4.6 Article

Provincialism in trends and high frequency changes in the northwest North Atlantic during the Holocene

Journal

GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE
Volume 54, Issue 3-4, Pages 263-290

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloplacha.2006.06.023

Keywords

Holocene; North Atlantic; Labrador Sea; dinocysts; oxygen-isotopes; foraminifers; sea ice; temperature; salinity; seasonality

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In the present paper, we report on micropalcontological (dinocysts) and isotopic (O-18 and C-13 in foraminifers) analyses performed in Holocene sediments from fifteen cores raised from the central and northwest North Atlantic. Sea-surface temperature (SST), sea-surface salinity (SSS), thus potential density, and sea-ice cover are reconstructed based on dinocyst assemblages. After proper calibration, oxygen isotope data on the mesopelagic foraminifer Neogloboquadrina pachyderma left coiled (Npl) are converted into potential density values deeper in the water column, thus allowing documentation of vertical density gradients and identification of intervals favourable for winter convection to occur with formation of intermediate Labrador Sea Water (LSW). The most important findings from this study include: (1) the existence of an early-mid Holocene thermal optimum with positive anomalies up to 6 degrees C above present along the main SW-NE axis of the North Atlantic Current, but no significant SST maximum at most sites along eastern Canadian margins; (2) the evidence for larger than present amplitude of annual SSTs during the early Holocene, thus for a stronger seasonality; (3) minimum sea-ice cover from 11500 to 6000 cal years BP, and a slight increase of sea-ice variability, and average seasonal duration of 0.5 to 1 month per year afterwards; (4) variable SSS during the entire Holocene, suggesting changes in the routing and rates of freshwater-meltwater discharges from the Arctic and eastern Canada; (5) the setting of conditions compatible with LSW production after 8 ka only, and likely a more steady production during the late Holocene; (6) an overall trend for a potential density increase of the Labrador Sea, throughout the Holocene, matching a decreasing trend eastward, thus suggesting a progressive enhancement of the western branch of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning with respect to its northeastern route; and (7) indication of maximum production and fast dispersal of LSW in the entire North Atlantic during recent times only, as suggested by linearly-converging delta O-18-values of NpI from all sites, towards its modem relatively homogeneous composition (similar to 2.5/2.6 parts per thousand). The overall picture of the Holocene North Atlantic arising from this study is that of a basin marked by a strong regionalism with large discrepancies in hydrographical trends and high frequency oscillations, at least partly controlled by freshwater-meltwater routes and rates of export from the Arctic. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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