a shallow, relatively nearshore environment. A detailed taxonomic examination of the molluscan fauna was undertaken in order to re-evaluate past work as well as to more thoroughly document the fauna. Samples were collected from 79 locations within the (\approx) 1 km² study area. The molluscan fauna from the KPRA consists of 47 bivalve, 22 gastropod, and 13 cephalopod species; ten of these species are new. In addition, two inarticulate brachiopods and one serpulid are described. This highly diverse assemblage points to an increase in nearshore diversity as compared to faunas described from earlier intervals with similar environmental settings. The timing of this increase in species richness remains elusive, but may have initiated in the late Campanian and continued into the early Maastrichtian.
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Changements climatiques et océanographiques au cours du Campanien – approche couplée minéralogie et géochimie / Palaeoclimatic and palaeoceanographic changes during the Campanian - mineralogical and geochemical approachChenot, Elise 28 May 2018 (has links)
Les causes du refroidissement climatique global qui caractérisent le Crétacé supérieur (~100 – 65 Ma) ne sont pas encore bien établies. L’évolution de la courbe des températures des eaux de fond et de surface des océans montre une accélération de ce refroidissement au cours du Campanien (~84 Ma), aussi l’objectif de ce travail était-il d’explorer les causes possibles de ce refroidissement en se focalisant sur l’étude des sédiments d’âge Campanien de divers bassins sédimentaires téthysiens, boréaux et atlantiques.Le premier objectif fut de déterminer l’extension spatiale des changements de cortèges argileux dans la Téthys et le domaine boréal. La minéralogie des argiles de plusieurs sites (hémi)pélagiques, sélectionnés selon un transect N-S de 5 à 45° N, a révélé une intensification de l’altération continentale au Campanien, marquée notamment par des apports accrus de kaolinite. Au cours du temps, ces apports liés au soulèvement de nouveaux domaines continentaux semblent se propager du Sud au Nord. Cette propagation est très certainement gouvernée par le mouvement antihoraire de la plaque africaine et de son rapprochement progressif de la plaque européenne. L’intensification de l’altération continentale semble aussi s’accompagner de la mise en place d’une ceinture climatique plus humide à l’origine du développement des bauxites.Le Campanien est également marqué par d’importantes modifications paléogéographiques, telles que l’élargissement de l’Atlantique Sud et Nord ainsi que la restriction du domaine téthysien. Le déplacement des masses continentales est probablement à l’origine d’une réorganisation majeure des courants océaniques. Dans le domaine téthysien, au Crétacé supérieur la courantologie est dominée par le « Tethyan Circumglobal Current » (TCC), courant latitudinal traversant l’océan téthysien et le passage des Caraïbes, d’est en ouest, qui semblerait s’intensifier au Campanien. Nous avons donc tenté de reconstituer l’évolution de la circulation profonde du TCC au cours du Crétacé supérieur, grâce une approche fondée sur les isotopes du néodyme (Nd). L’évolution de l’ɛNd des eaux de fond locales de trois sites (hémi)pélagiques situés sur le trajet potentiel de ce courant a été analysé à partir de la fraction carbonatée des sédiments : la coupe de Shahneshin à l’entrée du corridor téthysien (bassin du Zagros, Iran), la coupe de Gubbio – la Bottaccione dans la Téthys centrale (bassin des Marches – Ombrie, Italie) et le forage DSDP Site 146 dans le passage des Caraïbes (bassin du Venezuela, mer des Caraïbes). L’ɛNd de la fraction résiduelle des sédiments a également été déterminée, afin de discuter l’impact potentiel des échanges locaux eau-sédiments. L’évolution de l’ɛNd des eaux de fond locales, couplée à la minéralogie des argiles et à celle de l’ɛNd des résidus a révélé que les signatures minéralogiques et géochimiques des sites de Shahneshin et 146 semblent être affectées de façon significative par des processus locaux (tectonique, volcanisme). Une augmentation de l’écart entre l’ɛNd de l’eau de fond locale et des résidus est cependant compatible avec des apports accrus d’eaux du Pacifique dans l’est de la Téthys au cours du Campanien. Le site de Gubbio semble quant à lui recevoir des apports d’eaux atlantiques en profondeur, suggérant que si le TCC est présent dans cette région, il n’atteint pas la base de la colonne d’eau au niveau de ce site. / The origin of the Late Cretaceous (~100 – 65 Ma) global cooling is not yet well understood. The evolution of sea surface and bottom temperatures shows an acceleration of the cooling during the Campanian stage (~84 Ma). The main goal of this study was to explore the processes driving this cooling, focusing on Campanian sediments from the Tethyan, Boreal and Atlantic realms.The clay mineralogical assemblages of several (hemi)pelagic sites, selected along a S-N transect, from 5° to 45°N, reveal an increase in continental weathering during the Campanian, expressed by enhanced kaolinite inputs. The detrital input related to the uplift of new continental areas seems to evolve from south to north. This propagation is likely linked to the anticlockwise rotation of the African plate and the progressive closure to the Tethys Ocean. Enhanced continental weathering seems also linked to more hydrolysing conditions in the studied regions, resulting in bauxite development.The Campanian stage was characterised by major palaeogeographic changes, such as the widening of south and north Atlantic oceans and the closure of the Tethyan realm. The motion of continental plates is likely responsible for a major reorganization of the oceanic currents. During the Late Cretaceous, the so called “Tethyan Circumglobal Current” (TCC) current flows latitudinally through the Tethyan Ocean to the Caribbean gateway, from east to west, and seems to intensify during the Campanian stage. Thus, we tried to reconstruct the evolution of the deep oceanic circulation within the TCC pathway during the Late Cretaceous, based on a geochemical approach using the neodymium (Nd) isotopes. The evolution of ɛNd of local bottom water of three (hemi)pelagic sites located on the possible pathway of this current has been analysed on the carbonate fraction of the sediments : the Shahneshin section located at the main entrance of the Tethyan passage (Zagros basin, Iran), the Gubbio – la Bottaccione section located at the centre of the Tethys (Umbria – Marche basin, Italy) ocean and the DSDP site 146 located in the Caribbean gateway (Venezuela basin, Caribbean sea). The ɛNd of the insoluble fraction of the sediments was analysed, in order to discuss of the role of local exchanges between water and sediments. The evolution of the deep water ɛNd along with that of residue ɛNd and clay mineralogical assemblages shows that geochemical and mineralogical signatures of Shahneshin and 146 sites are largely controlled by local processes (tectonic and volcanism), although an increased input of radiogenic Pacific waters may be detected at Shahneshin during the Campanian. The Gubbio site seems to be influenced by atlantic waters entering western Tethys, suggesting that the TCC did not reach the base of the water column at this site.
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An Investigation of Geochemical Evidence for Three Paleo-EnvironmentsJones, John Paul 15 August 2014 (has links)
Three paleo-environments were studied. The first project concerned the Manson Impact and the effect of the Black Hills on the resulting fall-out from this asteroid strike. Samples of the Crow Creek Member were taken east of the Black Hills in Nebraska and South Dakota and samples from the Red Bird Member were taken from the west, in Wyoming. These samples were examined for chemical weathering, soot, shocked quartz, and fossils. The Crow Creek samples had shocked quartz (indicative of an impact), severe chemical weathering, soot, and evidence of tsunamis. There were few calcareous fossils. The Red Bird showed no signs of chemical weathering, a distinct absence of soot and shocked quartz and an abundance of fossils. These results indicate that the Black Hills were large enough to pose an atmospheric and oceanic barrier to the effects of the Manson Impact. The second project dealt with dinosaur eggs which were found in Montana. The eggs were examined and subjected to Computed Tomography Scans. The egg-shell, matrix, and volcanic ash were studied. The egg-shell was found to be from an undescribed oolithic species, and revealed that a transgressive event transpired after the eggs had fossilized. The matrix revealed that the eggs were laid in a flood-plain. The ash revealed a high amount of tungsten and yielded a high percentage of potassium for future dating. The eggs themselves revealed that intact embryos were within. This project has provided information on dinosaur nesting behavior. In the third project corals were examined to determine the usefulness of sampling different architectural structures for evaluating environmental proxies. Coral was collected at the Verde Reef. The different architectural structures were sampled using SIMS, and LA-ICP-MS to selectively sample the small architectural structures. Oxygen isotope ratios and elemental: calcium ratios were compared among the different structures. It was found that dissepiments intake isotopic oxygen and elements at different rates than other structures. This has an impact in sampling corals for environmental proxies, but, because of the very small amount of mass contained in the dissepiments that bulk analyses would not be significantly affected.
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Campanian-maastrichtian Planktonic Foraminiferal Investigation And Biostratigraphy (kokaksu Section, Bartin, Nw Anatolia): Remarks On The Cretaceous Paleoceanography Based On Quantitative DataGuray, Alev 01 August 2006 (has links) (PDF)
The aim of this study is to delineate the Campanian-Maastrichtian boundary by using planktonic foraminifers. In this manner, Kokaksu Section (Bartin, NW Anatolia) was selected and the Akveren Formation, characterized by a calciturbiditic-clayey limestone and marl intercalation of Campanian-Maastrichtian age, was examined. 59 samples were emphasized for position of boundary.
Late Campanian-Maastrichtian planktonic foraminifers were studied in thin section and by washed samples. Two different biostratigraphical frameworks have been established. Globotruncanid zonation consists of Campanian Globotruncana aegyptiaca Zone, Upper Campanian-Middle Maastrichtian Gansserina gansseri Zone and Upper Maastrichtian Abathomphalus mayaroensis Zone, whereas heterohelicids biozonation includes Campanian Pseudotextularia elegans Zone, Lower Maastrichtian Planoglobulina acervuloinides Zone, Middle Maastrichtian Racemiguembelina fructicosa Zone and Upper Maastrichtian Pseudoguembelina hariensis Zone. Campanian-Maastrichtian boundary was determined as the boundary between Pseudotextularia elegans and Planoglobulina acervuloinides zones and Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary was designated by total disappearance of Late Cretaceous forms. Heterohelicid biozonation has been established in this study for the first time in Turkey.
Collecting 300 individuals from each sample, diversity and abundance of assemblages were analyzed in terms of genus and species. ir evaluation of are important in observation of evolutionary trends and ecological changes. Moreover, evolution of different morphotypes is important in this evaluation. Such a study is new in Turkey in terms of examination of responses of planktonic foraminifers to environmental changes.
Taxonomic framework has been constructed to define each species and differences of comparable forms have been discussed. Both scanning electron microscope (SEM) photographs and thin section photographs were used in order to show se distinctions.
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Late Cretaceous faunal dynamics in the Western Interior Seaway: The record from the Red Bird Section, eastern WyomingSlattery, Joshua Stephen 01 January 2011 (has links)
Studies examining bioevents (e.g., mass extinctions, faunal turnovers, diversification events) usually only scrutinize a short interval prior to such events, however, understanding their actual paleobiological implications requires a thorough understanding of the background conditions. The objective of this study is to document the background biodiversity dynamics in a single lithofacies of the Upper Cretaceous Pierre Shale that was deposited in an offshore setting of the Western Interior Seaway (WIS) and to place these changes into an environmental context. To assess the background biodiversity dynamics, the concretionary faunas of the Baculites eliasi through B. clinolobatus biozones of the Pierre Shale in eastern Wyoming were examined to understand the structure of marine habitats in the WIS through an interval of ~2.5 Ma. Both changes in the taxonomic composition of assemblages and the relative abundance of the various species are interpreted to reflect ecological and environmental change through the study interval.
The concretionary faunas are thought to represent relatively short-term, time-averaged accumulations of dead and living animals on the muddy sea floor of the WIS that were concentrated by storm or current activity. They are likely accurate representations of the original skeletonized fauna of the WIS. The samples with lower diversity and abundances show a relationship with intervals when water conditions were deepest and the paleoshoreline was furthest to the west, while higher diversity and abundances match periods when the paleoshoreline was the closest and shallow-water conditions prevailed in that part of the WIS. The decrease in diversity with depth can best be explained by the long-term presence of dysoxic/anoxic conditions that would have precluded benthic faunas. The distribution of taxa and diversity of the assemblages seen in the study interval most likely reflect migrating oxygen-controlled biofacies in the WIS that were responding to changes in depth and the proximity to the western shoreline that was in turn controlled by relative sea-level fluctuations. This analysis shows that significant changes in richness, abundance, and guild structure can arise in response to variations in sea level with no apparent changes in lithology. It is also shown that a lack of environmental context can significantly influence interpretations of paleobiological and paleoecological data and it is recommended that future lines of research should examine faunal, morphological, and ecological change in a time/environmental context.
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