𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Changes in deep and intermediate water properties in the western North Atlantic during marine isotope stages 11–12: evidence from ODP Leg 172

✍ Scribed by Robert C Thunell; Maria S Poli; Domenico Rio


Book ID
104158050
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
842 KB
Volume
189
Category
Article
ISSN
0025-3227

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The interval of time represented by marine isotope stages 11 and 12 (V360^470 ka) contains what may be the most extreme glacial and interglacial climate conditions of the Late Pleistocene. It has been suggested that sea level rose by V160 m at the termination of glacial stage 12. This is 30% greater than the sea level rise that followed the most recent glacial maximum. There have been few detailed studies of the unique conditions that existed during the stage 11^12 time period because of the lack of high-quality core material. This problem has been addressed by the collection of high deposition rate cores from sediment drifts in the western North Atlantic during Ocean Drilling Project Leg 172. Benthic foraminiferal N 13 C data from cores collected between V4600 and 1800 m were used to reconstruct bathymetric gradients in deep and intermediate water properties for selected time slices during this glacialî nterglacial cycle. During glacial stage 12, the deep western North Atlantic was filled by a water mass that was more nutrient-enriched than modern Antarctic Bottom Water. Above 2000 m, a more nutrient-depleted water mass existed during this glacial stage. Such an intermediate water mass has been described for more recent glacial periods and presumably forms in a more proximate region of the North Atlantic. Interglacial stage 11 water mass properties closely resemble those of the present-day western North Atlantic. A nutrient-depleted water mass (N 13 C of 0.751 .0x), similar to modern North Atlantic Deep Water existed between 3500 and 2000 m. This was underlain by a water mass with lower N 13 C values ( 6 0.75x) that probably was derived from a southern source. Using Leg 172 data, along with previously published results from the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, we estimate a mean global N 13 C change of 0.95x from stage 12 to stage 11. This is twice the whole ocean N 13 C change reported for the transition from the last glacial maximum to the Holocene.