1. Terrigenous Sediment Supply in the Polar to Temperate South Atlantic: Land-Ocean Links of Environmental Changes during the Late Quaternary
- Author
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Rainer Petschick, Klaus Michels, Claus-Dieter Hillenbrand, Dieter K Fütterer, Bernhard Diekmann, Hannes Grobe, Gerhard Kuhn, and Michael Pirrung
- Subjects
Marine isotope stage ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Terrigenous sediment ,North Atlantic Deep Water ,Last Glacial Maximum ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Iceberg ,Antarctic Bottom Water ,Oceanography ,13. Climate action ,Thermohaline circulation ,14. Life underwater ,Glacial period ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Terrigenous sediment parameters in modern sea-bottom samples and sediment cores of the South Atlantic are used to infer variations in detrital sources and modes of terrigenous sediment supply in response to environmental changes through the late Quaternary climate cycles. Mass-accumulation rates of terrigenous sediment and fluxes of ice-rafted detritus are discussed in terms of temporal variations in detrital sediment input from land to sea. Grain-size parameters of terrigenous mud document the intensity of bottom-water circulation, whereas clay-mineral assemblages constrain the sources and marine transport routes of suspended fine-grained particulates, controlled by the modes of sediment input and patterns of ocean circulation. The results suggest low-frequency East Antarctic ice dynamics with dominant 100-kyr cycles and high rates of Antarctic Bottom Water formation and iceberg discharge during interglacial times. In contrast, the more subpolar ice masses of the Antarctic Peninsula also respond to short-term climate variability with maximum iceberg discharges during glacial terminations related to the rapid disintegration of advanced ice masses. In the northern Scotia Sea, increased sediment supply from southern South America points to extended ice masses in Patagonia during glacial times. In the southeastern South Atlantic, changes in regional ocean circulation are linked to global thermohaline ocean circulation and are in phase with northern-hemispheric processes of ice build-up and associated formation of North Atlantic Deep Water, which decreased during glacial times and permitted a wider extension of southern-source water masses in the study area. more...
- Published
- 2003
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