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The ocean-atmosphere system: primary responses to orbital forcings Orbital forcings GLACIAL OCEAN INTERGLACIAL temperature humidity CO2 winds volume temperature CO2 currents The oceanic d18O record: 80-90% RSL response; 10-20% temperature response? SST changes from LGM to present in coastal waters of N. California (~100 km offshore?) Radiolarian assemblages in core 1019 (989 m water depth) YD green line = GISP2 d18O record; black line=radiolarian record Primary productivity and zones of coastal upwelling image: terra.nasa.gov Pelagic diatom assemblages of the N. Pacific (e.g. Okhotsk Sea cluster = one of three subarctic water masses, shown in black) V20-119 580 RC10-216 V21-172 V20-107 579 from: Sancetta & Silvestri (1986) Paleoceanography 1, 163-180. “Okhotsk cluster” through time from: Rohling et al. (1998) Nature, 394, 162-165. RSL -temperature - salinity interactions in the Red Sea Low RSL = hypersaline Red Sea = no planktonic forams ooze H - layer (ooze-filled burrows?) A Heinrich layer (H-1) in a deep-sea core Iceberg-rafted detritus (IRD) in H1 Heinrich events in the North Atlantic Ocean Oceanographic effects of drifting icebergs drift cold fresh water >200 m nutrient-rich nutrientdeficient detritus Heinrich (5-10 ka) events and Bond cycles (~1.5 ka) in VM23-81 N. Atlantic currents: iceberg-drift routes The N. Atlantic ‘gate’ and the ‘bingepurge’ cycle of the Laurentide ice sheet Ocean ‘polar front’ cold warm Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles and Heinrich events Thermohaline circulation Binge and purge: is there a Heinrich record in Antarctica? antiphasing? SST C(org)% Inferred Late Glacial and Holocene SST (Aegean Sea) YD H1 from: Geraga et al., (2000), Palaeo3, 156, 1-17 Sapropel stratum in a core from the eastern Mediterranean (“sapro” = putrid refers to high Corg content); “pel” = mud S1 Episodes of sapropel formation in the last 200 000 years in the eastern Mediterranean from: Kallel et al., (2000), Palaeo3, 157, 45-58 S3 S4 S5 30°N S6 S7 Laminated sapropel deposits from: Kemp et al., (1999), Nature, 398, 57-61 Sapropels: annually laminated diatom mats from: Kemp et al., (1999), Nature, 398, 57-61 Sapropel formation hypothesis after Kemp et al., (1999), Nature, 398, 57-61. (see Sancetta (1999), Nature 398, 27-29 for discussion) • Greater freshwater runoff to eastern Mediterranean (heavy rainfall in Nile headwaters and in Med. Basin); leads to: • Enhanced stratification of surface waters, produces ‘nutricline’ across surface halocline; leads to: • Massive bloom of diatoms adapted to stratified waters (chiefly Rhizosolenia spp. and Hemiaulus hauckii). • Winter mixing of water column causes mass sinking of diatom mats. • Mixing brings nutrients to surface, promoting conventional nearsurface winter blooms of mixed diatoms. Freshwater sources in the Mediterranean base map from: Kallel et al., (2000), Palaeo3, 157, 45-58 Sapropels and climate of the Nile basin Eastern Mediterranean sedimentary record* “sapropelic” S1a 11 10 arid 9 8 wet S1b 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 arid Eastern Saharan sedimentary and archaeological record** * Geraga et al., (2000), Palaeo3, 156, 1-17 ** Malville et al., (1998), Nature 392, 488-491 0 ka BP Location of core 74 KL in the Arabian Sea 18 d O, 74 KL: dust deposition and CaCo3 production Dust minimum 7850 8850 Sahara dust storm over adjacent Atlantic Ocean image: terra.nasa.gov Dust accumulation and palaeoproductivity (core Meteor 12392: on continental rise offshore of Spanish Sahara) Japan Sea dust record Dust source: Mongolia/N. China Iron fertilization experiment: polar Southern Ocean (I) days Iron fertilization experiment: polar Southern Ocean (II) Mechanisms of CO2 drawdown CO2 drawdown (Vostok) Iron fertilization experiment: polar Southern Ocean (III) DMS makes clouds “brighter than white” from: Charlson et al., (1987) Nature 326, 655-661 Points to consider Ocean/atmosphere temperature - CO2 - sea ice feedbacks. Continental climates and oceanic responses: dust exports and palaeoproductivity; monsoonal rains and sapropels; glacial surging and THC switching. Palaeoproductivity patterns: consider effects of currents, RSL and marine food chains.