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Zhang & Scott 1996
Zhang, J. and Scott, D.B. (1996). Messinian deep-water turbidites and glacioeustatic sea-level changes in the North Atlantic: Linkage to the Mediterranean Salinity Crisis. Paleoceanography 11: doi: 10.1029/96PA00572. issn: 0883-8305.

Our benthic foraminiferal data clearly indicate eight layers of deep-water turbidites during the Messinian (MTL 1--8) and one in the early Pliocene (PTL 1) in Ocean Drilling Program Leg 105, Site 646B. These deep-water turbidite deposits are characterized by highly concentrated agglutinated marsh benthic foraminifera (e.g., Trochammina cf. squamata, Ammotium sp. A, Miliammina fusca), rounded quartz, polished thick-walled benthic foraminifera, wood fragments, plant seeds, plant fruit, and highly concentrated mica and are interbedded with sediments containing deep-water benthic faunas. We suggest these turbidites deposited during sea-level low stands (~80--100 m below sea level), and their ages are tentatively correlated to 6.59, 6.22, 6.01, 5.89, 5.75, 5.7, 5.65, 5.60, and 5.55 Ma, respectively, based on the Messinian oxygen isotope enrichments at Site 552A of Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 81. The turbidites layers during the late Messinian, coeval with frequent climate changes suggested by six oxygen enrichment excursions of Site 552A, may have been in part linked to the late Messinian evaporite deposits in the Mediterranean Basin. The most profound climate changes at 5.75 and 5.55 Ma may have been related to the Lower and Upper Evaporites in the Mediterranean Basin. Âż American Geophysical Union 1996

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Abstract

Keywords
Oceanography, General, Paleoceanography, Meteorology and Atmospheric Dynamics, Paleoclimatology, Marine Geology and Geophysics, Marine sediments—processes and transport, Marine Geology and Geophysics, Micropaleontology
Journal
Paleoceanography
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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