A ~240 ka record of Ice Sheet and Ocean interactions on the Snorri Drift, SW of Iceland
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Authors
Andrews, JT
McCave, IN
Syvitski, J
Publication Date
2021Journal Title
Global and Planetary Change
ISSN
0921-8181
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Volume
201
Number
ARTN 103498
Pages
103498-103498
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Andrews, J., McCave, I., & Syvitski, J. (2021). A ~240 ka record of Ice Sheet and Ocean interactions on the Snorri Drift, SW of Iceland. Global and Planetary Change, 201 (ARTN 103498), 103498-103498. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2021.103498
Abstract
Core MD99-2323 was extracted from the Snorri Drift at a water depth of 1062 m, just south of the Denmark Strait, and ~120 km from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) margins of the Iceland and East Greenland Ice Sheets. The core chronology (~7.5 to 240 cal ka) is derived from radiocarbon dates, marker tephra, paleomagnetic excursion, and correlation with North Atlantic δ18O records on Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (δ18ONp). Sedimentation averaged ~7.5 cm/kyr. Records of proxy flow speed, ice rafted debris (IRD) and oxygen isotopes show that many IRD abundance peaks represent winnowing of the fine fraction by faster flows rather than pulses of increased IRD flux. The overall pattern of flow speed does not resemble the classic fast interglacial/slow glacial pattern seen in records of Nordic Sea overflow, rather the current record is suggested to be partly controlled by the production of brine-driven gravity flows from adjacent ice fronts, especially during cold periods. On a smaller scale the usual glacial/slow – interglacial/fast pattern appears to be the case during ~5 kyr oscillations during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 6 where periodic low flow speed is matched by high values of planktonic oxygen isotope ratios. Eight peaks in quartz wt% reflect increased contributions from glacial erosion of Precambrian and Caledonian bedrock from E and NE Greenland; peaks in dolomite may reflect glacial-marine transport from the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Cross wavelet analysis of the δ18ONp versus sortable silt and quartz records indicate significant precession and obliquity periodicities, but with little temporal correlations due to leads and lags in responses.
Keywords
Snorri Drift, Deep Northern Boundary Current, MIS 1-7, Mineral composition, Sortable silt, Flow speed, Saline gravity current, IRD
Embargo Lift Date
2023-04-27
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2021.103498
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/332105
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