A HIGH-RESOLUTION DIATOM RECORD OF THE LAST DEGLACIATION FROM THE SE NORWEGIAN SEA: DOCUMENTATION OF RAPID CLIMATIC CHANGES

被引:213
作者
Karpuz, Nalan Koc [1 ]
Jansen, Eystein [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bergen, Dept Geol, Sect B, N-5007 Bergen, Norway
来源
PALEOCEANOGRAPHY | 1992年 / 7卷 / 04期
关键词
D O I
10.1029/92PA01651
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Although the pulsating nature and the abruptness of the last deglaciation are well documented in marine and land records, very few marine records have so far been able to capture the high-frequency climatic changes recorded in the Greenland ice core Dye 3. We studied high-resolutions sediment cores from SE Norwegian Sea, which display a detailed climatic record during the last deglaciation comparable to that of Dye 3. Accelerator mass spectrometray age control of the cores enables us to correlate this record in detail with continental records. The results indicate that the surface waters of the SE Norwegian Sea were seasonally ice free after 13,400 B. P. The Bolling/Allerod interstadial complex (13,200-11,200 B. P.) was a climatically unstable period with changing Arctic-Subarctic conditions. This period was punctuated by four progressively more severe sea surface temperature (SST) minima: between 12,900-12,800 B. P. (BCP I); 12,500-12,400 B. P. (BCP II); 12,300-12,000 B. P. (OD I); and 11,800-11,500 B. P. (OD II). The Younger Dryas (YD) (11,200-10,200 B. P.) represents the severest and most prolonged cold episode of this series of climatic deteriorations. It was bounded by very rapid SST changes and characterized by Arctic-Polar conditions. The first true warm Atlantic water incursion to the SE Norwegian Sea took place around 10,100 B. P., followed by a brief cooler condition between 9900-9600 B. P. (YD II). The early Holocene climatic optimum occurred between 8000-5000 B.P. A conceptual model is proposed where meltwater fluxes are suggested to cause the observed instability in the SST record. Copyright 1992 by the American Geophysical Union.
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页码:499 / 520
页数:22
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