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Abstract

Three British Jurassic mudrock formations have been investigated, via time\textendashseries analysis, for evidence of sedimentary cyclicity related to orbital\textendashclimatic (Milankovitch) cyclicity: the Blue Lias, the Belemnite Marls and the Kimmeridge Clay Formation.Magnetic\textendashsusceptibility measurements through the Blue Lias (uppermost Triassic to Sinemurian) were used to generate high\textendashresolution time\textendashseries. The data indicate the presence of a regular sedimentary cycle that gradually varies in wavelength according to sedimentation rate. Tuning of this cycle to the 38ka Jurassic obliquity cycle produces spectral evidence for two additional regular cycles of small amplitude. These correspond to the 95 ka component of orbital eccentricity and the 20 ka orbital\textendashprecession cycles. Cycle counting allowed the minimum duration of four ammonite zones to be estimated and the duration of the Hettangian stage is estimated to be at least 1.29 Ma. Calcium carbonate measurements through the Belemnite Marls (lower Pliensbachian) are characterized by two scales of cyclicity that can be firmly linked to orbital\textendashprecession (20 ka) and the 123 ka component of eccentricity. A time\textendashscale has been developed from the precession\textendashrelated sedimentary cycles, with cycle counts used to constrain the duration of two ammonite zones. In the Kimmeridge Clay Formation (Kimmeridgian\textendashTithonian), magnetic\textendashsusceptibility measurements made on exposures, core material and down boreholes can be correlated at the decimetre scale. Only measurements of magnetic susceptibility made below the Yellow Ledge Stone Band (midway through the formation) are suitable for analysis of the bedding\textendashscale cyclicity. A large\textendashamplitude sedimentary cycle detected in the lower part of the formation is probably related to the orbital\textendashobliquity cycle (38 ka). In certain stratigraphic intervals, there is evidence for small\textendashamplitude cycles related to orbital precession (20 ka).This study of the British Jurassic shows that, in the Rhaetian\textendashSinemurian, the dominant cyclicity was related to obliquity. In the Pliensbachian this had shifted to dominantly precession, and in the Kimmeridgian obliquity again dominated. These shifts in cycle dominance presumably reflect changing local or global palaeoclimatic and/or palaeoceanographic conditions.

Year of Publication
1999
Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
Volume
357
Number of Pages
1787-1813
Date Published
July 15, 1999
URL
http://rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/357/1757/1787.abstract
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