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Ziegler, Christa L; Murray, Richard W; Plank, Terry; Hemming, Sidney R (2008): Geochemistry of terrigenous material in deep-sea sediments of the equatorial Pacific [dataset publication series]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.706931, Supplement to: Ziegler, CL et al. (2008): Sources of Fe to the equatorial Pacific Ocean from the Holocene to Miocene. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 270(3-4), 258-270, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2008.03.044

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Abstract:
Biological productivity in the modern equatorial Pacific Ocean, a region with high nutrients and low chlorophyll, is currently limited by the micronutrient Fe. In order to test whether Fe was limiting in the past and to identify potential pathways of Fe delivery that could drive Fe fertilization (i.e., dust delivery from eolian inputs vs. Fe supplied by the Equatorial Undercurrent), we chemically isolated the terrigenous material from sediment along a cross-equatorial transect in the central equatorial Pacific at 140°W and at Ocean Drilling Program Site 850 in the eastern equatorial Pacific. We quantified the contribution from each potential Fe-bearing terrigenous source using a suite of chemical- and isotopic discrimination strategies as well as multivariate statistical techniques. We find that the distribution of the terrigenous sources (i.e., Asian loess, South American ash, Papua New Guinea, and ocean island basalt) varies through time, latitude, and climate. Regardless of which method is used to determine accumulation rate, there also is no relationship between flux of any particular Fe source and climate. Moreover, there is no connection between a particular Fe source or pathway (eolian vs. Undercurrent) to total productivity during the Last Glacial Maximum, Pleistocene glacial episodes, and the Miocene "Biogenic Bloom". This would suggest an alternative process, such as an interoceanic reorganization of nutrient inventories, may be responsible for past changes in total export in the open ocean, rather than simply Fe supply from dust and/or Equatorial Undercurrent processes. Additionally, perhaps a change in Fe source or flux is related to a change in a particular component of the total productivity (e.g., the production of organic matter, calcium carbonate, or biogenic opal).
Coverage:
Median Latitude: 0.425844 * Median Longitude: -135.323761 * South-bound Latitude: -11.997300 * West-bound Longitude: -140.146700 * North-bound Latitude: 8.930000 * East-bound Longitude: -110.521430
Date/Time Start: 1991-06-13T12:44:00 * Date/Time End: 1992-12-06T22:38:00
Event(s):
138-850B * Latitude: 1.297110 * Longitude: -110.521430 * Date/Time Start: 1991-06-13T12:44:00 * Date/Time End: 1991-06-16T12:04:00 * Elevation: -3786.1 m * Penetration: 399.8 m * Recovery: 393.58 m * Location: North Pacific Ocean * Campaign: Leg138 * Basis: Joides Resolution * Method/Device: Drilling/drill rig (DRILL) * Comment: 42 cores; 396.8 m cored; 0 m drilled; 99.2 % recovery
TT013_4 (11031300 Multicorer1) * Latitude: -11.997300 * Longitude: -134.952200 * Date/Time: 1992-11-03T13:00:00 * Elevation: -4280.0 m * Location: Equatorial Pacific * Campaign: TT013 * Basis: Thomas G. Thompson * Method/Device: MultiCorer (MUC)
TT013_18 (11071651 Pistoncore2) * Latitude: -1.839500 * Longitude: -139.713700 * Date/Time: 1992-11-07T16:51:00 * Elevation: -4354.0 m * Campaign: TT013 * Basis: Thomas G. Thompson * Method/Device: Piston corer (PC)
Size:
7 datasets

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