P
Paul R. Renne
Researcher at Berkeley Geochronology Center
Publications - 374
Citations - 32299
Paul R. Renne is an academic researcher from Berkeley Geochronology Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Basalt & Lava. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 363 publications receiving 29354 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul R. Renne include University of California, Berkeley & Planetary Science Institute.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
40Ar/39Ar age of a young rejuvenation basalt flow: Implications for the duration of volcanism and the timing of carbonate platform development during the quaternary on Kaua'i, Hawaiian Islands
TL;DR: A basalt flow within this succession has a 40Ar/39Ar step-heating plateau age of 375 ± 4 ka as mentioned in this paper, which is interpreted as the eruption age, indicating that rejuvenation volcanism persisted on Kaua‘i for considerably longer than previously thought.
Journal ArticleDOI
Magnetic properties of ilmenite-hematite single crystals from the Ecstall pluton near Prince Rupert, British Columbia
Sarah J. Brownlee,Sarah J. Brownlee,Joshua M. Feinberg,Takeshi Kasama,Richard J. Harrison,Gary R. Scott,Paul R. Renne,Paul R. Renne +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated changes in the rock magnetic properties associated with a reheating event by examining isolated grains of intergrown ilmenite and hematite, the primary paleomagnetic recorder in the Ecstall pluton.
Journal ArticleDOI
Palaeoenvironmental and palaeohydrological variability of mountain areas in the central Mediterranean region: A 190 ka-long chronicle from the independently dated Fucino palaeolake record (central Italy)
Giorgio Mannella,Biagio Giaccio,G. Zanchetta,Eleonora Regattieri,Eleonora Regattieri,Elizabeth M. Niespolo,Elizabeth M. Niespolo,A. Pereira,A. Pereira,A. Pereira,Paul R. Renne,Paul R. Renne,Sébastien Nomade,Niklas Leicher,Natale Perchiazzi,Bernd Wagner +15 more
TL;DR: In this article, a tephrochronologically constrained framework of past environmental and climatic changes in the central Mediterranean region during the last ca. 190 ka is presented based on a high-resolution, multi-proxy study of a sedimentary record retrieved from the Fucino Basin lacustrine succession, central Italy, in 2015.
Journal ArticleDOI
The expansion of the Acheulian to the Southeastern Ethiopian Highlands: Insights from the new early Pleistocene site-complex of Melka Wakena
Erella Hovers,Erella Hovers,Tegenu Gossa,Asfawossen Asrat,Elizabeth M. Niespolo,Elizabeth M. Niespolo,Elizabeth M. Niespolo,Angesom Resom,Paul R. Renne,Paul R. Renne,Ravid Ekshtain,Gadi Herzlinger,Gadi Herzlinger,Natnael Ketema,Bienvenido Martínez-Navarro +14 more
TL;DR: Melka Wakena as discussed by the authors is a newly discovered site-complex on the Southeastern Ethiopian Highlands (SEH) (>2300m above mean sea level) just east of the central sector of the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER), where eight archaeological and two paleontological localities were discovered to date.
Journal ArticleDOI
Importance of titanohematite in detrital remanent magnetizations of strata spanning the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, Hell Creek region, Montana
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used low-temperature magnetometry and high temperature susceptibility experiments to identify intermediate titanohematite (i.e., Fe2-yTiyO3 with 0.53-0.63) in sedimentary deposits.