Walter, Hans-Jürgen; Hegner, Ernst; Diekmann, Bernhard; Kuhn, Gerhard; Rutgers van der Loeff, Michiel M (2000): Radionuclides of bulk and terrigenous surface sediments in the Southern Ocean [dataset publication series]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.735071, Supplement to: Walter, H-J et al. (2000): Provenance and transport of terrigenous sediment in the South Atlantic Ocean and their relations to glacial and interglacial cycles: Nd and Sr isotopic evidence. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 64(22), 3813-3827, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7037(00)00476-2
Always quote citation above when using data! You can download the citation in several formats below.
Abstract:
Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of Late Quaternary surface sediment and sediment cores from the south Atlantic and southeast Pacific sectors of the Southern Ocean are used to constrain the provenance and transport mechanisms of their terrigenous component. We report isotopic and mineralogical data for core samples from three localities, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 41°S and the northern and southern Scotia Sea. In addition, data for surface sediment samples from the south Atlantic and southeast Pacific sectors of the Southern Ocean are presented. The variations of Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of the bulk sediment samples in all cores were correlated with the magnetic susceptibility of the sediment and with the inferred glacial-interglacial stages. The isotopic data indicate that, during glacial periods, sediment was delivered from continental crust with a shorter residence time than that supplying material during interglacial periods. At the core site near the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Nd isotopic, combined with mineralogical evidence indicates interglacial period deposition of a relatively high amount of kaolinite and silt with low epsilon-Nd values < -8. The material was probably supplied by North Atlantic Deep Water from low latitudes. For glacial periods, a high contribution of silt and clay with epsilon-Nd > -4.5, probably derived from southern South America, was indicated. The glacial-interglacial shift in sources may be due to either a decreasing influence of North Atlantic Deep Water during glacial times or by a larger contribution of glaciogenic detritus from southern South America. At the core site in the northern Scotia Sea, sediment of interglacial periods is dominated by smectite with epsilon-Nd < - 6 and silt with epsilon-Nd > -4. We suggest that smectite was derived from the Falkland shelf and silt was derived from the Argentinian shelf. During glacial periods, the Argentinian shelf was an important source for silt and chlorite with epsilon-Nd > -4. The contribution from the Falkland shelf seems to have remained similar during glacial and interglacial periods. Hydrographic transport by bottom currents and turbidites could account for the high glacial detrital flux. An evaluation of the significance of an aeolian contribution to deep sea sediment suggests that it plays only a minor role. In the southern Scotia Sea, the Antarctic Peninsula is considered an important source for young material with epsilon-Nd > -4, in particular during glacial periods. During interglacial periods, sediment supply from the Antarctic Peninsula was lower than during glacial times, resulting in a relatively high contribution of old material (epsilon-Nd < -8) from East Antarctica. Deep water currents and icebergs could account for the transport of the old component to the southern Scotia Sea. The accumulation rates of material from the various source regions for glacial times are in agreement with an increase in the strength of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. The production rate and the circulation pattern of bottom water in the Weddell Sea appear to have remained similar over most of the last 150 kyr.
Project(s):
Marine Geochemistry @ AWI (AWI_MarGeoChem)
Coverage:
Median Latitude: -51.865366 * Median Longitude: -57.476007 * South-bound Latitude: -77.284790 * West-bound Longitude: -95.024000 * North-bound Latitude: -0.233333 * East-bound Longitude: -14.490000
Date/Time Start: 1983-02-18T00:00:00 * Date/Time End: 1997-02-18T19:13:00
Event(s):
D-ORC-015 * Latitude: -60.950000 * Longitude: -45.421000 * Date/Time: 1989-01-01T00:00:00 * Elevation: -290.0 m * Location: Southern Ocean * Campaign: ANTARTIDA8611 * Basis: Nuevo Alcocero * Method/Device: Box corer (BC)
PS1016-1 (PS01/177) * Latitude: -77.284790 * Longitude: -40.832690 * Date/Time: 1983-02-18T00:00:00 * Elevation: -701.0 m * Penetration: 0.41 m * Recovery: 0.4 m * Location: Filchner Shelf * Campaign: ANT-I/2 (PS01) * Basis: Polarstern * Method/Device: Giant box corer (GKG)
PS1490-2 (PS10/738) * Latitude: -74.677500 * Longitude: -35.085833 * Date/Time: 1987-02-09T20:19:00 * Elevation: -487.0 m * Penetration: 0.55 m * Recovery: 0.55 m * Location: Filchner Trough * Campaign: ANT-V/4 (PS10) * Basis: Polarstern * Method/Device: Giant box corer (GKG)
License:
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC-BY-3.0)
Size:
2 datasets
Download Data
Datasets listed in this publication series
- Walter, H-J; Hegner, E; Diekmann, B et al. (2000): (Table 1) Accumulation rate and radionuclides in bulk surface sediments. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.57906
- Walter, H-J; Hegner, E; Diekmann, B et al. (2000): (Table 2) Radionuclides in terrigenous sand-, silt- and clay-sized fraction. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.57908