Abstract

A high-resolution record of radiolarian assemblages from Site U1314 was studied to reconstruct hydrographic and climatic changes in the North Atlantic Ocean during the Mid-Pleistocene Transition period (1069–779ka). Besides the faunal record, absolute accumulation of radiolarians and total biogenic opal are used to determine changes in surface water productivity. Results show that the North Atlantic Arctic Front shifted back and forth repeatedly at a glacial/interglacial timescale, bringing the site under the influence of both cold Arctic (glacial), and much warmer Atlantic (interglacial) waters. During glacial intervals and “ice-rafted debris” (IRD) events, the deep-dwelling taxon Cycladophora davisiana was the greatest contributor of the radiolarian assemblage, suggesting cold surface conditions, melt-water discharge and changes in deep and intermediate circulation. Interglacial intervals were characterized by abundant shallow-dwelling taxa like Pseudodyctiophimus gracilipes and Lithomelissa setosa, increased opal accumulation, and higher radiolarian diversities, indicating a northward flow of warm Atlantic surface waters to the Site U1314 area. A marked change in the structure of the radiolarian assemblage occurred after MIS 22 (~860ka), with large taxa differences between warm and cold periods, probably in response to changing ocean conditions due to the higher amplitude of glacial/interglacial changes as the dominant periodicity of high-latitude climate oscillations shifted from 41-kyr to 100-kyr. Thus, we conclude that the radiolarian assemblage from the North Atlantic have changed drastically along with variations in ocean circulation in response to orbital and millennial-scale climatic variations that occurred in the Early and Mid-Pleistocene.

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