Abstract
Recent studies highlight the role of the Mediterranean Outflow Water (MOW), in the intensification of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and as source of heat and salty water to high latitudes. During the Late Miocene the MOW suffered major changes and likely a total collapse during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). In order to study the MOW evolution in the Atlantic margin during the Tortonian-Messinian interval we completed a new high resolution geochemical and stable isotope record for the corresponding interval of the Montemayor-1 and Huelva-1 cores. Both sites are located in the Guadalquivir Basin on the former Atlantic side of the Mediterranean – Atlantic gateways (Iberian Atlantic margin) during the late Miocene. The tuning of this isotope record with astronomical solutions and other global isotope curves has allowed the establishment of an improved chronology and, consequently, to precisely date environmental changes happening on the Atlantic margin of the Iberian peninsula and their link to Mediterranean and global events. At 7.17 Ma, in concomitance with a shallowing of the basin, the residence time, temperature and salinity of the bottom waters increased. These changes were related to a reduction of the MOW reaching the Atlantic side as a consequence of the restriction of the last strand of the Betic corridor that connected the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. This hypothesis is in line with the analogous changes observed in several Mediterranean Sea locations, where from 7.17 Ma onward a reduced Mediterranean – Atlantic connection is observable. Furthermore, the new isotope chronology sheds light, through comparison with other records, on the age of Messinian geomagnetic reversals.
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