𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Recent and Late Quaternary pteropod preservation on the Pakistan shelf and continental slope

✍ Scribed by R. Klöcker; R. Henrich


Book ID
104043436
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
491 KB
Volume
231
Category
Article
ISSN
0025-3227

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Fifteen surface sediment samples from the Pakistan shelf and upper continental slope and a Late Quaternary high-sedimentation rate core (573 m water depth, Pakistan continental margin) have been analysed to improve the understanding of the factors influencing pteropod preservation. The aragonite compensation depth (ACD) is located at 250-400 m water depth, which corroborates previous observations of a very shallow ACD in the northern Arabian Sea. With the exception of the Hab transect off Karachi, the ACD coincides with the upper boundary of the OMZ located at 250 m water depth. The shell preservation index of the pteropod Limacina inflata (LDX) was applied on six surface sediment samples showing good to very good preservation (LDX: 2.2 to 1.3).

The 30 000 yr long record of sediment core SO90 137KA is characterized by alternations between bioturbated and laminated sediments. Bioturbated sediments occurring in the Early Holocene, Younger Dryas and time-equivalents of Heinrich events contain well to perfectly preserved tests of L. inflata (LDX: 2.1-0.2), whereas only traces of pteropods are found in laminated intervals.

The close linkage of pteropod preservation in the surface sediments and in core 137KA to well-oxygenated conditions can be explained by repetitive intermediate water formation in the Arabian Sea down to at least 600 m water depth in times of enhanced NE monsoons during stadials and H-equivalents. Low amounts of pteropods in laminated sediments (interstadials, Late Holocene) and in the present-day oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) indicate a weak NE monsoon, stable OMZ and shallow ACD.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Late Quaternary cycles of mangrove devel
✍ John Grindrod; Patrick Moss; Sander Van Der Kaars 📂 Article 📅 1999 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 329 KB

Mangrove communities in the Australian tropics presently occur as narrow belts of vegetation in estuaries and on sheltered, muddy coasts. Palynological data from continentalshelf and deep-sea cores indicate a long-term cyclical component of mangrove development and decline at a regional scale, which