Studer, Anja S. et al. (2012): Enhanced stratification and seasonality in the subarctic Pacific upon Northern Hemisphere glaciation; new evidence from diatom-bound nitrogen isotopes, alkenones and archaeal tetraethers

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 145
ODP 145 882
Identifier:
2013-013502
georefid

10.1016/j.epsl.2012.07.029
doi

Creator:
Studer, Anja S.
ETH Zuerich, Department of Earth Sciences, Geological Institute, Zurich, Switzerland
author

Martinez-Garcia, Alfredo
Princeton University, United States
author

Jaccard, Samuel L.
Potsdam University, Germany
author

Girault, France E.
author

Sigman, Daniel M.
author

Haug, Gerald H.
author

Identification:
Enhanced stratification and seasonality in the subarctic Pacific upon Northern Hemisphere glaciation; new evidence from diatom-bound nitrogen isotopes, alkenones and archaeal tetraethers
2012
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Netherlands
351-352
84-94
Coincident with the intensification of Northern Hemisphere Glaciation (NHG) around 2.73 million years (Ma) ago, sediment cores from both the open subarctic North Pacific and the Antarctic indicate a rapid decline in diatom opal accumulation flux to the seabed, representing one of the most abrupt and dramatic changes in the marine sediment record associated with the development of Pleistocene glacial cycles. In the North Pacific, bulk sediment nitrogen isotope data and alkenone-derived sea surface temperature (SST) estimates suggest that the productivity decline was driven by reduced exchange between surface and deep water, due to weaker wind-driven upwelling and/or a strengthening of the halocline (i.e. "stratification"). In this study of the 2.73Ma transition at Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 882 in the western subarctic North Pacific, diatom-bound nitrogen isotopes (delta (super 15) N (sub db) ), alkenone mass accumulation rate, and alkenone- and archaeal tetraether-based SST reconstructions support the stratification hypothesis, indicating perennially lower export production, generally higher nitrate consumption, and greater inter-seasonal variation in SST after the 2.73Ma transition. In addition, the delta (super 15) N (sub db) of large and small size fractions of Coscinodiscus spp. suggest that these diatoms grew mostly during the spring bloom during the late Pliocene, switching to their current fall-to-winter growth period at the 2.73Ma transition; this view is consistent with their decline in dominance and provides further evidence for increased stratification (reduced vertical exchange) in the North Pacific after 2.73Ma. The delta (super 15) N (sub db) data indicate that, over the nearly equal 100kyr period after the 2.73Ma transition studied here, nitrate consumption did not reach late Pleistocene ice age levels and that nitrate consumption in post-2.73Ma warm stages was similar to that before the transition, even though productivity was greatly reduced. We tentatively attribute this to relatively weak dust-borne iron inputs in the early post-2.73Ma period. Abstract Copyright (2012) Elsevier, B.V.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:50.2148
West:167.3600East: 167.3600
South:50.2148

Stratigraphy; algae; algal blooms; alkenones; Archaea; Cenozoic; cores; Detroit Seamount; diatoms; Emperor Seamounts; framework silicates; glaciation; isotope ratios; isotopes; ketones; Leg 145; microfossils; N-15/N-14; Neogene; nitrates; nitrogen; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 882; opal; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; Plantae; Pleistocene; Pliocene; productivity; Quaternary; sea-surface temperature; seasonal variations; silica minerals; silicates; stable isotopes; stratification; Tertiary; upwelling; West Pacific;

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