Abstract

High-resolution palaeoclimate records recovered from the Iberian margin in core MD95-2040 exhibit large fluctuations in oceanographic conditions over the last 190 ka. Large-scale cooling of the surface ocean is indicated by the presence of the polar planktonic foraminifer Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sinistral), and in some instances the occurrence of ice-rafted debris (IRD). Ice-rafting episodes were prevalent in both of the last two glacials with greater intensity in Stages 2 through 4, than in Stage 6. The six youngest Heinrich events are well defined during the last glacial but detrital carbonate is absent from Heinrich layers HL6, HL5 and HL3. Dansgaard–Oeschger stadial-equivalent sub-millennial IRD deposition events have been detected, in particular during Stage 3, allowing a good match with the cooling displayed in the Greenland ice core (GISP2). Sea-surface temperature off Portugal in Stage 6 was in general warmer than during the last glacial, pointing towards a weaker southward influence of polar water masses. Ice rafting occurred mainly in mid-MIS (Marine Isotope Stage) 6 (between 173 and 153 kyr) as a group of poorly differentiated, short-duration quasi-continuous events, mainly marked by the high abundance of sinistral N. pachyderma. Differences exist in IRD composition relative to the last glacial, with a reduced Canadian-derived detrital carbonate component, combined with an important contribution of volcanic particles. The lower magnitude and higher frequency of these events suggest that the higher temperatures would have induced iceberg waning closer to the source areas.

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