Paleonutrient and productivity records from the subarctic North Pacific

DOI

Our study addresses fundamental questions of the mode and timing of orbital and millennialscale changes in the meridional overturning circulation (MOC) of the subarctic North Pacific. Particular concerns are the vertical mixing, the present and past abundance of nutrients in surface waters despite strong stratification, and the North Pacific - North Atlantic seesaw of oscillations in sea surface temperature (SST). We do this by generating and interpreting multiple records for glacial terminations I-V down two long piston cores, one each from the western and eastern subarctic Pacific. Chlorins and biogenic opal are proxies for surface water productivity; delta 13C of epibenthic foraminifera is a record of deepwater ventilation; and the delta 13C of N. pachyderma sin. is a tracer of nutrients in subsurface waters that extend up to the sea surface during times of vertical mixing. The degree of mixing is traced by pairing SST and delta 18O records of planktic surface and subsurface (pycnocline) dwellers. Tight age control is deduced from a suite of age-calibrated 14C plateau boundaries for Termination I, and benthic ä18O, and geomagnetic events for the last 800 kyr. 14C paleoreservoir ages record the ages of surface and deep waters to uncover short-term changes in MOC over Termination I. We have defined a standard sequence of short-term productivity events for Termination I and subsequent interglacials, also evident during Terminations II to V over the last 450 ka. The peak-glacial regime of stable stratification and low productivity terminated, together with the end of ice rafting and melting, near 17 ka, ~2000 yr after the onset of Termination I. Pulses of vertical mixing and incursion of warm surface waters from the subtropics followed. Convected young water masses finally penetrated down to 2350 m water depth after a further 1500 yr, at ~14.5 ka, significantly improving bottom water ventilation through the late deglacial and earliest interglacial. Mixing with upwelled nutrients from the pycnocline induced shortterm maxima in algal production of chlorins and biogenic opal near 17-15 and 15-12 ka, respectively. Deglacial meltwater incursions in the Aleutian Current and silica input from North American rivers also promoted East Pacific productivity after 15.5 ka. Productivity decreased during the late deglacial and early interglacial, coeval with an exceptional peak in CaCO3 preservation caused by both low organic flux and well ventilated deepwater. Subsequently, low-salinity and cool surface waters and in turn, stratification were gradually restored. A second, opal-dominated productivity maximum marked the ends of interglacials. The deglacial pulses of vertical mixing around 17-11 ka imply an important contribution of the North Pacific to the coeval release of oceanic CO2 into the atmosphere and support the east-west seesaw model of climate change.

Supplement to: Gebhardt, Holger; Sarnthein, Michael; Grootes, Pieter Meiert; Kiefer, Thorsten; Kühn, Hartmut; Schmieder, Frank; Röhl, Ursula (2008): Paleonutrient and productivity records from the subarctic North Pacific for Pleistocene glacial terminations I to V. Paleoceanography, 23(4), PA4212

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.701578
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001513
Metadata Access https://ws.pangaea.de/oai/provider?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=datacite4&identifier=oai:pangaea.de:doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.701578
Provenance
Creator Gebhardt, Holger; Sarnthein, Michael; Grootes, Pieter Meiert ORCID logo; Kiefer, Thorsten; Kühn, Hartmut; Schmieder, Frank; Röhl, Ursula ORCID logo
Publisher PANGAEA
Publication Year 2008
Rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Supplementary Publication Series of Datasets; Collection
Format application/zip
Size 28 datasets
Discipline Earth System Research
Spatial Coverage (-148.921W, 51.268S, 167.725E, 54.391N); Emperor Seamounts
Temporal Coverage Begin 2001-06-09T20:05:00Z
Temporal Coverage End 2002-05-23T00:00:00Z