Neogene evolution of Atlantic thermohaline circulation: Perspective fromWalvis Ridge, southeastern Atlantic Ocean

circulation. The new data indicate that deepwater eNd(t) values from ODP Site 1262 decrease from 11.0 at 10.6 Ma to 12.5 by 7.3 Ma. This decrease parallels the Nd isotope trends contained in Fe-Mn crust records from the northwestern Atlantic; however, the shift at ODP Site 1262 (4755 m water depth)...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Deborah J. Thomas, Rachael K. Via
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.571.4797
http://geoclasses.tamu.edu/ocean/dthomas/Thomas%26Via_2007.pdf
Description
Summary:circulation. The new data indicate that deepwater eNd(t) values from ODP Site 1262 decrease from 11.0 at 10.6 Ma to 12.5 by 7.3 Ma. This decrease parallels the Nd isotope trends contained in Fe-Mn crust records from the northwestern Atlantic; however, the shift at ODP Site 1262 (4755 m water depth) occurred up to 6 Ma earlier than the corresponding changes in crust records from the Atlantic and earlier than any Atlantic site shallower than 2700 m paleowater depth. Recent interpretations of the rapid decrease in Fe-Mn crust Nd eNd(t)ssvalues invoke changes in weathering inputs to the Labrador Sea region rather than a fundamental change in deepwater convection in the Labrador Sea. However, the new evidence for significant depth stratification of the Nd isotope signal in the southeastern Atlantic between 10.6 and 7.3 Ma suggests that the onset of deepwater convection in the Labrador Sea may have played a role in the deepwater decrease in Nd isotopic composition. Climatic conditions during the middle to late Miocene likely favored an increase in the importance of glacially induced mechanical weathering, while at the same time promoting deep convection in the Labrador Sea.