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Journal ArticleDOI

Deepwater source variations during the last climatic cycle and their impact on the global deepwater circulation

TLDR
In this paper, a detailed reconstruction of the geographic distribution of ∂13C in benthic foraminifera in the Atlantic Ocean during the last glacial maximum was presented.
Abstract
The degree of similarity of the ∂13C records of the planktonic foraminiferal species N. pachyderma and of the benthic foraminiferal genus Cibicides in the high-latitude basins of the world ocean is used as an indicator of the presence of deepwater sources during the last climatic cycle. Whereas continuous formation of deep water is recognized in the southern ocean, the Norwegian Sea stopped acting as a sink for surface water during isotope stage 4 and the remainder of the last glaciation. However, deep water formed in the north Atlantic south of the Norwegian Sea during the last climatic cycle as early as isotope substage 5d, and this area was also the only active northern source during stages 4–2. A detailed reconstruction of the geographic distribution of ∂13C in benthic foraminifera in the Atlantic Ocean during the last glacial maximum shows that the most important deepwater mass originated from the southern ocean, whereas the Glacial North Atlantic Deep Water cannot be traced south of 40°N. At shallower depth an oxygenated 13C rich Intermediate Water mass extended from 45°N to 15°S. In the Pacific Ocean a ventilation higher than the modern one was also found in open ocean in the depth range 700–2600 m and is best explained by stronger formation of Intermediate Water in high northern latitudes.

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Integrating palaeoclimate time series with rich metadata for uncertainty modelling: strategy and documentation of the PalMod 130k marine palaeoclimate data synthesis

TL;DR: This paper presents the first version of the data product that focuses exclusively on time series for which a robust chronology based on benthic foraminifera δ18O and radiocarbon dating is available and presents a set of recommendations for data archiving.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unstable AMOC during glacial intervals and millennial variability: The role of mean sea ice extent

TL;DR: In this article, a low-order ocean model that reproduces a realistic power spectrum of millennial variability was used to explore differences in the AMOC stability between glacial and interglacial intervals of the 100 kyr glacial cycle of the Late Pleistocene (1 kyr = 1000 yr ).
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconstruction of intermediate water circulation in the tropical North Atlantic during the past 22,000 years

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used high-resolution Nd isotopic compositions of fish debris and acid-reductive leachate of bulk sediment in core VM12-107 (1079m depth) from the Southern Caribbean are not in agreement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alternating Influence of Northern Versus Southern-Sourced Water Masses on the Equatorial Pacific Subthermocline During the Past 240 ka

TL;DR: In this article, a carbon isotope (δ13C) record of subthermocline waters derived from deep-dwelling planktonic foraminifera Globorotaloides hexagonus in the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP) is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coastal upwelling and atmospheric CO2 changes over the last 400,000 years: Peru

TL;DR: A transfer function relating diatom assemblages in surface sediments and primary production in the photic zone was used to calculate variations in primary production over the last 400 kyr as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The distribution of 13C of ΣCO2 in the world oceans

TL;DR: In this article, the results from 2252 samples from 107 hydrographic stations are presented as north-south vertical (depth) sections with δ13C contoured at intervals of 0.5−0.0075·AOU.
Journal ArticleDOI

North Atlantic thermohaline circulation during the past 20,000 years linked to high-latitude surface temperature

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that during a surface cooling event 10,000 to 12,000 years ago, higher Cd/Ca and lower 13C/12C ratios are observed in benthic foraminifera shells from rapidly accumulating western North Atlantic sediments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Atlantic and Pacific paleochemical records for the last 215,000 years : changes in deep ocean circulation and chemical inventories

TL;DR: In this article, detailed Cd/Ca and δ 13 C data have been obtained for benthic foraminifera from western North Atlantic and Equatorial Pacific sediment cores, which indicate that bottom waters overlying the Atlantic site have been nutrient depleted relative to those at the Pacific site over the last 215,000 years.
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