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Cenozoic global sea level, sequences, and the New Jersey transect: Results from coastal plain and continental slope drilling

November 1, 1998

The New Jersey Sea Level Transect was designed to evaluate the relationships among global sea level (eustatic) change, unconformity-bounded sequences, and variations in subsidence, sediment supply, and climate on a passive continental margin. By sampling and dating Cenozoic strata from coastal plain and continental slope locations, we show that sequence boundaries correlate (within ±0.5 myr) regionally (onshore-offshore) and interregionally (New Jersey-Alabama-Bahamas), implicating a global cause. Sequence boundaries correlate with δ18O increases for at least the past 42 myr, consistent with an ice volume (glacioeustatic) control, although a causal relationship is not required because of uncertainties in ages and correlations. Evidence for a causal connection is provided by preliminary Miocene data from slope Site 904 that directly link δ18O increases with sequence boundaries. We conclude that variation in the size of ice sheets has been a primary control on the formation of sequence boundaries since ∼42 Ma. We speculate that prior to this, the growth and decay of small ice sheets caused small-amplitude sea level changes (

Publication Year 1998
Title Cenozoic global sea level, sequences, and the New Jersey transect: Results from coastal plain and continental slope drilling
DOI 10.1029/98RG01624
Authors K.G. Miller, Gregory S. Mountain, J.V. Browning, M. Kominz, P. J. Sugarman, N. Christie-Blick, M.E. Katz, J.D. Wright
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Reviews of Geophysics
Index ID 70020486
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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