Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific

A high standing oceanic island in the mid-latitudes of the South Pacific, New Zealand is well situated to record far-field effects of global climate change. A 1.8 Ma paleomagnetic and environmental magnetic record from the Challenger Plateau, Tasman Sea, is presented here. Continuous sub-samples (u-...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nelson, Faye Elizabeth
Other Authors: Wilson, Gary Steven
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Otago 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10523/1840
id ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/1840
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivotagoour
language English
topic Paleomagnetism
Relative paleointensity
Tasman Sea
spellingShingle Paleomagnetism
Relative paleointensity
Tasman Sea
Nelson, Faye Elizabeth
Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific
topic_facet Paleomagnetism
Relative paleointensity
Tasman Sea
description A high standing oceanic island in the mid-latitudes of the South Pacific, New Zealand is well situated to record far-field effects of global climate change. A 1.8 Ma paleomagnetic and environmental magnetic record from the Challenger Plateau, Tasman Sea, is presented here. Continuous sub-samples (u-channels) were collected from three long (up to ~40 m) giant piston cores (MD06-2987, -2988 and -2989), as well as shorter cores (TAN0712-14, -15, -17, -23, -27), within the global westerly system in front of New Zealand's Southern Alps. Magnetic grain size in the cores was determined from anhysteretic remanent magnetism (κARM) and volume magnetic susceptibility measured on u-channel samples using a pass-through cryogenic magnetometer with an in-line Bartington MS2C susceptibility bridge and solenoid in a shielded room (150 nT). Magnetic mineralogy was investigated using temperature-dependent susceptibility, hysteresis parameters and elemental analysis. Age control was achieved through radiocarbon ages, and correlation of the paleomagnetic inclination and relative paleointensity records (derived from NRM/saturationARM; RPIarm) to radiometrically dated geomagnetic excursions. An inclination anomaly and RPI minima in TAN0712-14 at 29.92 cal ka BP (2σ age range: 29.36 : 30.5 cal ka BP) is inferred to record the Mono Lake excursion and falls within the error range of the published radiometric age, supporting a relatively rapid lock-in of the paleomagnetic signal. MD06-2987, -2988 and -2989 make up a relative paleointensity (RPIarm) stack---West Coast South Island 1800-ka or WCSI-1800---and contain fifteen Brunhes and Matuyama excursions. Correlation with other stacks and the presence of coeval paleointensity minima support it as a South Pacific representation of Earth's geomagnetic field. Influxes of fine magnetic minerals in cores MD06-2988 and -2989 are inferred to be a clay content (ice cap glaciation) proxy and correlate with cold stadials (MIS 58, 52, 38, 36, 20 and 6). The magnetic grain-size record of MD06-2989 has spectral power at both obliquity and precession frequencies. Magnetic grain-size fining in MD06-2987 corresponds to Antarctic warm events (A6-A1) and implies circum-Antarctic waxing and waning in bottom water production on millennial timescales during the last interglacial. Higher frequency fining events correlate to millennial-scale warm Antarctic Isotopic Maxima events (AIM) 7-3. Termination I between 12.5 and 11.75 cal ka BP is defined by a monotonic increase in κARM, through the Younger Dryas (YD) chronozone and mirroring the EPICA ice core δ18O transition out of the Antarctic Cold Reversal. A simple phenomenological model is derived from the positive linear relationship (r = 0.86; n = 21; p = 1 x 10-6) of κARM and water depth on the continental shelf. Hydrodynamic sorting is inferred to be the primary process. Rock magnetic paleobathymetry has potential to provide quantitative constraints on estimates of water depth changes in, for example, shallow glacimarine settings. Together, the cores record most of the past two million years of oceanographic and climatic change at these sites, including tight connections between cooling/warming in New Zealand and Antarctica on timescales as short as 1000 years. This implies climate signals are rapidly communicated through both the ocean and atmosphere.
author2 Wilson, Gary Steven
format Thesis
author Nelson, Faye Elizabeth
author_facet Nelson, Faye Elizabeth
author_sort Nelson, Faye Elizabeth
title Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific
title_short Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific
title_full Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific
title_fullStr Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific
title_full_unstemmed Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific
title_sort paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the new zealand sector of the south pacific
publisher University of Otago
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10523/1840
geographic Antarctic
New Zealand
Pacific
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
New Zealand
Pacific
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
EPICA
Ice cap
ice core
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
EPICA
Ice cap
ice core
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10523/1840
op_rights All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
_version_ 1766256373506506752
spelling ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/1840 2023-05-15T13:52:08+02:00 Paleomagnetic records of the last two million years of climate and oceanographic change in the New Zealand sector of the South Pacific Nelson, Faye Elizabeth Wilson, Gary Steven 2011-08-12T01:05:16Z http://hdl.handle.net/10523/1840 en eng University of Otago http://hdl.handle.net/10523/1840 All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated. Paleomagnetism Relative paleointensity Tasman Sea Thesis or Dissertation 2011 ftunivotagoour 2022-05-11T19:14:41Z A high standing oceanic island in the mid-latitudes of the South Pacific, New Zealand is well situated to record far-field effects of global climate change. A 1.8 Ma paleomagnetic and environmental magnetic record from the Challenger Plateau, Tasman Sea, is presented here. Continuous sub-samples (u-channels) were collected from three long (up to ~40 m) giant piston cores (MD06-2987, -2988 and -2989), as well as shorter cores (TAN0712-14, -15, -17, -23, -27), within the global westerly system in front of New Zealand's Southern Alps. Magnetic grain size in the cores was determined from anhysteretic remanent magnetism (κARM) and volume magnetic susceptibility measured on u-channel samples using a pass-through cryogenic magnetometer with an in-line Bartington MS2C susceptibility bridge and solenoid in a shielded room (150 nT). Magnetic mineralogy was investigated using temperature-dependent susceptibility, hysteresis parameters and elemental analysis. Age control was achieved through radiocarbon ages, and correlation of the paleomagnetic inclination and relative paleointensity records (derived from NRM/saturationARM; RPIarm) to radiometrically dated geomagnetic excursions. An inclination anomaly and RPI minima in TAN0712-14 at 29.92 cal ka BP (2σ age range: 29.36 : 30.5 cal ka BP) is inferred to record the Mono Lake excursion and falls within the error range of the published radiometric age, supporting a relatively rapid lock-in of the paleomagnetic signal. MD06-2987, -2988 and -2989 make up a relative paleointensity (RPIarm) stack---West Coast South Island 1800-ka or WCSI-1800---and contain fifteen Brunhes and Matuyama excursions. Correlation with other stacks and the presence of coeval paleointensity minima support it as a South Pacific representation of Earth's geomagnetic field. Influxes of fine magnetic minerals in cores MD06-2988 and -2989 are inferred to be a clay content (ice cap glaciation) proxy and correlate with cold stadials (MIS 58, 52, 38, 36, 20 and 6). The magnetic grain-size record of MD06-2989 has spectral power at both obliquity and precession frequencies. Magnetic grain-size fining in MD06-2987 corresponds to Antarctic warm events (A6-A1) and implies circum-Antarctic waxing and waning in bottom water production on millennial timescales during the last interglacial. Higher frequency fining events correlate to millennial-scale warm Antarctic Isotopic Maxima events (AIM) 7-3. Termination I between 12.5 and 11.75 cal ka BP is defined by a monotonic increase in κARM, through the Younger Dryas (YD) chronozone and mirroring the EPICA ice core δ18O transition out of the Antarctic Cold Reversal. A simple phenomenological model is derived from the positive linear relationship (r = 0.86; n = 21; p = 1 x 10-6) of κARM and water depth on the continental shelf. Hydrodynamic sorting is inferred to be the primary process. Rock magnetic paleobathymetry has potential to provide quantitative constraints on estimates of water depth changes in, for example, shallow glacimarine settings. Together, the cores record most of the past two million years of oceanographic and climatic change at these sites, including tight connections between cooling/warming in New Zealand and Antarctica on timescales as short as 1000 years. This implies climate signals are rapidly communicated through both the ocean and atmosphere. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica EPICA Ice cap ice core University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive) Antarctic New Zealand Pacific The Antarctic