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Distribution of biogenic silica and quartz in recent deep-sea sediments

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TLDR
In this paper, all available quartz and biogenic silica concentrations from deep-sea surface sediments were intercalibrated, plotted, and contoured on a calcium-carbonate-free basis.
Abstract
All available quartz and biogenic silica concentrations from deep-sea surface sediments were intercalibrated, plotted, and contoured on a calcium-carbonate-free basis. The maps show highest concentrations of biogenic silica (opal) along the west African coast, along equatorial divergences in all oceans, and at the Polar Front in the southern Indian Ocean. These are all areas where upwelling is strong and there is high biological productivity. Quartz in pelagic sediments deposited far from land is generally eolian in origin. Its distribution reflects dominant wind systems in the Pacific, but in much of the Atlantic and Indian oceans the distribution pattern is strongly modified by turbidite deposition and bottom current processes.

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A simple method for the rapid determination of biogenic opal in pelagic marine sediments

TL;DR: In this paper, a single extraction of silica into 2 M Na2CO3 solution at 85°C for 5 h was used to determine the biogenic opal content in marine sediments.
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The paleoclimatic record provided by eolian deposition in the deep sea: The geologic history of wind

David K. Rea
TL;DR: The most important change in Cenozoic atmospheric circulation was a severalfold reduction in wind intensity that occurred at the time of the Paleocene-Eocene boundary as mentioned in this paper.
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Forcing mechanisms of the Indian Ocean monsoon

TL;DR: In contrast to the results of general circulation models, these geological data suggest that the climate change associated with variability in global ice volume is not a primary factor in determining the strength and timing of the monsoon winds as mentioned in this paper.
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Coccolithophorid blooms in the global ocean

TL;DR: The global distribution pattern of coccolithophrid blooms was mapped in order to ascertain the prevalence of these blooms in the world oceans and to estimate their worldwide production of CaCO3 and dimethyl sulfide (DMS) as mentioned in this paper.
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