Repository logo
 

Transient hydrodynamic effects influence organic carbon signatures in marine sediments.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Magill, Clayton R 
Ausín, Blanca 
Wenk, Pascal 
McIntyre, Cameron 

Abstract

Ocean dynamics served an important role during past dramatic climate changes via impacts on deep-ocean carbon storage. Such changes are recorded in sedimentary proxies of hydrographic change on continental margins, which lie at the ocean-atmosphere-earth interface. However, interpretations of these records are challenging, given complex interplays among processes delivering particulate material to and from ocean margins. Here we report radiocarbon (14C) signatures measured for organic carbon in differing grain-size sediment fractions and foraminifera in a sediment core retrieved from the southwest Iberian margin, spanning the last ~25,000 yr. Variable differences of 0-5000 yr in radiocarbon age are apparent between organic carbon in differing grain-sizes and foraminifera of the same sediment layer. The magnitude of 14C differences co-varies with key paleoceanographic indices (e.g., proximal bottom-current density gradients), which we interpret as evidence of Atlantic-Mediterranean seawater exchange influencing grain-size specific carbon accumulation and translocation. These findings underscore an important link between regional hydrodynamics and interpretations of down-core sedimentary proxies.

Description

Keywords

0405 Oceanography, 0403 Geology, 0402 Geochemistry

Journal Title

Nature Communications

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-1723
2041-1723

Volume Title

9

Publisher

Springer Nature
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/J00653X/1)
This work was made possible by a Marie Curie Actions postdoctoral fellowship to C.R.M and NERC support for cruise JC089 (NE/J00653X/1) to D.A.H. and L.S.