4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Temperature and salinity variations of Mediterranean Sea surface waters over the last 16,000 years from records of planktonic stable oxygen isotopes and alkenone unsaturation ratios

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PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
卷 158, 期 3-4, 页码 259-280

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0031-0182(00)00053-5

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Mediterranean Sea; sapropel S1; last glacial maximum; temperature; salinity; density

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Alkenone unsaturation ratios and planktonic delta(18)O records from sediment cores of the Alboran, Ionian and Levantine basins in the Mediterranean Sea show pronounced variations in paleo-temperatures and -salinities of surface waters over the last 16,000 years. Average sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are low during the last glacial (averages prior to 13,000 years: 11-15 degrees C), vary rapidly at the beginning of the Holocene, and increase to 17-18 degrees C at all sites during S1 formation (dated between 9500 and 6600 calendar years). The modern temperature gradient (2-3 degrees C) between the Mediterranean sub-basins is maintained during formation of sapropel S1 in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea. After S1, SSTs have remained uniform in the Alboran Sea at 18 degrees C and have fluctuated around 20 degrees C in the Ionian and Levantine Basin sites. The delta(18)O of planktonic foraminifer calcite decreases by 2 parts per thousand from the late glacial to S1 sediments in the Ionian Basin and by 2.8 parts per thousand in the Levantine Basin. In the Alboran Sea, the decrease is 1.7 parts per thousand. Of the 2.8 parts per thousand decrease in the Levantine Basin, the effect of global ice volume accounts for a maximum of 1.05 parts per thousand and the temperature increase explains only a maximum of 1.3 parts per thousand. The remainder is attributed to salinity changes. We use the temperature and salinity estimates to calculate seawater density changes. They indicate that a reversal of water mass circulation is nor a likely explanation for increased carbon burial during S1 time. Instead, it appears that intermediate and deep water formation may have shifted to the Ionian Sea approximately 2000 years before onset of S1 deposition, because surface waters were as cold, but saltier than surface water in the Levantine Basin during the Younger Dryas. Sapropel S1 began to form at the same time, when a significant density decrease also occurred in the Ionian Sea. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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