4 research outputs found

    Abrupt deglacial changes in the properties of the Atlantic Water entering the Arctic

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    The Arctic Ocean and Barents Sea are currently experiencing rapid changes, with recent reductions in sea ice being linked to increased heat transport by warm Atlantic Water (AW) flowing into the Arctic Ocean. Knowledge of past ocean-climate-sea ice variability provides a crucial reference for understanding and contextualizing these ongoing changes. The last glaciation experienced numerous abrupt perturbations in the climate-ice-ocean system that can provide important exemplars for elucidating the coupling and sensitivity of this system. The most recent event being the Younger Dryas (YD) (12 900 – 11 700 cal yr BP). Despite this, the variability of AW properties inflowing to the Arctic and their relationship to ocean circulation and sea ice during the YD remains equivocal, due to there being few high- resolution proxy records covering this interval in the northern Barents Sea and Arctic Ocean. Here I present high resolution stable isotope records (δ18O and δ13C) of planktic and benthic foraminifera, for the late Bølling-Allerød, Younger Dryas and early Holocene, from a sediment core (KH18-10-14-GC-1) from the Kvitøya Trough (80.69°N, 28.95°E). Subsurface properties at this location are influenced by, and thus provide a monitor of, the Svalbard Branch of AW inflowing to the Arctic. A rapid decrease in 18O of 1.28-2‰ occurs early in the Younger Dryas (YD) at 12 500 ± 280 cal yr BP in both the planktic and benthic records and persists for approximately 500 years. This isotope anomaly indicates that a large warming (or freshening) event of as much as 5 – 8 °C influenced both the near surface and bottom water through the first part of the YD. The magnitude of this inferred AW warming is consistent with models and proxy results investigating other millennial scale stadial cold periods. The low 18O interval is concomitant with increased local sea ice cover and a weakened Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Variations in sea ice extent during the YD may explain how these events are linked. Expanding sea ice limits AW’s exposure to the atmosphere and heat (buoyancy) loss, reducing the density and formation of deep water. The subsequent decrease of sea ice and AW temperature at 12 000 cal yr BP is consistent with an increase in heat loss, suggesting deep water formation recovered through the latter portion of the YD. Thus, sea-ice, ocean-heat transport, and overturning circulation appear consistently coupled during abrupt climate change events. These natural perturbations appear different in pattern to that found for the current sea ice reduction, suggesting different underlying causes.Master's Thesis in Earth ScienceGEOV399MAMN-GEO

    Arctic Paleoceanography Cruise KH21-234 with R/V Kronprins Haakon

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    We set sail from Longyearbyen on 30.6.2021 to collect surface sediments, long sediment archives, water and plankton samples. The study area is located north of Svalbard, within the seasonal and permanent sea ice covered Arctic Ocean. We took stations N of Svalbard, near Nordaustlandet, Sophia Basin, Yermak Plateau and on the shelf east of Svalbard. In total, we had 52 stations. We deployed the multicorer at least once at every station and sampled the core tops already onboard. These samples will be included in the Arctic Surface Sediment DNA Database, which we will use to establish new aDNA based sea ice proxies. We recovered gravity cores from 12 stations that can be used to reconstruct the Arctic sea ice history in the Holocene, last glacial and likely also Last Interglacial. We collected ice and water and filtered these for eDNA and biomarkers, and water for tracing the isotope signal of the different water masses in the region (Atlantic Water, Polar Water).publishedVersio

    Abrupt deglacial changes in the properties of the Atlantic Water entering the Arctic

    No full text
    The Arctic Ocean and Barents Sea are currently experiencing rapid changes, with recent reductions in sea ice being linked to increased heat transport by warm Atlantic Water (AW) flowing into the Arctic Ocean. Knowledge of past ocean-climate-sea ice variability provides a crucial reference for understanding and contextualizing these ongoing changes. The last glaciation experienced numerous abrupt perturbations in the climate-ice-ocean system that can provide important exemplars for elucidating the coupling and sensitivity of this system. The most recent event being the Younger Dryas (YD) (12 900 – 11 700 cal yr BP). Despite this, the variability of AW properties inflowing to the Arctic and their relationship to ocean circulation and sea ice during the YD remains equivocal, due to there being few high- resolution proxy records covering this interval in the northern Barents Sea and Arctic Ocean. Here I present high resolution stable isotope records (δ18O and δ13C) of planktic and benthic foraminifera, for the late Bølling-Allerød, Younger Dryas and early Holocene, from a sediment core (KH18-10-14-GC-1) from the Kvitøya Trough (80.69°N, 28.95°E). Subsurface properties at this location are influenced by, and thus provide a monitor of, the Svalbard Branch of AW inflowing to the Arctic. A rapid decrease in 18O of 1.28-2‰ occurs early in the Younger Dryas (YD) at 12 500 ± 280 cal yr BP in both the planktic and benthic records and persists for approximately 500 years. This isotope anomaly indicates that a large warming (or freshening) event of as much as 5 – 8 °C influenced both the near surface and bottom water through the first part of the YD. The magnitude of this inferred AW warming is consistent with models and proxy results investigating other millennial scale stadial cold periods. The low 18O interval is concomitant with increased local sea ice cover and a weakened Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. Variations in sea ice extent during the YD may explain how these events are linked. Expanding sea ice limits AW’s exposure to the atmosphere and heat (buoyancy) loss, reducing the density and formation of deep water. The subsequent decrease of sea ice and AW temperature at 12 000 cal yr BP is consistent with an increase in heat loss, suggesting deep water formation recovered through the latter portion of the YD. Thus, sea-ice, ocean-heat transport, and overturning circulation appear consistently coupled during abrupt climate change events. These natural perturbations appear different in pattern to that found for the current sea ice reduction, suggesting different underlying causes

    Arctic Paleoceanography Cruise KH21-234 with R/V Kronprins Haakon

    No full text
    We set sail from Longyearbyen on 30.6.2021 to collect surface sediments, long sediment archives, water and plankton samples. The study area is located north of Svalbard, within the seasonal and permanent sea ice covered Arctic Ocean. We took stations N of Svalbard, near Nordaustlandet, Sophia Basin, Yermak Plateau and on the shelf east of Svalbard. In total, we had 52 stations. We deployed the multicorer at least once at every station and sampled the core tops already onboard. These samples will be included in the Arctic Surface Sediment DNA Database, which we will use to establish new aDNA based sea ice proxies. We recovered gravity cores from 12 stations that can be used to reconstruct the Arctic sea ice history in the Holocene, last glacial and likely also Last Interglacial. We collected ice and water and filtered these for eDNA and biomarkers, and water for tracing the isotope signal of the different water masses in the region (Atlantic Water, Polar Water)
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