Rosell-Mele, A. et al. (2011): Alkenones and coccoliths in ice-rafted debris during the last glacial maximum in the North Atlantic; implications for the use of U (super K) (sub 37) ' as a sea surface temperature proxy

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 162
ODP 162 986
Identifier:
2012-004888
georefid

10.1002/jqs.1488
doi

Creator:
Rosell-Mele, A.
Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Institut de Ciencia i Tecnologia Ambientals, Bellaterra, Spain
author

Balestra, B.
Universita degli Studi di Firenze, Italy
author

Kornilova, O.
University of Durham, United Kingdom
author

McClymont, E. L.
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
author

Russell, M.
author

Monechi, S.
author

Troelstra, S.
author

Ziveri, P.
author

Identification:
Alkenones and coccoliths in ice-rafted debris during the last glacial maximum in the North Atlantic; implications for the use of U (super K) (sub 37) ' as a sea surface temperature proxy
2011
JQS. Journal of Quaternary Science
John Wiley and Sons for the Quaternary Research Association, Chichester, United Kingdom
26
6
657-664
The U (super K) (sub 37) ' index has proven to be a robust proxy to estimate past sea surface temperatures (SSTs) over a range of time scales, but like any other proxy, it has uncertainties. For instance, in reconstructions of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) in the northern North Atlantic, U (super K) (sub 37) ' indicates higher temperatures than those derived from foraminiferal proxies. Here we evaluate whether such warm glacial estimates are caused by the advection of reworked alkenones in ice-rafted debris (IRD) to deep-sea sediments. We have quantified both coccolith assemblages and alkenones in sediments from glaciogenic debris flows in the continental margins of the northern North Atlantic, and from a deep-sea core from the Reykjanes Ridge. Certain debris flow deposits in the North Atlantic were generated by the presence of massive ice-sheets in the past, and their associated ice streams. Such deposits are composed of the same materials that were present in the IRD at the time they were generated. We conclude that ice rafting from some locations was a transport pathway to the deep sea floor of reworked alkenones and pre-Quaternary coccolith species during glacial stages, but that not all of the IRD contained alkenones, even when reworked coccoliths were present. We speculate that the ratio of reworked coccoliths to alkenone concentration might be useful to infer whether significant reworked alkenone inputs from IRD did occur at a particular site in the glacial North Atlantic. We also observe that alkenones in some of the debris flows contain a colder signal than estimated for LGM sediments in the northern North Atlantic. This is also clear in the deep-sea core studied where the warmest intervals do not correspond to the intervals with large inputs of reworked coccoliths or IRD. We conclude that any possible bias to U (super K) (sub 37) ' estimates associated with reworked alkenones is not necessarily towards higher values, and that the high SST anomalies for the LGM are unlikely to be the result of a bias caused by IRD inputs. Abstract Copyright (2010), John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:77.2025
West:-30.2400East: 10.5200
South:58.5600

Quaternary geology; algae; alkenones; Arctic Ocean; Arctic region; Atlantic Ocean; Baffin Bay; Barents Sea; biomarkers; Cenozoic; Coccolithophoraceae; cores; debris; deep-sea environment; glacial transport; Greenland; ice rafting; ketones; Labrador Sea; last glacial maximum; Leg 162; lithostratigraphy; marine environment; marine sediments; microfossils; North Atlantic; North Sea; Norwegian Sea; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 986; organic compounds; paleoenvironment; Plantae; Pleistocene; Quaternary; reworking; Reykjanes Ridge; Scoresby Sund; sediments; transport; upper Pleistocene;

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