Glacial marine sedimentation: Paleoclimatic significance
- eds.
This publication resulted from a symposium held during the 1988 Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America. Many, but not all, contributors to the symposium have papers in this volume. This Special Paper consists of 14 chapters and a Subject/Geographic index. Each chapter has is own list of references. The papers cover a wide range of modem climate/ ocean environments, including papers on glacial marine sediments from Antarctica, the fiords of Alaska, and sediments from the Canadian High Arctic. In addition, three papers discuss [open quote]old[close quotes] glacial marine records (i.e., pre-Tertiary), and one paper discusses the Yakataga Formation of the Gulf of Alaska which is a Miocene-to-late-Pleistocene sequence. The last chapter in the book includes a survey and summary of the evidence for the paleoclimatic significance of glacial marine sediments by the two editors, John Anderson and Gail Ashley. It is worth noting that Anderson and Domack state in the Foreword that there is a considerable variation in terminology; hence they employ a series of definitions which they urge the other authors to employ. They define and explain what they mean by [open quotes]polar ice cap,[close quotes] [open quote]polar tundra (subpolar),[close quotes] and [open quotes]temperate oceanic and boreal[close quotes] in terms of the dominant glacial and glacial marine processes. Although one might quarrel with the terminology, the broad differences between these three glaciological regimes are indeed fundamental and need to be sought in the geological record. The flavor of the volume can be judged by some of the chapter titles. Contributions on Antarctica include a paper by Anderson and other entitled [open quote]Sedimentary facies associated with Antarctica's floating ice masses[close quotes] and a companion paper by Anderson and Domack which deals with the extremely complex glacial marine facies (13 facies are delimited) in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica.
- OSTI ID:
- 6729949
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: From review by John T. Andrews, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, in Arctic and Alpine Research, Vol, 24, No. 3 (Aug 1992); Related Information: Geological Society of America Special Paper 261
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Paleoclimatic significance of Middle Pleistocene glacial deposits in the Kotzebue Sound region, northwest coastal Alaska
Evolution of the Gulf of Alaska coastal plain: Cape Suckling to Icy Point
Related Subjects
POLAR REGIONS
PALEOCLIMATOLOGY
SEDIMENTS
SAMPLING
ALASKA
ANTARCTICA
ARCTIC REGIONS
CLIMATES
GLACIERS
MIOCENE EPOCH
PLEISTOCENE EPOCH
SEAS
ANTARCTIC REGIONS
CENOZOIC ERA
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
GEOLOGIC AGES
NORTH AMERICA
PALEONTOLOGY
QUATERNARY PERIOD
SURFACE WATERS
TERTIARY PERIOD
USA
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