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Multi-proxy analysis of Late Quaternary ODYSSEA Contourite Depositional System (Ross Sea, Antarctica) and the depositional record of contour current and cold, dense waters

Authors :
Stefano Miserocchi
Ester Colizza
Nessim Douss
Chris Mark
Michele Rebesco
Renata G. Lucchi
Giuliana Villa
Rudy Conte
Patrizia Macrì
Paola Del Carlo
Aldo Winkler
Yanguang Liu
Davide Persico
Leonardo Langone
Caterina Morigi
Roland Neofitu
Andrea Caburlotto
Alessio Di Roberto
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2020.

Abstract

The Ross Ice Shelf is the Antarctic region that over the last deglaciation experienced the greatest change in areal ice cover. Today, cold, dense and saline water masses (brines) produced in the Ross Sea polynya, flow from the shelf to the deep ocean providing a significant contribution to the propelling of the global ocean circulation regulating the climate. In particular, the Hillary Canyon in the Eastern Ross Sea is the main conduit through which brines descend the slope to reach the deeper ocean and is thus one of the greatest regions of cold, dense water export in the world.A Contourite Depositional System (the ODYSSEA CDS) on the western flank of the Hillary Canyon is inferred to have been generated through several hundred-thousand years by along-slope, contour currents that transported and accumulated the sediments brought down the Hillary Canyon by means of brines. A multi-proxy investigation was conducted on the shallowest part of the ODYSSEA CDS depositional sequences, which we expect to contain i) the record of the brine formation, ii) the indication on contour current strength through time, and iii) their interplay and modulation associated to climate change.Six gravity cores, collected in both the proximal and distal area of the ODYSSEA CDS, were studied through multi-proxy analyses including sediment physical properties (texture, structures, water content, wet bulk density), compositional characteristics (XRF, geochemistry and detrital apatite, zircon, and rutile U-Pb on ice-rafted debris) (Lucchi et al., 2019; Neofitu et al., 2020) and microfossil content (planktonic and benthic foraminifera, calcareous nannofossils and diatoms). An age model has been reconstructed combining palaeomagnetic record, biostratigraphic content, tephrochronology and AMS radiocarbon dating on planktonic foraminifera tests.Inferred variations in dense water formation, contour current strength and ice sheet dynamics are discussed in the light of our data interpretation. Lucchi, R.G., Caburlotto, A., Miserocchi, S., Liu, Y., Morigi, C., Persico, D., Villa, G., Langone, L., Colizza, E., Macrì, P., Sagnotti, L., Conte, R., Rebesco, M., 2019. The depositional record of the Odyssea drift (Ross Sea, Antarctica). Geophysical Research Abstracts, Vol. 21, EGU2019-10409-1, 2019. EGU General Assembly, Vienna (Austria), 7–12, April, 2019 (POSTER).Neofitu, R., Mark, C., Rebesco, M., Lucchi, R.G., Douss, N., Morigi, C., Kelley, S., Daly, J.S., 2020. Tracking Late Quaternary ice sheet dynamics by multi-proxy detrital mineral U-Pb analysis: A case study from the Odyssea contourite, Ross Sea, Antarctica. Geophysical Research Abstracts. EGU General Assembly, Vienna (Austria), 3–8, May, 2020 (POSTER for session CL1.11).

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........55788c745298982518648bd9827fc3be