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PALEOCEANOGRAPHY,
VOL. 18, NO. 1,
1008,
doi:10.1029/2001PA000629,
2003
Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation changes on orbital to suborbital timescales during the mid-Pleistocene
H. F. Kleiven
Department of Geology,
University of Bergen,
Bergen,
Norway
E. Jansen
Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research and Department of Geology,
University of Bergen,
Bergen,
Norway
W. B. Curry
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
Woods Hole,
Massachusetts,
USA
D. A. Hodell
Department of Geology,
University of Florida,
Gainesville,
Florida,
USA
K. Venz
Department of Geology,
University of Florida,
Gainesville,
Florida,
USA
Abstract
Mid-Pleistocene benthic δ18O and δ13C time series from the North Atlantic site 983 and Ceara Rise site 928 are compared to an array of existing isotopic records
spanning the Atlantic basin and the geographic extremes of the North Atlantic Deep Water/Southern Ocean Water interface during
both glacial and interglacial periods. This comparison allows the persistent millennial-scale intermediate depth North Atlantic
ventilation changes recorded at site 983 to be placed within the context of the longer period water mass reorganizations taking
place throughout the mid-Pleistocene. Our benthic δ13C results suggest that the intermediate depth North Atlantic experienced millennial-scale changes in ventilation throughout
the mid-Pleistocene climate shift. The times of poorest ventilation (low benthic δ13C) persisted for only a few millennia and were associated with rapid decreases in benthic δ18O, suggesting that ice sheet decay and melt water induced salinity changes were effective at throttling deep water production
in the North Atlantic throughout the mid-Pleistocene. Similar but less pronounced decreases in the δ13C of the middepth waters also punctuated interglacials, suggesting that large ice sheet fluctuations do not explain all of
the observed thermohaline circulation mode shifts in the North Atlantic. Meanwhile, on orbital timescales, glacial deep to
intermediate water δ13C gradients evolved after ∼0.95 Ma. Taken together, these observations provide a number of new constraints for understanding
the timing and evolution of deep water circulation changes across the mid-Pleistocene.
Published 19
February
2003.
Index Terms: 4267 Oceanography: General: Paleoceanography; 4870 Oceanography: Biological and Chemical: Stable isotopes; 9325 Information Related to Geographic Region: Atlantic Ocean.
Read Full Article (file size: 737814 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Kleiven, H. F., E. Jansen, W. B. Curry, D. A. Hodell, and K. Venz
(2003),
Atlantic Ocean thermohaline circulation changes on orbital to suborbital timescales during the mid-Pleistocene,
Paleoceanography,
18(1),
1008,
doi:10.1029/2001PA000629.
Copyright 2003 by the American Geophysical Union.
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