4.3 Review

The Pliocene to recent history of the Kuroshio and Tsushima Currents: a multi-proxy approach

期刊

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40645-015-0045-6

关键词

Kuroshio Current; Tsushima Current; Pliocene; Pleistocene; Holocene; Paleoceanographic proxies; Biogeography; Microfossils; Macrofossils; Geochemistry

资金

  1. ARC [LP0219312]
  2. ANZIC IODP analytical grant
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI [25247083]
  4. Australian Research Council [LP0219312] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25247083, 25400504] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The Kuroshio Current is a major western boundary current controlled by the North Pacific Gyre. It brings warm subtropical waters from the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool to Japan exerting a major control on Asian climate. The Tsushima Current is a Kuroshio offshoot transporting warm water into the Japan Sea. Various proxies are used to determine the paleohistory of these currents. Sedimentological proxies such as reefs, bedforms, sediment source and sorting reveal paleocurrent strength and latitude. Proxies such as coral and mollusc assemblages reveal past shelfal current activity. Microfossil assemblages and organic/inorganic geochemical analyses determine paleo-sea surface temperature and salinity histories. Transportation of tropical palynomorphs and migrations of Indo-Pacific species to Japanese waters also reveal paleocurrent activity. The stratigraphic distribution of these proxies suggests the Kuroshio Current reached its present latitude (35 degrees N) by similar to 3 Ma when temperatures were 1 to 2 degrees C lower than present. At this time a weak Tsushima Current broke through Tsushima Strait entering the Japan Sea. Similar oceanic conditions persisted until similar to 2 Ma when crustal stretching deepened the Tsushima Strait allowing inflow during every interglacial. The onset of stronger interglacial/glacial cycles similar to 1 Ma was associated with increased North Pacific Gyre and Kuroshio Current intensity. This triggered Ryukyu Reef expansion when reefs reached their present latitude (similar to 31 degrees N), thereafter the reef front advanced (similar to 31 degrees N) and retreated (similar to 25 degrees N) with each cycle. Foraminiferal proxy data suggests eastward deflection of the Kuroshio Current from its present path at 24 degrees N into the Pacific Ocean due to East Taiwan Channel restriction during the Last Glacial Maximum. Subsequently Kuroshio flow resumed its present trajectory during the Holocene. Ocean modeling and geochemical proxies show that the Kuroshio Current path may have been similar during glacials and interglacials, however the glacial mode of this current remains controversial. Paleohistorical studies form important analogues for current behavior with future climate change, however, there are insufficient studies at present in the region that may be used for this purpose. Modeling of the response of the Kuroshio Current to future global warming reveals that current velocity may increase by up to 0.3 m/sec associated with a northward migration of the Kuroshio Extension.

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