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      Early Cretaceous life, climate and anoxia

      Cretaceous Research
      Elsevier BV

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          Chronology of fluctuating sea levels since the triassic.

          Advances in sequence stratigraphy and the development of depositional models have helped explain the origin of genetically related sedimentary packages during sea level cycles. These concepts have provided the basis for the recognition of sea level events in subsurface data and in outcrops of marine sediments around the world. Knowledge of these events has led to a new generation of Mesozoic and Cenozoic global cycle charts that chronicle the history of sea level fluctuations during the past 250 million years in greater detail than was possible from seismic-stratigraphic data alone. An effort has been made to develop a realistic and accurate time scale and widely applicable chronostratigraphy and to integrate depositional sequences documented in public domain outcrop sections from various basins with this chronostratigraphic framework. A description of this approach and an account of the results, illustrated by sea level cycle charts of the Cenozoic, Cretaceous, Jurassic, and Triassic intervals, are presented.
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            Geochemical consequences of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide on coral reefs

            A coral reef represents the net accumulation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) produced by corals and other calcifying organisms. If calcification declines, then reef-building capacity also declines. Coral reef calcification depends on the saturation state of the carbonate mineral aragonite of surface waters. By the middle of the next century, an increased concentration of carbon dioxide will decrease the aragonite saturation state in the tropics by 30 percent and biogenic aragonite precipitation by 14 to 30 percent. Coral reefs are particularly threatened, because reef-building organisms secrete metastable forms of CaCO3, but the biogeochemical consequences on other calcifying marine ecosystems may be equally severe.
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              Latest pulse of Earth: Evidence for a mid-Cretaceous superplume

              R Larson (1991)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cretaceous Research
                Cretaceous Research
                Elsevier BV
                01956671
                June 2012
                June 2012
                : 35
                :
                : 230-257
                Article
                10.1016/j.cretres.2011.12.005
                f7978a25-8d6b-46ff-8bcf-932c58666981
                © 2012

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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