Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions

Two cores, one from the Beaufort Sea Slope at 1000 m water depth (core 750) and one from the Amundsen Gulf at 426 m (core 124), were collected to help determine paleo-ice cover in the Holocene and late glacial of this area. Site 750 is particularly sensitive to changes in paleo-ice cover because it...

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Published in:Paleoceanography
Main Authors: Scott, D. B. (David Bruce), Schell, Trecia, St-Onge, Guillaume, Rochon, Andre, Blasco, Steve
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575
http://hdl.handle.net/10222/25909
id ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/25909
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/25909 2023-05-15T13:22:52+02:00 Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions Scott, D. B. (David Bruce) Schell, Trecia St-Onge, Guillaume Rochon, Andre Blasco, Steve 2013-06-19T17:40:18Z https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575 http://hdl.handle.net/10222/25909 unknown Paleoceanography Scott, David B., Trecia Schell, Guillaume St-Onge, Andre Rochon, et al. 2009. "Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions." Paleoceanography 24: 2219-PA2219. doi:10.1029/2007PA001575 0883-8305 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575 http://hdl.handle.net/10222/25909 24 2219 Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union. article 2013 ftdalhouse https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575 2021-12-29T18:08:39Z Two cores, one from the Beaufort Sea Slope at 1000 m water depth (core 750) and one from the Amundsen Gulf at 426 m (core 124), were collected to help determine paleo-ice cover in the Holocene and late glacial of this area. Site 750 is particularly sensitive to changes in paleo-ice cover because it rests beneath the present ice margin of the permanent Arctic ice pack. Core 124 was sampled just in front of the former glacier that moved out into the Amundsen Gulf and started to recede about 13 ka B. P. Both cores have a strong occurrence of calcareous foraminifera in the upper few centimeters, but these disappear throughout most of the Holocene, suggesting more open water in that time period than present. In the sediments representing the end of the last glacial period (dated at similar to 11,500-14,000 calibrated years B.P. (cal B.P.)) a calcareous fauna with an abundant planktic foraminiferal fauna suggests a return to almost permanent ice cover, much like the central Arctic today. Together with the foraminifera there was also abundant ice-rafted debris (IRD) in both cores between 12,000 cal B.P. and similar to 14,000 cal B.P., but those units are of different ages between cores, suggesting different events. The IRD in both cores appears to have the same magnetic and chemical signals, but their origins cannot be determined exactly until clay mineralogy is completed. There is abundant organic debris in both cores below the IRD units: the organics in core 750 are very diffuse and not visually identifiable, but the organic material in core 124 is clearly identifiable with terrestrial root fragments; these are (14)C dated at over 37,000 years B.P. This is a marine unit as it also has glacial front foraminifera in the sediment with the organic debris that must have been originating from subglacial streams. The seismic and multibeam data both indicate glaciers did not cross the core 124 site. Article in Journal/Newspaper Amundsen Gulf Arctic Beaufort Sea Central Arctic Foraminifera* glacier* ice pack Sea ice Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Arctic Canada Paleoceanography 24 2 n/a n/a
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language unknown
description Two cores, one from the Beaufort Sea Slope at 1000 m water depth (core 750) and one from the Amundsen Gulf at 426 m (core 124), were collected to help determine paleo-ice cover in the Holocene and late glacial of this area. Site 750 is particularly sensitive to changes in paleo-ice cover because it rests beneath the present ice margin of the permanent Arctic ice pack. Core 124 was sampled just in front of the former glacier that moved out into the Amundsen Gulf and started to recede about 13 ka B. P. Both cores have a strong occurrence of calcareous foraminifera in the upper few centimeters, but these disappear throughout most of the Holocene, suggesting more open water in that time period than present. In the sediments representing the end of the last glacial period (dated at similar to 11,500-14,000 calibrated years B.P. (cal B.P.)) a calcareous fauna with an abundant planktic foraminiferal fauna suggests a return to almost permanent ice cover, much like the central Arctic today. Together with the foraminifera there was also abundant ice-rafted debris (IRD) in both cores between 12,000 cal B.P. and similar to 14,000 cal B.P., but those units are of different ages between cores, suggesting different events. The IRD in both cores appears to have the same magnetic and chemical signals, but their origins cannot be determined exactly until clay mineralogy is completed. There is abundant organic debris in both cores below the IRD units: the organics in core 750 are very diffuse and not visually identifiable, but the organic material in core 124 is clearly identifiable with terrestrial root fragments; these are (14)C dated at over 37,000 years B.P. This is a marine unit as it also has glacial front foraminifera in the sediment with the organic debris that must have been originating from subglacial streams. The seismic and multibeam data both indicate glaciers did not cross the core 124 site.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Scott, D. B. (David Bruce)
Schell, Trecia
St-Onge, Guillaume
Rochon, Andre
Blasco, Steve
spellingShingle Scott, D. B. (David Bruce)
Schell, Trecia
St-Onge, Guillaume
Rochon, Andre
Blasco, Steve
Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions
author_facet Scott, D. B. (David Bruce)
Schell, Trecia
St-Onge, Guillaume
Rochon, Andre
Blasco, Steve
author_sort Scott, D. B. (David Bruce)
title Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions
title_short Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions
title_full Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions
title_fullStr Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions
title_full_unstemmed Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions
title_sort foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the mackenzie-beaufort sea slope and amundsen gulf, canada: implications for past sea ice conditions
publishDate 2013
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575
http://hdl.handle.net/10222/25909
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Amundsen Gulf
Arctic
Beaufort Sea
Central Arctic
Foraminifera*
glacier*
ice pack
Sea ice
genre_facet Amundsen Gulf
Arctic
Beaufort Sea
Central Arctic
Foraminifera*
glacier*
ice pack
Sea ice
op_relation Paleoceanography
Scott, David B., Trecia Schell, Guillaume St-Onge, Andre Rochon, et al. 2009. "Foraminiferal assemblage changes over the last 15,000 years on the Mackenzie-Beaufort Sea Slope and Amundsen Gulf, Canada: Implications for past sea ice conditions." Paleoceanography 24: 2219-PA2219. doi:10.1029/2007PA001575
0883-8305
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575
http://hdl.handle.net/10222/25909
24
2219
op_rights Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1029/2007PA001575
container_title Paleoceanography
container_volume 24
container_issue 2
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