Search Results - "FIELDING, CHRISTOPHER R."

Refine Results
  1. 1

    Stratigraphic architecture of the Cenozoic succession in the McMurdo Sound region, Antarctica: An archive of polar palaeoenvironmental change in a failed rift setting by Fielding, Christopher R.

    Published in Sedimentology (01-01-2018)
    “…The Victoria Land Basin forms part of the failed West Antarctic Rift, and preserves a Cenozoic succession up to 4 km thick that records the onset of Cenozoic…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Age and pattern of the southern high-latitude continental end-Permian extinction constrained by multiproxy analysis by Fielding, Christopher R., Frank, Tracy D., McLoughlin, Stephen, Vajda, Vivi, Mays, Chris, Tevyaw, Allen P., Winguth, Arne, Winguth, Cornelia, Nicoll, Robert S., Bocking, Malcolm, Crowley, James L.

    Published in Nature communications (23-01-2019)
    “…Past studies of the end-Permian extinction (EPE), the largest biotic crisis of the Phanerozoic, have not resolved the timing of events in southern…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Lethal microbial blooms delayed freshwater ecosystem recovery following the end-Permian extinction by Mays, Chris, McLoughlin, Stephen, Frank, Tracy D., Fielding, Christopher R., Slater, Sam M., Vajda, Vivi

    Published in Nature communications (17-09-2021)
    “…Harmful algal and bacterial blooms linked to deforestation, soil loss and global warming are increasingly frequent in lakes and rivers. We demonstrate that…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Acme and demise of the late Palaeozoic ice age: A view from the southeastern margin of Gondwana by Frank, Tracy D., Shultis, Aaron I., Fielding, Christopher R.

    “…Palaeoenvironmental reconstructions from across the globe indicate that the climatic and oceanographic changes that accompanied the Permian transition from…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  5. 5

    Mercury evidence from southern Pangea terrestrial sections for end-Permian global volcanic effects by Shen, Jun, Chen, Jiubin, Yu, Jianxin, Algeo, Thomas J., Smith, Roger M. H., Botha, Jennifer, Frank, Tracy D., Fielding, Christopher R., Ward, Peter D., Mather, Tamsin A.

    Published in Nature communications (03-01-2023)
    “…The latest Permian mass extinction (LPME) was triggered by magmatism of the Siberian Traps Large Igneous Province (STLIP), which left an extensive record of…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  6. 6

    Onset of the Late Paleozoic Glacioeustatic Signal: A Stratigraphic Record from the Paleotropical, Oil-Shale-Bearing Big Snowy Trough of Central Montana, U.S.A by Ahern, Justin P., Fielding, Christopher R.

    Published in Journal of sedimentary research (01-08-2019)
    “…In the Big Snowy Mountains of central Montana, USA, late Visean to Bashkirian strata preserve a nearly complete, but poorly documented, paleotropical…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  7. 7

    Sedimentology of the continental end‐Permian extinction event in the Sydney Basin, eastern Australia by Fielding, Christopher R., Frank, Tracy D., Tevyaw, Allen P., Savatic, Katarina, Vajda, Vivi, McLoughlin, Stephen, Mays, Chris, Nicoll, Robert S., Bocking, Malcolm, Crowley, James L., Ghinassi, Massimiliano

    Published in Sedimentology (01-01-2021)
    “…Upper Permian to Lower Triassic coastal plain successions of the Sydney Basin in eastern Australia have been investigated in outcrop and continuous drillcores…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  8. 8

    Stratigraphic imprint of the late Palaeozoic ice age in eastern Australia; a record of alternating glacial and nonglacial climate regime by Fielding, Christopher R, Frank, Tracy D, Birgenheier, Lauren P, Rygel, Michael C, Jones, Andrew T, Roberts, John

    Published in Journal of the Geological Society (01-01-2008)
    “…Stratigraphic and sedimentological data from New South Wales and Queensland, eastern Australia, indicate that the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age comprised at least…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  9. 9

    CO₂-Forced Climate and Vegetation Instability During Late Paleozoic Deglaciation by Montañez, Isabel P, Tabor, Neil J, Niemeier, Deb, DiMichele, William A, Frank, Tracy D, Fielding, Christopher R, Isbell, John L, Birgenheier, Lauren P, Rygel, Michael C

    “…The late Paleozoic deglaciation is the vegetated Earth's only recorded icehouse-to-greenhouse transition, yet the climate dynamics remain enigmatic. By using…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12

    Asymmetry in Holocene river deltas: Patterns, controls, and stratigraphic effects by Korus, Jesse T., Fielding, Christopher R.

    Published in Earth-science reviews (01-11-2015)
    “…Understanding controls on sediment distribution in river deltas is paramount to predicting facies relationships and stratal architecture. Most classifications…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  13. 13
  14. 14

    Planform and facies variability in asymmetric deltas; facies analysis and depositional architecture of the Turonian Ferron Sandstone in the western Henry Mountains, south-central Utah, U.S.A by Fielding, Christopher R

    Published in Journal of sedimentary research (01-05-2010)
    “…Facies analysis of the Upper Cretaceous (Turonian) Ferron Sandstone in the western Henry Mountains of south-central Utah, U.S.A., indicates sediment…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  15. 15

    Onset of the glacioeustatic signal recording late Palaeozoic Gondwanan ice growth: New data from palaeotropical East Fife, Scotland by Fielding, Christopher R., Frank, Tracy D.

    “…Estimates as to the timing of initial Gondwanan ice growth during the late Mississippian onset of the late Palaeozoic Ice Age vary among different studies…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  16. 16

    Anatomy of falling-stage deltas in the Turonian Ferron Sandstone of the western Henry Mountains Syncline, Utah: Growth faults, slope failures and mass transport complexes by Fielding, Christopher R.

    Published in Sedimentology (01-01-2015)
    “…Falling‐stage deltas are predicted by sequence stratigraphic models, yet few reliable criteria are available to diagnose falling‐stage deltaic systems in…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  17. 17

    Analysis of coastal-plain fluvial architecture and high-frequency stacking patterns in the Upper Cretaceous Masuk Formation, Utah, U.S.A.; climate-driven cyclicity? by Hess, Aaron M, Fielding, Christopher R

    Published in Journal of sedimentary research (01-10-2020)
    “…Most sequence stratigraphic models are based on the premise that relative changes in sea level (RSL) control stacking patterns in continental-margin settings…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  18. 18

    Sequence stratigraphy of the late Desmoinesian to early Missourian (Pennsylvanian) succession of southern Illinois; insights into controls on stratal architecture in an icehouse period of Earth history by Fielding, Christopher R, Nelson, W. John, Elrick, Scott D

    Published in Journal of sedimentary research (01-02-2020)
    “…Uncertainty persists over whether repetitive stratal rhythms in the Pennsylvanian of Euramerica (so-called "cyclothems") were externally forced, in all…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  19. 19

    Unit bar architecture in a highly‐variable fluvial discharge regime: Examples from the Burdekin River, Australia by Herbert, Christopher M., Alexander, Jan, Amos, Kathryn J., Fielding, Christopher R., Ghinassi, Massimiliano

    Published in Sedimentology (01-01-2020)
    “…Unit bars are relatively large bedforms that develop in rivers over a wide range of climatic regimes. Unit bars formed within the highly‐variable discharge…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article
  20. 20

    Recognizing products of palaeoclimate fluctuation in the fluvial stratigraphic record: An example from the Pennsylvanian to Lower Permian of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia by Allen, Jonathan P., Fielding, Christopher R., Gibling, Martin R., Rygel, Michael C.

    Published in Sedimentology (01-08-2014)
    “…Tectonics and climate are the major extrinsic upstream controls on both the external and internal architectures of fluvial channels. While the role of…”
    Get full text
    Journal Article