Yu, Pai-Sen et al. (2012): Influences of extratropical water masses on Equatorial Pacific cold tongue variability during the past 160 ka as revealed by faunal evidence of planktic foraminifers

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 202
ODP 202 1240
Identifier:
2013-044118
georefid

10.1002/jqs.2582
doi

Creator:
Yu, Pai-Sen
National Taiwan Ocean University, Institute of Applied Geosciences, Keelung, Taiwan
author

Kienast, Markus
Hokkaido University, Japan
author

Chen, Min-Te
Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
author

Cacho, Isabel
University of Exeter, United Kingdom
author

Flores, Jos Abel
Dalhousie University, Canada
author

Mohtadi, Mahyar
University of Barcelona, Spain
author

Mix, Alan C.
University of Salamanca, Spain
author

Identification:
Influences of extratropical water masses on Equatorial Pacific cold tongue variability during the past 160 ka as revealed by faunal evidence of planktic foraminifers
2012
In: Chen, Min-Te (editor), Yamamoto, Masanobu (editor), Sun Youbin (editor), Turney, Chris (editor), Western Pacific paleoceanography and paleoclimatology; land-sea linkage and variability of centennial to orbital scales
John Wiley and Sons for the Quaternary Research Association, Chichester, United Kingdom
27
9
921-931
Glacial cooling ( approximately 1-5 degrees C) in the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) cold tongue is often attributed to increased equatorial upwelling, stronger advection from the Peru-Chile Current (PCC), and to the more remote subpolar southeastern Pacific water mass. However, evidence is scarce for identifying unambiguously which process plays a more important role in driving the large glacial cooling in the EEP. To address this question, here we adopt a faunal calibration approach using planktic foraminifers with a new compilation of coretop data from the eastern Pacific, and present new downcore variation data of fauna assemblage and estimated sea surface temperatures (SSTs) for the past 160 ka (Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6) from ODP Site 1240 in the EEP. With significant improvement achieved by adding more coretop data from the eastern boundary current, our downcore calibration results indicate that most of the glacial cooling episodes over the past 160 ka in the EEP are attributable to increased influence from the subpolar water mass from high latitudes of the southern Pacific. By applying this new calibration of the fauna SST transfer function to a latitudinal transect of eastern Pacific (EP) cores, we find that the subpolar water mass has been a major dynamic contributor to EEP cold tongue cooling since MIS 6. Abstract Copyright (2010), John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:0.0100
West:-82.2800East: -82.2800
South:0.0100

Quaternary geology; Cenozoic; cores; currents; East Pacific; Equatorial Pacific; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; Leg 202; marine sediments; microfossils; MIS 6; ocean circulation; ocean currents; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1240; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; Panama Basin; planktonic taxa; Protista; Quaternary; reconstruction; sea-surface temperature; sediments; upper Quaternary;

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