Abstract

From late Jurassic to early Cenozoic time the calcite compensation depth (CCD) in the world oceans was shallow (above 4000 m). About 40 m.y. ago it dropped to about 4500 m, sharply in the Indian and Pacific oceans and gradually in the Atlantic. In the early Miocene it began to rise again, reaching a very shallow peak 10–15 m.y. ago, then descended to its present deep position. In the Pacific, fluctuations during the last 40 m.y. appear to result mainly from changes in bottom-water structure related to the progressive glaciation of the Antarctic and Arctic regions. Analogous explanations hold for CCD fluctuations during this period in the Indian and Atlantic oceans. The very shallow CCD prior to about 50 m.y., on the other hand, cannot be explained in this manner but must be attributed either to a low input of calcium in the oceans from deeply weathered continents or, more probably, to large changes in the distribution of carbonate deposition between shallow and deep seas.

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