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Abrupt shoaling of the nutricline in response to massive freshwater flooding at the onset of the last interglacial sapropel event
Author(s) -
Grelaud Michaël,
Marino Gianluca,
Ziveri Patrizia,
Rohling Eelco J.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2012pa002288
Subject(s) - sapropel , geology , oceanography , deep chlorophyll maximum , photic zone , coccolithophore , phytoplankton , nutrient , mediterranean climate , chemistry , ecology , organic chemistry , biology
A detailed assessment of the respective roles of production, export, and subsequent preservation of organic carbon (C org ) in the eastern Mediterranean (EMED) sediments during the formation of sapropels remains elusive. Here we present new micropaleontological results for both surface samples taken at several locations in the EMED and last interglacial sapropel S5 from core LC21 in the southeastern Aegean Sea. A strong exponential anticorrelation between relative abundances of the lower photic zone coccolithophore Florisphaera profunda in the surface sediments and modern concentrations of chlorophyll a (Chl‐a) at the sea surface suggests that F. profunda percentages can be used to track past productivity changes in the EMED. Prior to S5 deposition, an abrupt and large increase of F. profunda percentages in LC21 coincided (within the multidecadal resolution of the records) with the marked freshening of EMED surface waters. This suggests a strong coupling between freshwater‐bound surface to intermediate water (density) stratification and enhanced upward advection of nutrients to the base of the photic zone, fuelling a productive deep chlorophyll maximum (DCM) underneath a nutrient‐starved surface layer. Our findings imply that (at least) at the onset of sapropel formation physical and biogeochemical processes likely operated in tandem, enabling high C org accumulation at the seafloor.

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