Cannariato, Kevin G. and Kennett, James P. (1999): Climatically related millennial-scale fluctuations in strength of California margin oxygen-minimum zone during the past 60 k.y.
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
ODP 146 ODP 167 ODP 167 1017 ODP 146 893
Identifier:
ID:
1999-070123
Type:
georefid
ID:
10.1130/0091-7613(1999)027<0975:CRMSFI>2.3.CO;2
Type:
doi
Creator:
Name:
Cannariato, Kevin G.
Affiliation:
University of California at Santa Barbara, Geological Sciences, Santa Barbara, CA, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Kennett, James P.
Affiliation:
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
Climatically related millennial-scale fluctuations in strength of California margin oxygen-minimum zone during the past 60 k.y.
Year:
1999
Source:
Geology (Boulder)
Publisher:
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
Volume:
27
Issue:
11
Pages:
975-978
Abstract:
A strong oxygen-minimum zone (OMZ) currently exists along the California margin because of a combination of high surface-water productivity and poor intermediate-water ventilation. However, the strength of this OMZ may have been sensitive to late Quaternary ocean-circulation and productivity changes along the margin. Although sediment-lamination strength has been used to trace ocean-oxygenation changes in the past, oxygen levels on the open margin are not sufficiently low for laminations to form. In these regions, benthic foraminifera are highly sensitive monitors of OMZ strength, and their fossil assemblages can be used to reconstruct past fluctuations. Benthic foraminiferal assemblages from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1017, off Point Conception, exhibit major and rapid faunal oscillations in response to late Quaternary millennial-scale climate change (Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles) on the open central California margin. These faunal oscillations can be correlated to and are apparently synchronous with those reported from Santa Barbara Basin. Together they represent major fluctuations in the strength of the OMZ which were intimately associated with global climate change--weakening, perhaps disappearing, during cool periods and strengthening during warm periods. These rapid, major OMZ strength fluctuations were apparently widespread on the Northeast Pacific margin and must have influenced the evolution of margin biota and altered biogeochemical cycles with potential feedbacks to global climate change.
Language:
English
Genre:
Serial
Rights:
URL:
Coverage: Geographic coordinates: North:34.3500 West:-121.1500 East:
-120.0211 South:34.1715
Keywords: Quaternary geology; benthic taxa; California; Cenozoic; climate change; continental margin; cycles; East Pacific; Foraminifera; Invertebrata; Leg 146; Leg 167; marine environment; marine sediments; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; ocean circulation; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1017; ODP Site 893; oxygen; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; paleocirculation; paleoclimatology; paleoecology; Point Conception; Protista; Quaternary; Santa Barbara County California; sediments; United States; upper Quaternary;
.