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Late Quaternary palaeoceanography of the Circumpolar Deep Water from the South Tasman Rise
Author(s) -
Moy Andrew D.,
Howard William R.,
Gagan Michael K.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of quaternary science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.142
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1099-1417
pISSN - 0267-8179
DOI - 10.1002/jqs.1067
Subject(s) - benthic zone , oceanography , geology , circumpolar deep water , glacial period , foraminifera , water mass , quaternary , interglacial , radiocarbon dating , deep sea , sediment , north atlantic deep water , chronology , paleoceanography , thermohaline circulation , paleontology
We use sediment cores from the South Tasman Rise (STR) to reconstruct deep‐ water circulation in the southwest Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean. Sediment cores MD972106 (45° 09′ S, 146° 17′ E, 3310 m water depth) and GC34 (45° 06′ S, 147° 45′ E, 4002 m water depth) preserve records covering the last 160 k yr, with chronology controlled by calibrated accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates and benthic foraminiferal δ 18 O tied to SPECMAP. The STR benthic foraminiferal δ 13 C records provide new δ 13 C values for Southern Ocean deep water spanning the last 160 k yr at sites unlikely to be affected by variations in productivity. The records establish that glacial benthic foraminifera ( Cibicidoides spp.) δ 13 C values are lower relative to interglacial values and are comparable to previous glacial benthic δ 13 C records in the Indian and Pacific sectors of the Southern Ocean. Comparisons of the benthic foraminiferal δ 13 C time series at the STR are made with the equatorial Pacific (V19‐30 and Site 846) and the equatorial Atlantic (GeoB1115). The similarity of benthic δ 13 C records at the STR to the equatorial Pacific suggest the Southern Ocean deep‐water mass closely tracked those of the deep Pacific, and the presence of a δ 13 C gradient between the STR and the equatorial Atlantic suggests there was continual production of northern source deep water over the past 160 k yr. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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