The deglacial history of surface and intermediate water of the Bering Sea
The deglacial history of surface and intermediate water of the Bering Sea
Date
2005-07-31
Authors
Cook, Mea S.
Keigwin, Lloyd D.
Sancetta, Constance A.
Keigwin, Lloyd D.
Sancetta, Constance A.
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Keywords
Anoxic sediments
Deglaciation
Diatoms
Foraminifera
Oxygen isotope stratigraphy
Bering Sea
Deglaciation
Diatoms
Foraminifera
Oxygen isotope stratigraphy
Bering Sea
Abstract
The lithology of deglacial sediments from the Bering Sea includes intervals of laminated
or dysaerobic sediments. These intervals are contemporaneous with the occurrence
of laminated sediments from the California margin and Gulf of California,
which suggests widespread low-oxygen conditions at intermediate depths in the
North Pacific Ocean. The cause could be reduced intermediate water ventilation,
increased organic carbon
flux, or a combination of the two. We infer abrupt decreases
of planktonic foraminifer δ18O at 14,400 y BP and 11,650 y BP, which may
be a combination of both freshening and warming. On the Shirshov Ridge, the abundance
of sea-ice diatoms of the genus Nitzschia reach local maxima twice during the
deglaciation, the latter of which may be an expression of the Younger Dryas. These
findings expand the extent of the expression of deglacial millennial-scale climate
events to include the northernmost Pacific.
Description
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B. V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography 52 (2005): 2163-2173, doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2005.07.004.