The Neoproterozoic Cryogenian (‘Marinoan’) Ghaub Formation of northwestern Namibia represents an important founding pillar of the Snowball Earth hypothesis and its derivative, the Panglacial Earth hypothesis. These hypotheses assume oceans and continents covered by thick ice, even in the tropics, which caused a very distinct drop in eustatic sea-level. Over time, strongly increased CO2 contents of the atmosphere led to sudden ice melting, very substantial sea-level rise, and strong weathering on the continents associated with the deposition of cap carbonates in the newly ice-free oceans. The ongoing controversy about Snowball-type glaciations in Namibia and elsewhere is reviewed, and other hypotheses (Slushball Earth, Waterbelt Earth, Jormu...
This work was supported by NERC Isotope Geoscience Facility Steering Committee grant IP-1462-0514.Th...
[1] A large (11–15%) negative shift in d13C is observed in shallow water carbonates directly beneath...
The Neoproterozoic Earth underwent at least two severe glaciations, each extending to low paleomagne...
Abstract The Neoproterozoic Cryogenian ('Marinoan') Ghaub Formation of northwestern Namibia represen...
In the late Neoproterozoic (~750 to 635 Ma), geochemical, paleomagnetic, and sedimentological eviden...
The termination of the Marinoan Snowball Earth glacial epoch was one of the most extreme climate eve...
The snowball earth hypothesis is a unified theory accounting for the global distribution of Cryogeni...
The precipitation of Cryogenian ironstones has been attributed to a spectrum of mechanisms ranging f...
The Chuos Formation is a diamictite-dominated succession of Cryogenian age, variously interpreted as...
Paleomagnetic data suggest that the early Cryogenian (Sturtian) glaciation extended to sea level at ...
[1] A large (11–15%) negative shift in d13C is observed in shallow water carbonates directly beneath...
International audienceThe Late Paleozoic Ice Age (LPIA) is the longest-lived and most extreme glacia...
2 The Neoproterozoic glaciogenic deposits have been the centre of much geological debate for almost ...
The Cryogenian Grand Conglomerat Formation (735 Ma) is an association of interbedded glaciogenic, c...
Geological, geophysical, and geochemical data support a theory that Earth experienced several interv...
This work was supported by NERC Isotope Geoscience Facility Steering Committee grant IP-1462-0514.Th...
[1] A large (11–15%) negative shift in d13C is observed in shallow water carbonates directly beneath...
The Neoproterozoic Earth underwent at least two severe glaciations, each extending to low paleomagne...
Abstract The Neoproterozoic Cryogenian ('Marinoan') Ghaub Formation of northwestern Namibia represen...
In the late Neoproterozoic (~750 to 635 Ma), geochemical, paleomagnetic, and sedimentological eviden...
The termination of the Marinoan Snowball Earth glacial epoch was one of the most extreme climate eve...
The snowball earth hypothesis is a unified theory accounting for the global distribution of Cryogeni...
The precipitation of Cryogenian ironstones has been attributed to a spectrum of mechanisms ranging f...
The Chuos Formation is a diamictite-dominated succession of Cryogenian age, variously interpreted as...
Paleomagnetic data suggest that the early Cryogenian (Sturtian) glaciation extended to sea level at ...
[1] A large (11–15%) negative shift in d13C is observed in shallow water carbonates directly beneath...
International audienceThe Late Paleozoic Ice Age (LPIA) is the longest-lived and most extreme glacia...
2 The Neoproterozoic glaciogenic deposits have been the centre of much geological debate for almost ...
The Cryogenian Grand Conglomerat Formation (735 Ma) is an association of interbedded glaciogenic, c...
Geological, geophysical, and geochemical data support a theory that Earth experienced several interv...
This work was supported by NERC Isotope Geoscience Facility Steering Committee grant IP-1462-0514.Th...
[1] A large (11–15%) negative shift in d13C is observed in shallow water carbonates directly beneath...
The Neoproterozoic Earth underwent at least two severe glaciations, each extending to low paleomagne...