Assessing oxygen depletion in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean during the last deglaciation using I/Ca ratios from multiple benthic foraminiferal species
Author(s) -
Taylor M. A.,
Hendy I. L.,
Chappaz A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1002/2016pa003062
Subject(s) - benthic zone , foraminifera , oceanography , bottom water , geology , oxygen minimum zone , deglaciation , paleoceanography , continental shelf , productivity , glacial period , water mass , last glacial maximum , holocene , upwelling , paleontology , economics , macroeconomics
Paleo‐redox proxies are crucial for reconstructing past bottom water oxygen concentration changes brought about by ocean circulation and marine productivity shifts in response to climate forcing. Carbonate I/Ca ratios of multiple benthic foraminifera species from Ocean Drilling Program Hole 1017E—a core drilled within the Californian oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), on the continental slope—are employed to reexamine the transition from the well‐oxygenated last glacial into poorly oxygenated modern conditions. The redox and export productivity history of this site is constrained by numerous proxies used to assess sensitivity of I/Ca ratios of benthic foraminifera to changes in bottom and pore water O 2 concentrations. Reconstructed iodate (IO 3 − ) availability is from the I/Ca ratio of epifaunal ( Cibicidoides sp.), shallow infaunal ( Uvigerina peregrina ), and deep infaunal ( Bolivina spissa ) foraminifera. The reconstructed IO 3 − availability profile is used to determine the contribution of bottom water O 2 relative to oxidant demand on pore water O 2 concentrations. These results suggest that high export productivity on the California Margin drove low pore water O 2 concentrations during the Bølling. In contrast, low bottom water O 2 concentrations at 950 m water depth only contributed to reduced sediments during the Allerød. Increased contribution of modified North Pacific Intermediate Water to the California Current System ventilated the California OMZ during the late glacial and the Younger Dryas such that water overlying the site was oxygenated. These results highlight the promising potential of this new proxy for understanding the relative influence of bottom water O 2 concentration and pore water oxidant demand on OMZs.
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