ELSEVIER Marine Geology 119 (1994) 333 355
MARINE
aEOLOaY
/NTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MARINE
GEOLOG~ GEOCHEMISTRY AND GEOPHYSICS
Stable isotope stratigraphy, sedimentation rates, and salinity
changes in the Latest Pleistocene to Holocene eastern central
Arctic Ocean
Ruediger Stein, Carsten Schubert, Christoph Vogt, Dieter Fatterer
Alfred- Wegener-Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Columbusstrafle, D-27515 Bremerhaven, Germany
(Received March 8, 1993; revision accepted November 9, 1993 )
Abstract
A high-resolution study including oxygen and carbon stable isotopes as well as carbonate and total organic carbon
contents, has been performed on undisturbed near-surface (0-40 cm) sediment sequences taken in the eastern Arctic
Ocean during the international Arctic 91 Expedition. Based on the oxygen stable isotope records measured on
Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sin.) and AMS 14C dating, the upper 10 to 20 cm of the sediment sequences represent
isotope stage 1, and the base of Termination I (15.7 ka) can be identified very well. Stage 1 sedimentation rates vary
between 0.4 and > 2.0 cm/kyr. In general, glacial stage 2 sedimentation rates are probably lower and vary between
0.4 and 0.7 cm/kyr.
The glacial-interglacial shifts in 6180 values of N. pachyderma sin. may reach values of 1.3 to 2.5%0 indicating (1)
that, in addition to the glacial-interglacial global ice-volume signal, changes in surface-water salinity have effected
the isotope records and (2) that these salinity changes have varied laterally. Glacial interglacial differences in salinity
were small in the Lomonosov Ridge area (0-0.4%o) and relatively high in the Morris-Jesup-Rise area (up to 1.4%o).
This implies that the supply of low-saline waters onto the Eurasian shelves and its further transport into the
central Arctic Ocean via the Transpolar Drift should have continued during the last glacial and should have
significantly influenced the surface water characteristics in parts of the central Arctic. On the Morris-Jesup-Rise, on
the other hand, the glacial low-saline-water signal at that time was strongly reduced in comparison to the modern
situation.
At the glacial-interglacial stage 1/2 boundary, a strong meltwater signal is recorded in a sharp depletion in 6180 as
well as 613C. This central Arctic Ocean meltwater event can be correlated from the Makarov Basin through the
Lomonosov Ridge and Amundsen Basin to the eastern Gakkel Ridge. The beginning of this event is AMS 14C
dated at 15.7 ka, i.e., significantly older than the major decrease in the global ice-volume signal which occurs
between 9 and 13.5 ka. Large amounts of freshwater/meltwater were probably supplied from the Eurasian continent
due to the decay of the Barents-Sea-Ice-Sheet, causing this distinct early meltwater anomaly in the central Arctic
Ocean.
The extension of a well-oxygenated surface-near water mass in the Arctic Ocean and (at least seasonal) open-ice
conditions and some increased bioproductivity were probably established at the end of Termination I, as indicated by
the increase in ~13C to modern values as well as increased carbonate (i.e., foraminifers, coccoliths, ostracodes) and
total organic carbon contents.
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