Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wzw2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-03T16:07:04.758Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Studies in North Atlantic Geology and Palaeontology: 1. Upper Cretaceous

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

B. M. Funnell
Affiliation:
Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge.

Abstract

An Upper Maastrichtian assemblage of planktonic foraminifera is recorded from chalk dredged from Galicia Bank, a non–magnetic seamount off the west coast of Spain. The occurrence and distribution of Upper Cretaceous sediments and fossils in the North Atlantic is reviewed, and their significance for the palaeogeography of the North Atlantic during the Upper Cretaceous is considered.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1964

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Arkell, W. J., 1956. Jurassic Geology of the World. Oliver and Boyd, London, 806 pp.Google Scholar
Arrhenius, G., 1963. Pelagic sediments, in The Sea, vol. 3, (ed. Hill, M. N.). 655727. Interscience, New York and London.Google Scholar
Bassler, R. S., 1936. Geology and Palaeontology of the Georges Bank Canyons, Part III. Cretaceous Bryozoa from Georges Bank. Bull. geol. Soc. Amer., 47, 411412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berggren, W. A., 1962. Some planktonic foraminifera from the Maestrichtian and type Danian stages of southern Scandinavia. Stockh. Contr. Geol., 9, 1106.Google Scholar
Black, M., 1962. Fossil Coccospheres from a Tertiary Outcrop on the Continental Slope. Geol. Mag., 99, 123127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, M., Hill, M. N., Laughton, A. S., and Matthews, D. H., 1964. Three nonmagnetic seamounts off the Iberian coast. Quart. J. geol. Soc. Lond., 120, 478517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolli, H. M., 1957. The Genera Praeglobotruncana, Rotalipora, Globotruncana, and Abathomphalus in the Upper Cretaceous of Trinidad, B. W. I. Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., 215, 5160.Google Scholar
Bradley, W. H., 1940. Geology and biology of North Atlantic deep–sea cores between Newfoundland and Ireland. Prof. Pap. U.S. geol. Surv., 196–A, xiiixv.Google Scholar
Bramlette, M. N., and Martini, E., 1964. The great change in calcareous nannoplankton fossils between the Maestrichtian and Danian. Micropaleont., 10, 291322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cloud, P. E., 1955. Physical limits of glauconite formation. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 39, 484492.Google Scholar
Colom, G., 1955. Jurassic–Cretaceous pelagic sediments of the western Mediterranean zone and the Atlantic area. Micropaleont., 1, 109124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cushman, J. A., 1936. Geology and Paleontology of the Georges Bank Canyons, Part IV. Cretaceous and Late Tertiary foraminifera. Bull. geol. Soc., Amer., 47, 413440.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalbiez, F., 1955. The genus Globotruncana in Tunisia. Micropaleont., 1, 161171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dall, W. H., 1925. Teritary fossils dredged off the northeastern coast of North America. Amer. J. Sci., 5th ser., 10, 213218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dietz, R. S., 1963. Collapsing continental rises: an actualistic concept of geosynclines and mountain building. J. Geol., 71, 314333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eardley, A. J., 1951. Structural Geology of North America. Harper, New York, 624 pp.Google Scholar
Engelen, G. B., 1963. Indications for large scale graben formation along the continental margin of the Eastern United States. Geol. en Mijnb., 42, 6575.Google Scholar
Ericson, D. B., Ewing, M., and Heezen, B. C., 1952. Turbidity currents and sediments in North Atlantic. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 36, 489511.Google Scholar
Ericson, D. B., Ewing, M., Wollin, G., and Heezen, B. C., 1961. Atlantic Deep–Sea Sediment Cores. Bull. geol. Soc. Amer., 72, 193286.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewing, M., Ewing, J. I., and Talwant, M., 1964. Sediment distribution in the oceans. Bull. geol. Soc. Amer., 75, 1735.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Francis, T. J. G., 1962. Black Mud Canyon. Deep–Sea Res., 9, 457464.Google Scholar
Funnell, B. M., and Bean, J. K.. Maastrichtian planktonic foraminifera from the eastern Atlantic (in preparation).Google Scholar
Furon, R., 1963. The Geology of Africa. Oliver and Boyd, London, 377 pp.Google Scholar
Grimsdale, T. F., and van Morkhoven, F. P. C. M., 1955. The ratio between Pelagic and Benthonic foraminifera as a means of estimating depth of deposition of sedimentary rocks. Proc. 4th World Petrol. Congr., Sect. 1/D, paper 4, 473491.Google Scholar
Hay, W. W., 1960. The Cretaceous–Tertiary Boundary in the Tampico Embayment. Rept. 21st. Session Internat. geol. Congr., Part V, 7077.Google Scholar
Heezen, B. C., 1962. The Deep–Sea Floor; in Continental Drift, 235288. Academic Press, New York and London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heezen, B. C., Tharp, M., and Ewing, M., 1959. The Floors of the Oceans, I. The North Atlantic. Spec. Pap. geol. Soc. Amer., 65, 122 pp.Google Scholar
Loeblich, A. R., and Tappan, H., 1961. Cretaceous planktonic foraminifera: Part 1—Cenomanian. Micropaleont., 7, 257304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Legrand, H. E., 1961. Summary of geology of Atlantic Coastal Plain. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 45, 15571571.Google Scholar
Legrand, H. E., and Brown, P. M., 1955. Guidebook of excursion in the Coastal Plain of North Carolina. Spec. Publ. N.C. Div. Min. Res., 43 pp.Google Scholar
Miller, E. T., and Ewing, M., 1956. Geomagnetic measurements in the Gulf of Mexico and in the vicinity of Caryn Peak. Geophysics, 21, 406432.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, D. G., and Curray, J. R., 1963. Sedimentary Framework of Continental Terrace off Norfolk, Virginia and Newport, Rhode Island. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 47, 20512054.Google Scholar
Newell, N. D., 1955. Bahamian Platforms. Spec. Pap. geol. Soc. Amer., 62, 303316.Google Scholar
Newell, N. D., and Rigby, J. K., 1957. Geological Studies on the Great Bahama Bank. Spec. Publ. Soc. Econ. Paleont. and Mineral., 5, 1572.Google Scholar
Olsson, R. K., 1960. Foraminifera of latest Cretaceous and earliest Teritary age in the New Jersey Coastal Plain. J. Paleont., 34, 158.Google Scholar
Olsson, R. K., 1963. Latest Cretaceous and earliest Teritary stratigraphy of New Jersey Coastal Plain. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 47, 643665.Google Scholar
Pires, Soares J. M., 1948. Observations géologiques sur les iles du Cap Vert. Bull. Soc. geol. France, ser. 5, 18, 383389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riedel, W. R., and Funnell, B. M., 1964. Tertiary sediment cores and microfossils from the Pacific Ocean floor. Quart. J. geol. Soc. Lond., 120, 305368.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, F. D., 1955. Planktonic foraminifera as indicators of depositional environment. Micropaleont., 1, 147151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sousa, Torres A., and Pires, Soares J. M., 1946. Formações sedimentares do Arquipélago de Cabo Verde. Mem. Minister. Colonias Port., ser. geol., 3, 397 pp.Google Scholar
Spangler, W. B., 1950. Subsurface geology of the Atlantic Coastal Plain of North Carolina. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 34, 100132.Google Scholar
Stephenson, L. W., 1936. Geology and Paleontology of the Georges Bank Canyons, Part II. Upper Cretaceous fossils from Georges Bank (including species from Banquereau, Nova Scotia). Bull. geol. Soc. Amer., 47, 367410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stetson, H. C., 1936. Geology and paleontology of the Georges Bank Canyons, Pt. I. Bull. geol. Soc. Amer., 47, 339366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stetson, H. C., 1949. The Sediments and Stratigraphy of the East Coast Continental Margin; Georges Bank to Norfolk Canyon. Papers in Phys. Oceanogr. and Meteorol., 11, 160.Google Scholar
Swain, F. M., 1947. Two recent wells in coastal plain of North Carolina. Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol., 31, 20542060.Google Scholar
Swain, F. M., 1951. Ostracoda from wells in North Carolina, Part 1, Cenozoic Ostracoda. Prof. Pap. U.S. geol. Surv., 234A, 158.Google Scholar
Swain, F. M., 1952. Ostracoda from wells in North Carolina, part 2, Mesozoic Ostracoda. Prof. Pap. U.S. geol. Surv., 234B, 5993.Google Scholar
Todd, R., and Low, D., 1964. Cenomanian (Cretaceous) Foraminifera from the Puerto Rico Trench. Deep Sea Res., 11, 395414.Google Scholar
Whittard, W. F., 1962. Geology of the Western Approaches of the English Channel; a progress report. Proc. Roy. Soc., A, 265, 395406.Google Scholar
Wiseman, J. D. H., and Ovey, C. D., 1950. Recent Investigations on the Deep–Sea Floor. Proc. Geol. Assoc., 61, 2884.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worzel, J. L., and Harrison, J. C., 1963. Gravity at Sea, in The Sea, vol. 3, (ed. Hill, M. N.), 134174. Interscience, New York and London.Google Scholar