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Anomalously low alkenone temperatures caused by lateral particle and sediment transport in the Malvinas Current region, western Argentine Basin

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0967-0637(00)00030-3

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alkenones; U-37(K); sea-surface temperature (SST); surface sediments; South Atlantic Ocean; Brazil-Malvinas Confluence

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We analysed the alkenone unsaturation ratio (U-37(K');) in 87 surface sediment samples from the western South Atlantic (5 degrees N-50 degrees S) in order to evaluate its applicability as a paleotemperature tool for this part of the ocean. The measured U-37(K') ratios were converted into temperature using the global core-top calibration of Muller et al. (1998) and compared with annual mean atlas sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) of overlying surface waters. The results reveal a close correspondence (<1.5 degrees C) between atlas and alkenone temperatures for the Western Tropical Atlantic and the Brazil Current region north of 32 degrees S, but deviating low alkenone temperatures by - 2 degrees to - 6 degrees C are found in the regions of the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence (35-39 degrees S) and the Malvinas Current (41-48 degrees S). From the oceanographic evidence these low U-37(K') values cannot be explained by preferential alkenone production below the mixed layer or during the cold season. Higher nutrient availability and algal growth rates are also unlikely causes. Instead, our results imply that lateral displacement of suspended particles and sediments, caused by strong surface and bottom currents, benthic storms, and downslope processes is responsible for the deviating U-37(K') temperatures. In this way, particles and sediments carrying a cold water U-37(K') signal of coastal or southern origin are transported northward and offshore into areas with warmer surface waters. In the northern Argentine Basin the depth between displaced and unaffected sediments appears to coincide with the boundary between the northward Bowing Lower Circumpolar Deep Water (LCDW) and the southward flowing North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) at about 4000 m. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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