Incarbona, Alessandro et al. (2011): Surface and deep water conditions in the Sicily Channel (central Mediterranean) at the time of sapropel S5 deposition
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
ODP 160 ODP 160 963
Identifier:
ID:
2011-082828
Type:
georefid
ID:
10.1016/j.palaeo.2011.04.030
Type:
doi
Creator:
Name:
Incarbona, Alessandro
Affiliation:
Universita di Palermo, Dipartimento di Geologia e Geodesia, Palermo, Italy
Role:
author
Name:
Sprovieri, Mario
Affiliation:
Consiglio Nazionale delle Richerche, Italy
Role:
author
Name:
Lirer, Fabrizio
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Name:
Sprovieri, Rodolfo
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
Surface and deep water conditions in the Sicily Channel (central Mediterranean) at the time of sapropel S5 deposition
Year:
2011
Source:
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Publisher:
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Volume:
306
Issue:
3-4
Pages:
243-248
Abstract:
New centennial-scale data of benthic foraminifera assemblages and of stable isotopes of foraminifera shells from the Sicily Channel, representative of surface and bottom waters, over the interval between about 140 and 110 kyr BP, are presented. During this period anoxia developed on the eastern Mediterranean basin and sapropel S5 deposited. Although anoxic sediments have not been deposited in the Sicily Channel, this area is strategic to study the character of intermediate waters, whose chemical-physical properties strongly precondition the eastern Mediterranean deep water formation. So far, no data from these water masses have been obtained, apart from the isotopic composition of shells of the planktonic foraminifera species Neogloboquadrina pachyderma which lives at about 200 m depth, thus quite far from the intermediate water core. We conclude that, although with a reduced rate, the flowing of intermediate waters coming from the eastern basin, together with the surface water masses with a clear western affinity, implies the maintenance of an anti-estuarine circulation pattern across the Sicily Channel and in the Mediterranean Sea, also during one of the most severe episodes of anoxia of the Late Pleistocene. Abstract Copyright (2011) Elsevier, B.V.
Language:
English
Genre:
Serial
Rights:
URL:
Coverage: Geographic coordinates: North:37.0202 West:13.1046 East:
13.1046 South:37.0202
Keywords: Quaternary geology; benthic taxa; C-13/C-12; carbon; Cenozoic; East Mediterranean; Foraminifera; geochemistry; Invertebrata; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 160; marine sediments; Mediterranean Sea; microfossils; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 963; organic compounds; oxygen; paleo-oceanography; paleocirculation; Protista; Quaternary; sapropel; sediments; stable isotopes; Strait of Sicily; upper Quaternary;
.