Skip to main content

IMIS

A new integrated search interface will become available in the next phase of marineinfo.org.
For the time being, please use IMIS to search available data

 

[ report an error in this record ]basket (0): add | show Print this page

Foraminiferal faunas in cores offshore from the Mississippi Delta
Phleger, F.B. (1955). Foraminiferal faunas in cores offshore from the Mississippi Delta, in: Papers in Marine Biology and Oceanography. Dedicated to Henry Bryant Bigelow, By His Former Students and Associates on the occasion of The Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Founding of The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 1955 . Deep-Sea Research (1953), 3(Supplement): pp. 45-57
In: (1955). Papers in Marine Biology and Oceanography. Dedicated to Henry Bryant Bigelow, By His Former Students and Associates on the occasion of The Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Founding of The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 1955. Deep-Sea Research (1953), 3(Supplement). Pergamon Press: London & New York. 498 pp., more
In: Deep-Sea Research (1953). Pergamon: Oxford; New York. ISSN 0146-6291; e-ISSN 1878-2485, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Author 

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Author  Top 
  • Phleger, F.B.

Abstract
    Study of Foraminifera from fifteen cores shows presence of cold-water faunas interpreted as representing glacial stages and/or substages, and of warm-water faunas interpreted as post-glacial and interglacial stages and/or substages. These sequences are similar to those previously reported from the northwestern Gulf of Mexico. The amount of post-glacial deposition is greater on the lower continental shelf and upper continental slope than on the lower slope and basin. Variations in amount of post-glacial sedimentation within these topographic provinces are demonstrated. Two cores located in the bottom of Mississippi Canyon contain faunas and sediments which have been displaced downslope, presumably by turbidity currents. It is suggested that the turbidity current was confined to Mississippi Canyon, and that submarine canyons generally tend to localize many turbidity currents.

All data in the Integrated Marine Information System (IMIS) is subject to the VLIZ privacy policy Top | Author