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Evidence from Cd/Ca ratios in foraminifera for greater upwelling off California 4,000 years ago
Authors
A Bakun
A Huyer
+32 more
A Juillet-Leclerc
A van Geen
A. van Geen
AR Flegal
BH Corliss
BL Ingram
C. C. Fuller
CJ Jones
DH Peterson
DJ DeMaster
DP Adam
EA Boyle
EA Boyle
GI Roden
GT Shen
H. E. Clifton
J Hansen
JC Davis
JR Southon
JS Vogel
JV Gardner
K Hester
KD Owen
KW Bruland
LC Breaker
PJ Quinterno
R. Anima
RR Lankford
RW Angell
S. N. Luoma
S. Trumbore
WL Prell
Publication date
1 January 1992
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California
Doi
Abstract
Upwelling of nutrient-rich Pacific deep water along the North American west coast is ultimately driven by the temperature difference between air masses over land and over the ocean. The intensity of upwelling, and biological production in the region, could therefore be affected by anthropogenic climate change. Examination of the geological record is one way to study the link between climate and upwelling. Because Pacific deep water is enriched in cadmium, dissolved cadmium concentrations in coastal water off central California reflect the intensity of upwelling. By demonstrating that the Cd/Ca ratio in the shell of a benthic foraminifer, Elphidiella hannai, is proportional to the Cd concentration in coastal water, we show here that foraminiferal Cd/Ca ratios can be used to detect past changes in mean upwelling intensity. Examination of a sediment core from the mouth of San Francisco Bay reveals that foraminiferal Cd/Ca decreased by about 30% from 4,000 years ago to the present, probably because of a reduction in coastal upwelling. This observation is consistent with predictions of atmospheric general circulation models that northwesterly winds, which drive upwelling, became weaker over this period as summer insolation of the Northern Hemisphere decreased. © 1992 Nature Publishing Group
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eScholarship - University of California
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