Abstract

The outer Ross Sea continental shelf has experienced large variations in ice sheet extent over the Pleistocene that are theorized to be largely driven by changes in the westward-flowing Antarctic Slope Current (ASC) at the continental shelf break. This current regulates southward incursions of warm modified Circumpolar Water, and it is thought to have triggered past marine ice sheet retreat. Additionally, expansions of grounded ice sheets on the continental shelf have fundamentally altered the Ross Sea water mass formation processes, influencing surface water salinity, sea ice cover, nutrient utilization, deep-water ventilation, and primary productivity. Here, we report the geochemical, physical properties, grain size, bulk δ15N, and diatom records during the late Pleistocene from two sediment cores from the Iselin Bank on the outermost continental shelf in the Ross Sea. These core sites were not overridden by grounded ice sheets during the late Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles, allowing for a continuous archive of glacimarine environments that were influenced by the ASC. Interglacial periods are typically characterized by high surface water productivity and nutrient utilization, with Chaetoceros resting spores indicating nutrient limitation under open ocean conditions, and glacial periods are typically characterized by low surface water productivity and nutrient utilization, with sea ice diatoms and planktonic foraminifers indicating light limitation under extensive sea ice/ice margin proximal conditions. A grain size analysis indicates coarse-skewed distributions and winnowing in the Iselin Bank region during cold periods. The winnowing may be related to enhanced ASC flow instead of density driven shelf water outflow.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call