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Geology; September 1994; v. 22; no. 9; p. 795-798; DOI: 10.1130/0091-7613(1994)022<0795:MOTLMS>2.3.CO;2
© 1994 Geological Society of America
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Microstratigraphy of the Lower Mississippian Sunbury Shale: A record of solar-modulated climatic cyclicity

Thomas J. Algeo1 and Adam D. Woods1

1 H. N. Fisk Laboratory of Sedimentology, Department of Geology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0013

Microstratigraphic analysis of the Sunbury Shale has yielded a high-resolution record of probable short-term climatic changes in the Early Mississippian central Appalachian basin. The formation is a laminated black shale that contains pervasive millimetre-thick couplets composed of alternating thin black and thick dark gray laminae, and decimetre-thick bands that are alternately dark and light. Total organic carbon content varies at length scales corresponding to both orders of cyclicity, and correlation of total organic carbon values to X-radiograph gray-scale densities permitted rapid stratigraphic analysis of millimetre-scale lithologic variation in the 5.0-m-thick formation. Spectral analysis of gray-scale density time series revealed strong power concentrations at intervals of 23 ±2 and 70 ±5 couplets. These results are interpreted to represent varved deposition of the Sunbury Shale modulated by the ~22 yr Hale and ~70-90 yr Gleissberg solar activity cycles. These cycles were probably recorded because of deposition in a stratified anoxic environment that was sensitive to short-term climatic fluctuations and subject to high sedimentation rates (4.5 mm/yr).




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J. Pike and A. E. S. Kemp
Preparation and analysis techniques for studies of laminated sediments
Geological Society, London, Special Publications, January 1, 1996; 116(1): 37 - 48.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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