Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.

This NSF funded project was dedicated to testing the idea that the Younger Dryas cold epoch (~13,000 to ~12700 years Before Present) was caused by a massive flood of fresh water via Mackenzie River to the eastern Beaufort Sea. It was noted in a 1975 paper in Science by Kennett and Shackleton that th...

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Main Authors: Lloyd Keigwin, Neal Driscoll
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:a2989644-3b3c-4e2f-8198-4957af42c940
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spelling dataone:urn:uuid:a2989644-3b3c-4e2f-8198-4957af42c940 2024-11-03T19:45:09+00:00 Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013. Lloyd Keigwin Neal Driscoll continental slope, eastern Beaufort Sea, core JPC-15 ENVELOPE(-135.136,-135.136,71.104,71.104) BEGINDATE: 2013-08-18T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-09-06T00:00:00Z 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:a2989644-3b3c-4e2f-8198-4957af42c940 unknown Arctic Data Center piston core foraminifera oxygen isotopes deglaciation meltwater Mackenzie River Younger Dryas radiocarbon Dataset 2018 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-11-03T19:11:21Z This NSF funded project was dedicated to testing the idea that the Younger Dryas cold epoch (~13,000 to ~12700 years Before Present) was caused by a massive flood of fresh water via Mackenzie River to the eastern Beaufort Sea. It was noted in a 1975 paper in Science by Kennett and Shackleton that the flood of fresh water down Mississippi River was interrupted at about 13 ka, even though there was no reason to suspect a pause in glacial ice melt. The Kennett and Shackleton hypothesis led to the expectation that as glacial ice continued to melt and retreat northward, at some point eastern outlets for meltwater must have opened to the St. Lawrence system around the time the Mississippi flood ended. However, researchers looked for decades for the signal of low d18-O in planktonic foraminifera off eastern Canada, to no avail. The only other logical direction for meltwater would have been to the north through Mackenzie River. Two piston cores recovered during HLY 2013 near Mackenzie River have the low d18-O signal of the flood beginning at 12.9 ka according to radiocarbon dating. Those flood waters most likely reduced the surface ocean salinity in the Nordic Seas, reducing the production of deep water, and thereby reducing the northward the flux of warm salty waters that account for the temperate climate in northern Europe today. This flood was most likely the trigger for the younger Dryas cooling. Analytical data associated with this project, and especially those data published in Keigwin et al. (2018, "Deglacial floods in the Beaufort Sea preceded Younger Dryas cooling," Nature Geoscience, dos/10.1038/s41561-018-0169-6), can be found in the NOAA WDS paleoclimatology database (https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/study/24790). Those data are mostly the metadata, the chronology, and the stable isotope results. The metadata are repeated here. Supplementary information to Keigwin et al. 2018 may be found at the Nature Geoscience url shown above. Underway geophysical data can be found here: doi.org/10.18739/A2FB4WK7X. Dataset Beaufort Sea Mackenzie river Nordic Seas Planktonic foraminifera Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Canada Kennett ENVELOPE(-65.167,-65.167,-67.117,-67.117) Mackenzie River Shackleton ENVELOPE(-135.136,-135.136,71.104,71.104)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic piston core
foraminifera
oxygen isotopes
deglaciation
meltwater
Mackenzie River
Younger Dryas
radiocarbon
spellingShingle piston core
foraminifera
oxygen isotopes
deglaciation
meltwater
Mackenzie River
Younger Dryas
radiocarbon
Lloyd Keigwin
Neal Driscoll
Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.
topic_facet piston core
foraminifera
oxygen isotopes
deglaciation
meltwater
Mackenzie River
Younger Dryas
radiocarbon
description This NSF funded project was dedicated to testing the idea that the Younger Dryas cold epoch (~13,000 to ~12700 years Before Present) was caused by a massive flood of fresh water via Mackenzie River to the eastern Beaufort Sea. It was noted in a 1975 paper in Science by Kennett and Shackleton that the flood of fresh water down Mississippi River was interrupted at about 13 ka, even though there was no reason to suspect a pause in glacial ice melt. The Kennett and Shackleton hypothesis led to the expectation that as glacial ice continued to melt and retreat northward, at some point eastern outlets for meltwater must have opened to the St. Lawrence system around the time the Mississippi flood ended. However, researchers looked for decades for the signal of low d18-O in planktonic foraminifera off eastern Canada, to no avail. The only other logical direction for meltwater would have been to the north through Mackenzie River. Two piston cores recovered during HLY 2013 near Mackenzie River have the low d18-O signal of the flood beginning at 12.9 ka according to radiocarbon dating. Those flood waters most likely reduced the surface ocean salinity in the Nordic Seas, reducing the production of deep water, and thereby reducing the northward the flux of warm salty waters that account for the temperate climate in northern Europe today. This flood was most likely the trigger for the younger Dryas cooling. Analytical data associated with this project, and especially those data published in Keigwin et al. (2018, "Deglacial floods in the Beaufort Sea preceded Younger Dryas cooling," Nature Geoscience, dos/10.1038/s41561-018-0169-6), can be found in the NOAA WDS paleoclimatology database (https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/study/24790). Those data are mostly the metadata, the chronology, and the stable isotope results. The metadata are repeated here. Supplementary information to Keigwin et al. 2018 may be found at the Nature Geoscience url shown above. Underway geophysical data can be found here: doi.org/10.18739/A2FB4WK7X.
format Dataset
author Lloyd Keigwin
Neal Driscoll
author_facet Lloyd Keigwin
Neal Driscoll
author_sort Lloyd Keigwin
title Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.
title_short Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.
title_full Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.
title_fullStr Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.
title_full_unstemmed Testing the northern route for Younger Dryas meltwater, in the Beaufort Sea, based on the second cruise of USCG icebreaker Healy in 2013.
title_sort testing the northern route for younger dryas meltwater, in the beaufort sea, based on the second cruise of uscg icebreaker healy in 2013.
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2018
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:a2989644-3b3c-4e2f-8198-4957af42c940
op_coverage continental slope, eastern Beaufort Sea, core JPC-15
ENVELOPE(-135.136,-135.136,71.104,71.104)
BEGINDATE: 2013-08-18T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2013-09-06T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-65.167,-65.167,-67.117,-67.117)
ENVELOPE(-135.136,-135.136,71.104,71.104)
geographic Canada
Kennett
Mackenzie River
Shackleton
geographic_facet Canada
Kennett
Mackenzie River
Shackleton
genre Beaufort Sea
Mackenzie river
Nordic Seas
Planktonic foraminifera
genre_facet Beaufort Sea
Mackenzie river
Nordic Seas
Planktonic foraminifera
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