Abstract
Sediment cores from the Nordic seas covering the past five climatic cycles have been investigated to elucidate the climate-induced relation between the pelagic and benthic realm from studies of foraminifera. A comparison of the total number of benthic and planktic foraminiferal tests (specimens per gram sediment) reveals corresponding fluctuations over the entire time range investigated. Highest abundances are normally observed during peak interglacial periods, whereas glacial periods are marked by generally reduced numbers offoraminiferal tests. Despite an overall similarity, on a spatial basis, the relative proportion of planktic and benthic foraminiferal abundance seems to have varied between each interglaciation. Moreover, distinct differences in species composition characterize some interglacial periods and short time intervals. Because these compositions have had no modem analogue at any time during the present interglacial (Holocene), it is suggested that they result from oceanographic conditions other than those that prevail in the Nordic seas today.
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