Abstract

A distinct boundary between sediment types usually occurs at a depth of about 10 cm in bottom cores raised from the Alpha Rise in the Arctic Ocean. The sediment between the tops of the cores and the 10 cm boundary is a dark brown, foraminiferal lutite mixed with ice-rafted sand and pebbles. The sediment between the 10 cm boundary and a depth of about 40 cm is a light brown sand with ice-rafted material but few Foraminifera. The 10 cm boundary apparently represents the most recent change in pelagic deposition in this region and must be connected with climatic changes. Foraminifera from a zone between 7 and 10 cm have been dated by the C 14 method as 25,000 ± 3000 and as 30,000 years BP in two different samples. The 10 cm boundary itself has been dated as 70, 000 years BP by a uranium series method. If these dates are accepted, a low sedimentation rate of 1 1 2 to 3 mm/1000 years is indicated for the Alpha Rise and for the Arctic Ocean as a whole if pelagic sedimentation has been uniform over the entire ocean. Cores from the Canada Abyssal Plain differ in character from the Alpha Rise cores consisting primarily of olive-gray lutite without Foraminifera or ice-rafted material. This sediment was probably deposited by turbidity currents. A 3 mm layer of dark brown, foraminiferal lutite occurs at the top of the Canada Abyssal Plain cores. This layer is similar to the upper layer in Alpha Rise cores and apparently represents continued pelagic deposition since the last turbidity current. Foraminifera from this upper 3 mm layer have been dated as 700 ± 100 years BP by the C 14 method. The conclusion is that pelagic sedimentation has continued unchanged in the Arctic Ocean from about 70,000 years ago to the present. This implies that the present ice cover has existed for that length of time.

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