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Interglacial Paleoclimate in the Arctic
Author(s) -
Cronin Thomas M.,
Keller Katherine J.,
Farmer Jesse R.,
Schaller Morgan F.,
O'Regan Matt,
Poirier Robert,
Coxall Helen,
Dwyer Gary S.,
Bauch Henning,
Kindstedt Ingalise G.,
Jakobsson Martin,
Marzen Rachel,
Santin Emiliano
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
paleoceanography and paleoclimatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.927
H-Index - 127
eISSN - 2572-4525
pISSN - 2572-4517
DOI - 10.1029/2019pa003708
Subject(s) - oceanography , geology , arctic sea ice decline , arctic ice pack , sea ice , interglacial , arctic , arctic dipole anomaly , paleoclimatology , benthic zone , arctic geoengineering , paleoceanography , ice core , bottom water , climatology , antarctic sea ice , climate change , glacial period , paleontology
Marine Isotope Stage 11 from ~424 to 374 ka experienced peak interglacial warmth and highest global sea level ~410–400 ka. MIS 11 has received extensive study on the causes of its long duration and warmer than Holocene climate, which is anomalous in the last half million years. However, a major geographic gap in MIS 11 proxy records exists in the Arctic Ocean where fragmentary evidence exists for a seasonally sea ice‐free summers and high sea‐surface temperatures (SST; ~8–10 °C near the Mendeleev Ridge). We investigated MIS 11 in the western and central Arctic Ocean using 12 piston cores and several shorter cores using proxies for surface productivity (microfossil density), bottom water temperature (magnesium/calcium ratios), the proportion of Arctic Ocean Deep Water versus Arctic Intermediate Water (key ostracode species), sea ice (epipelagic sea ice dwelling ostracode abundance), and SST (planktic foraminifers). We produced a new benthic foraminiferal δ 18 O curve, which signifies changes in global ice volume, Arctic Ocean bottom temperature, and perhaps local oceanographic changes. Results indicate that peak warmth occurred in the Amerasian Basin during the middle of MIS 11 roughly from 410 to 400 ka. SST were as high as 8–10 °C for peak interglacial warmth, and sea ice was absent in summers. Evidence also exists for abrupt suborbital events punctuating the MIS 12‐MIS 11‐MIS 10 interval. These fluctuations in productivity, bottom water temperature, and deep and intermediate water masses (Arctic Ocean Deep Water and Arctic Intermediate Water) may represent Heinrich‐like events possibly involving extensive ice shelves extending off Laurentide and Fennoscandian Ice Sheets bordering the Arctic.