scholarly journals Planktic foraminiferal proxy development and application to paleoceanographic change in the Southwest Pacific Ocean

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Julene Marr

<p>This thesis investigates the use of foraminiferal calcite geochemical and physical properties as paleoceanographic proxies, to improve identification of past climatic change and provide a more quantitative basis for forecasts of future climate. I have developed and used these proxies on a high resolution, well-dated marine sediment core, MD97 2121 from north of the Subtropical Front (STF) off the eastern central North Island of New Zealand to determine paleoceanographic changes in the South Pacific Gyre since the last glacial period, 25 ka to present.  Various analytical methods to measure foraminiferal calcite trace element geochemistry were first investigated using core top samples. Two main analytical techniques were deployed; “pseudo” solution- or laser ablation-based ICPMS analysis. Ratios tested include Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, Ba/Ca, Zn/Ca, Mn/Ca and Al/Ca. Trace element/calcium ratios Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca values were consistent between these methods, provided that currently recommended ‘Mg-cleaning’ protocols were followed for solution-based measurements. However, discrepancies of up to an order-of-magnitude for Zn/Ca, Mn/Ca and Ba/Ca occurred between solution and laser ablation-based measurements if both oxidative and reductive cleaning techniques were not employed prior to solution-based analysis.   Using down-core trace element values Mg/Ca, Zn/Ca, Mn/Ca and Ba/Ca from MD97 2121, coupled with modern core top and plankton-tow samples, multiple geochemical proxies for the SW Pacific Ocean were developed and/or tested. Results suggest that Zn/Ca may act as (i) a surface water mass tracer, in this case differentiating between subtropical and subantarctic surface waters and (ii) a proxy for nutrients. Mg/Ca and Zn/Ca values from different test chambers in Globigerina bulloides were also found to reliably re-construct surface ocean temperature and nutrient stratification. Using these new proxies, coupled with oxygen isotopes, standard Mg/Ca paleothermometry and foraminiferal assemblage data, I show that surface water nutrient and thermal stratification significantly reduced during the last glacial period. In addition, the relative strength of the South Pacific Gyre, which affects the inflow of subtropical water to New Zealand, was a major influence during the last glacial termination. In particular, the period from 17-14.5 ka, otherwise known as the ‘Mystery Interval’, appears to be genuinely anomalous with foraminifera indicating cooling trends while alkenones continue to warm. This may reflect changes to both gyre strength and Antarctic forcing prior to the Antarctic Cold Reversal (14.2-12.5ka) and an offset in the timing of species productivity.  The high resolution Mg/Ca paleotemperature record developed here, together with published alkenone paleotemperatures were compared to core MD97 2120, south of the STF to evaluate the relationship between Mg/Ca and alkenones temperatures and how these reflect environmental change. It appears that the season of maximum alkenone and G. bulloides flux varied over the last 25kyr in response to insolation and water mass changes. During the glacial period north and south of the STF alkenone seasonal flux was summer dominated. However, during the Holocene while seasonal alkenone flux remained summer or annual dominated in the north, it shifted to a spring productivity cycle south of the STF. The foraminifera G. bulloides glacial period flux was likely have been spring dominated both north and south of the STF, maintaining a spring bloom cycle south of the STF, while shifting to a summer or annual cycle to the north during the Holocene. These seasonal offsets may have acted to dampen or exacerbate the glacial-Holocene temperature offsets by up to 4°C especially for the surface dwelling, alkenone producing coccolithophores. Seasonality changes of the coccolithophore and foraminifera make direct comparison of alkenone and Mg/Ca G. bulloides paleothermometers challenging. However, despite the complexity, offsets in the paleotemperatures may help to elucidate changes in the paleoceanography.  The use of G. bulloides size normalised weight (SNW) as a proxy for surface water carbonate ion concentration ([CO₃⁼]) was investigated by comparing modern SNW data sets from five different ocean regions to their specific environmental variables including [CO₃⁼], chlorophyll-a, nutrient and temperature values. It was identified that the ‘ocean’ from which the foraminifera originated appeared to have the strongest control over shell SNW, potentially reflecting geographically distinct, genetic variations within the G. bulloides species. Within ‘ocean’ regions no consistent environmental variable(s) could be identified that appeared to control shell SNW in all regions. From the 25 ka to present, shell SNWs from the SW Pacific Ocean were compared to the North Atlantic and were found to be heavier during the glacial period regardless of ocean region. This may reflect multiple factors including increased surface ocean CO₃⁼, possibly combined with changes in primary productivity. Calcification of G. bulloides tests appears to be region specific; therefore, proxy calibrations based on shell SNW for one ocean are not applicable to other settings.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Julene Marr

<p>This thesis investigates the use of foraminiferal calcite geochemical and physical properties as paleoceanographic proxies, to improve identification of past climatic change and provide a more quantitative basis for forecasts of future climate. I have developed and used these proxies on a high resolution, well-dated marine sediment core, MD97 2121 from north of the Subtropical Front (STF) off the eastern central North Island of New Zealand to determine paleoceanographic changes in the South Pacific Gyre since the last glacial period, 25 ka to present.  Various analytical methods to measure foraminiferal calcite trace element geochemistry were first investigated using core top samples. Two main analytical techniques were deployed; “pseudo” solution- or laser ablation-based ICPMS analysis. Ratios tested include Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, Ba/Ca, Zn/Ca, Mn/Ca and Al/Ca. Trace element/calcium ratios Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca values were consistent between these methods, provided that currently recommended ‘Mg-cleaning’ protocols were followed for solution-based measurements. However, discrepancies of up to an order-of-magnitude for Zn/Ca, Mn/Ca and Ba/Ca occurred between solution and laser ablation-based measurements if both oxidative and reductive cleaning techniques were not employed prior to solution-based analysis.   Using down-core trace element values Mg/Ca, Zn/Ca, Mn/Ca and Ba/Ca from MD97 2121, coupled with modern core top and plankton-tow samples, multiple geochemical proxies for the SW Pacific Ocean were developed and/or tested. Results suggest that Zn/Ca may act as (i) a surface water mass tracer, in this case differentiating between subtropical and subantarctic surface waters and (ii) a proxy for nutrients. Mg/Ca and Zn/Ca values from different test chambers in Globigerina bulloides were also found to reliably re-construct surface ocean temperature and nutrient stratification. Using these new proxies, coupled with oxygen isotopes, standard Mg/Ca paleothermometry and foraminiferal assemblage data, I show that surface water nutrient and thermal stratification significantly reduced during the last glacial period. In addition, the relative strength of the South Pacific Gyre, which affects the inflow of subtropical water to New Zealand, was a major influence during the last glacial termination. In particular, the period from 17-14.5 ka, otherwise known as the ‘Mystery Interval’, appears to be genuinely anomalous with foraminifera indicating cooling trends while alkenones continue to warm. This may reflect changes to both gyre strength and Antarctic forcing prior to the Antarctic Cold Reversal (14.2-12.5ka) and an offset in the timing of species productivity.  The high resolution Mg/Ca paleotemperature record developed here, together with published alkenone paleotemperatures were compared to core MD97 2120, south of the STF to evaluate the relationship between Mg/Ca and alkenones temperatures and how these reflect environmental change. It appears that the season of maximum alkenone and G. bulloides flux varied over the last 25kyr in response to insolation and water mass changes. During the glacial period north and south of the STF alkenone seasonal flux was summer dominated. However, during the Holocene while seasonal alkenone flux remained summer or annual dominated in the north, it shifted to a spring productivity cycle south of the STF. The foraminifera G. bulloides glacial period flux was likely have been spring dominated both north and south of the STF, maintaining a spring bloom cycle south of the STF, while shifting to a summer or annual cycle to the north during the Holocene. These seasonal offsets may have acted to dampen or exacerbate the glacial-Holocene temperature offsets by up to 4°C especially for the surface dwelling, alkenone producing coccolithophores. Seasonality changes of the coccolithophore and foraminifera make direct comparison of alkenone and Mg/Ca G. bulloides paleothermometers challenging. However, despite the complexity, offsets in the paleotemperatures may help to elucidate changes in the paleoceanography.  The use of G. bulloides size normalised weight (SNW) as a proxy for surface water carbonate ion concentration ([CO₃⁼]) was investigated by comparing modern SNW data sets from five different ocean regions to their specific environmental variables including [CO₃⁼], chlorophyll-a, nutrient and temperature values. It was identified that the ‘ocean’ from which the foraminifera originated appeared to have the strongest control over shell SNW, potentially reflecting geographically distinct, genetic variations within the G. bulloides species. Within ‘ocean’ regions no consistent environmental variable(s) could be identified that appeared to control shell SNW in all regions. From the 25 ka to present, shell SNWs from the SW Pacific Ocean were compared to the North Atlantic and were found to be heavier during the glacial period regardless of ocean region. This may reflect multiple factors including increased surface ocean CO₃⁼, possibly combined with changes in primary productivity. Calcification of G. bulloides tests appears to be region specific; therefore, proxy calibrations based on shell SNW for one ocean are not applicable to other settings.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 532 ◽  
pp. 116012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica B. Volz ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Male Köster ◽  
Susann Henkel ◽  
Andrea Koschinsky ◽  
...  

Nature ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 405 (6786) ◽  
pp. 555-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeth L. Sikes ◽  
Catherine R. Samson ◽  
Thomas P. Guilderson ◽  
William R. Howard

1999 ◽  
Vol 15 (12) ◽  
pp. 909-919 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Vidal ◽  
R.R. Schneider ◽  
O. Marchal ◽  
T. Bickert ◽  
T.F. Stocker ◽  
...  

Nature ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 360 (6401) ◽  
pp. 245-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerard Bond ◽  
Hartmut Heinrich ◽  
Wallace Broecker ◽  
Laurent Labeyrie ◽  
Jerry McManus ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shota Amekawa ◽  
Kenji Kashiwagi ◽  
Masako Hori ◽  
Tomomi Sone ◽  
Hirokazu Kato ◽  
...  

AbstractIn the East Asian monsoon area, stalagmites generally record lower and higher oxygen isotope (δ18O) levels during warm humid interglacial and cold dry glacial periods, respectively. Here, we report unusually low stalagmite δ18O from the last glacial period (ca. 32.2–22.3 ka) in Fukugaguchi Cave, Niigata Prefecture, Japan, where a major moisture source is the East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) that carries vapor from the warm surface of the Japan Sea. The δ18O profile of this stalagmite may imply millennial-scale changes, and high δ18O intervals that are related to Dansgaard–Oeschger (D–O) interstadials. More importantly, the stalagmite exhibits low overall δ18O values; the mean δ18O (− 8.87‰) is distinctly lower than the mid-Holocene mean of another stalagmite from the same cave (4.2–8.2 ka, − 7.64‰). An interpretation assuming a more intense EAWM and greater vapor transportation during the last glacial period, compared with the mid-Holocene, contradicts the limited inflow of the Tsushima Warm Current into the Japan Sea because of lowered sea level. Additionally, our model calculation using δ18O data from meteoric water indicated that the amount effect of winter meteoric water was insignificant (1.2‰/1000 mm). Low stalagmite δ18O for the last glacial period in Fukugaguchi Cave most likely resulted from 18O-depleted surface water, which developed in the isolated Japan Sea. The estimated amplitude of the δ18O decrease in surface water was ~ 3‰ at most, consistent with the abnormally low values for foraminifera (by ~ 2.5‰) in sediment during the last glacial period, shown by samples collected from the Japan Sea. This is the first terrestrial evidence of 18O depletion in Japan Sea surface water during the last glacial period.


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