Definition of Glacioeustatic. Meaning of Glacioeustatic. Synonyms of Glacioeustatic

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Glacioeustatic. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Glacioeustatic and, of course, Glacioeustatic synonyms and on the right images related to the word Glacioeustatic.

Definition of Glacioeustatic

No result for Glacioeustatic. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Glacioeustatic from wikipedia

- in 1958. During the Pleistocene, the Bohai Sea experienced numerous glacioeustatic transgressions and regressions, as evidenced by sediment cores sampled...
- water supply from rivers and allowed its desiccation.[citation needed] Glacioeustatic sea level falls with an amplitude of around 10 metres (33 ft) that began...
- Viséan and earliest Serpukhovian, the LPIA proper began. A start in glacioeustatic sea level changes is recorded from Idaho at around this time. The first...
- during the much less extinction-inducing Pleistocene glaciations, made glacioeustatic marine regression especially hazardous to marine life. Falling sea levels...
- of glacioeustatic cycles during the Katian, as do conodont apatite δ18O fluctuations from Kentucky and Quebec that likely reflect glacioeustatic sea...
- between glacial and interglacial periods. Processes of eustasy lead to glacioeustatic sea level fluctuations due to changes of the water volume in the oceans...
- Corrochano, Diego; Barba, Pedro; Colmenero, Juan R. (March 2012). "Glacioeustatic cyclicity of a Pennsylvanian carbonate platform in a foreland basin...
- carbon buildup on the Amazon deep sea fan is controlled by changes in glacioeustatic sea-levels. Additionally, only 7 to 12% of the terrestrial organic carbon...
- Journal of the Geological Society, 165. The magnitude of Late Paleozoic glacioeustatic fluctuations: a synthesis (2008) Journal of Sedimentary Research, 78...
- Pekar, Stephen F.; Audrey Hucks; Michael Fuller; Shawna Li (2005). "Glacioeustatic changes in the early and middle Eocene (51–42 Ma): Shallow-water stratigraphy...