Western Arabian Sea SST during the penultimate interglacial: A comparison of U 37 K′ and Mg/Ca paleothermometry
Author(s) -
Saher M. H.,
Rostek F.,
Jung S. J. A.,
Bard E.,
Schneider R. R.,
Greaves M.,
Ganssen G. M.,
Elderfield H.,
Kroon D.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2007pa001557
Subject(s) - alkenone , upwelling , geology , oceanography , sea surface temperature , interglacial , holocene , climatology , glacial period , paleontology
Millennial‐scale records of planktonic foraminiferal Mg/Ca, bulk sediment U 37 K′ , and planktonic foraminiferal δ 18 O are presented across the last two deglaciations in sediment core NIOP929 from the Arabian Sea. Mg/Ca‐derived temperature variability during the penultimate and last deglacial periods falls within the range of modern day Arabian Sea temperatures, which are influenced by monsoon‐driven upwelling. The U 37 K′ ‐derived temperatures in MIS 5e are similar to modern intermonsoon values and are on average 3.5°C higher than the Mg/Ca temperatures in the same period. MIS 5e U 37 K′ and Mg/Ca temperatures are 1.5°C warmer than during the Holocene, while the U 37 K′ ‐Mg/Ca temperature difference was about twice as large during MIS 5e. This is surprising as, nowadays, both proxy carriers have a very similar seasonal and depth distribution. Partial explanations for the MIS 5e U 37 K′ ‐Mg/Ca temperature offset include carbonate dissolution, the change in dominant alkenone‐producing species, and possibly lateral advection of alkenone‐bearing material and a change in seasonal or depth distribution of proxy carriers. Our findings suggest that (1) Mg/Ca of G. ruber documents seawater temperature in the same way during both studied deglaciations as in the present, with respect to, e.g., season and depth, and (2) U 37 K′ ‐based temperatures from MIS 5 (or older) represent neither upwelling SST nor annual average SST (as it does in the present and the Holocene) but a higher temperature, despite alkenone production mainly occurring in the upwelling season. Further we report that at the onset of the deglacial warming, the Mg/Ca record leads the U 37 K′ record by 4 ka, of which a maximum of 2 ka may be explained by postdepositional processes. Deglacial warming in both temperature records leads the deglacial decrease in the δ 18 O profile, and Mg/Ca‐based temperature returns to lower values before δ 18 O has reached minimum interglacial values. This indicates a substantial lead in Arabian Sea warming relative to global ice melting.
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