Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:

Recent warming of Earth’s climate has inspired many studies of the polar region in order to better understand how ice-sheets respond to climate change. Oceanic systems play a key role in regulating climate. Surface ocean circulation is driven by wind and deep ocean circulation (thermohaline) by dens...

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Other Authors: Luna, Melissa (Melissa Luna) (author), (Suzanne O'Connell) (Thesis advisor), () (Committee member), (Degree grantor)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Subjects:
> -
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.2.179
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/object/ir%3A2490/datastream/TN/view/Climate%20Change%20During%20the%20Pliocene%3A%20Interpretations%20from%20Site%20697,%20the%20Jane%20Basin,%20Weddell%20Sea,%20Antarctica.jpg
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/object/ir-2490
id ftwesleyanu:oai:digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu:ir_2490
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwesleyanu:oai:digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu:ir_2490 2023-05-15T13:59:40+02:00 Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica: Luna, Melissa (Melissa Luna) (author) (Suzanne O'Connell) (Thesis advisor) () (Committee member) (Degree grantor) 124 pages electronic application/pdf https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.2.179 https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/object/ir%3A2490/datastream/TN/view/Climate%20Change%20During%20the%20Pliocene%3A%20Interpretations%20from%20Site%20697,%20the%20Jane%20Basin,%20Weddell%20Sea,%20Antarctica.jpg https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/object/ir-2490 eng eng In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted (InC-NC) Antarctica Climate Change Pliocene Sediment Grain Size Spectra Clays --- Text theses Dissertation/Thesis ftwesleyanu https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.2.179 2022-02-04T20:38:12Z Recent warming of Earth’s climate has inspired many studies of the polar region in order to better understand how ice-sheets respond to climate change. Oceanic systems play a key role in regulating climate. Surface ocean circulation is driven by wind and deep ocean circulation (thermohaline) by density. Both transport heat and nutrients around the world. This study analyzes changes in grain size and composition of mid and late Pliocene-age sediment (~3.8-2.7 Ma), from the Jane Basin in West Antarctica. The Pliocene was a time when global temperatures were 2.5-4.0 °C warmer, and when carbon dioxide levels were similar to today. Based on changes in both the fine and coarse-fraction sediment (IRD), three distinct intervals were identified in which both the processes and sources of the sediment changed. Interval I extends from ~3.78 to ~3.63 Ma, and was a time when both surface and bottom currents were active and variable, and peak changes in the currents and IRD deposition occurred at similar times. During Interval II, ~3.50-3.30 Ma, both surface and bottom currents continued to active, but were more variable with peak changes offset by about ~15-40 thousand years. Interval III, ~3.30-2.77 Ma, was a time when there was little to no input of IRD, and slower, less variable bottom currents. This data shows that during Intervals I and II, ice sheets produced icebergs that traveled far enough to deposit IRD in the Jane Basin and bottom currents, though variable were strong. However, at the end of Interval II there was a slight decrease in bottom current strength and a much larger decrease in IRD. This change is attributed to an abrupt cooling event. During the late Pliocene, the bottom current activity was lower than in the earlier Pliocene, and IRD deposition decreased, suggesting that fewer icebergs were produced, or that the icebergs did not travel far enough to deposit course sediment into the Jane Basin. Overall, understanding how the Antarctic environment responded to changes in climate allows us to better predict how our climate today will respond to similar conditions from the past. Thus, it is important to use the sedimentary archive as the key to the future. Old URL: https://wesscholar.wesleyan.edu/etd_mas_theses/181 In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted (InC-NC) Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Iceberg* Weddell Sea West Antarctica Wesleyan University: WesScholar Antarctic Jane Basin ENVELOPE(-41.909,-41.909,-61.890,-61.890) The Antarctic Weddell Weddell Sea West Antarctica
institution Open Polar
collection Wesleyan University: WesScholar
op_collection_id ftwesleyanu
language English
topic Antarctica
Climate Change
Pliocene
Sediment
Grain Size
Spectra
Clays
---
spellingShingle Antarctica
Climate Change
Pliocene
Sediment
Grain Size
Spectra
Clays
---
Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:
topic_facet Antarctica
Climate Change
Pliocene
Sediment
Grain Size
Spectra
Clays
---
description Recent warming of Earth’s climate has inspired many studies of the polar region in order to better understand how ice-sheets respond to climate change. Oceanic systems play a key role in regulating climate. Surface ocean circulation is driven by wind and deep ocean circulation (thermohaline) by density. Both transport heat and nutrients around the world. This study analyzes changes in grain size and composition of mid and late Pliocene-age sediment (~3.8-2.7 Ma), from the Jane Basin in West Antarctica. The Pliocene was a time when global temperatures were 2.5-4.0 °C warmer, and when carbon dioxide levels were similar to today. Based on changes in both the fine and coarse-fraction sediment (IRD), three distinct intervals were identified in which both the processes and sources of the sediment changed. Interval I extends from ~3.78 to ~3.63 Ma, and was a time when both surface and bottom currents were active and variable, and peak changes in the currents and IRD deposition occurred at similar times. During Interval II, ~3.50-3.30 Ma, both surface and bottom currents continued to active, but were more variable with peak changes offset by about ~15-40 thousand years. Interval III, ~3.30-2.77 Ma, was a time when there was little to no input of IRD, and slower, less variable bottom currents. This data shows that during Intervals I and II, ice sheets produced icebergs that traveled far enough to deposit IRD in the Jane Basin and bottom currents, though variable were strong. However, at the end of Interval II there was a slight decrease in bottom current strength and a much larger decrease in IRD. This change is attributed to an abrupt cooling event. During the late Pliocene, the bottom current activity was lower than in the earlier Pliocene, and IRD deposition decreased, suggesting that fewer icebergs were produced, or that the icebergs did not travel far enough to deposit course sediment into the Jane Basin. Overall, understanding how the Antarctic environment responded to changes in climate allows us to better predict how our climate today will respond to similar conditions from the past. Thus, it is important to use the sedimentary archive as the key to the future. Old URL: https://wesscholar.wesleyan.edu/etd_mas_theses/181 In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted (InC-NC)
author2 Luna, Melissa (Melissa Luna) (author)
(Suzanne O'Connell) (Thesis advisor)
() (Committee member)
(Degree grantor)
format Thesis
title Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:
title_short Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:
title_full Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:
title_fullStr Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:
title_full_unstemmed Climate Change During the Pliocene: Interpretations from Site 697, the Jane Basin, Weddell Sea, Antarctica:
title_sort climate change during the pliocene: interpretations from site 697, the jane basin, weddell sea, antarctica:
url https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.2.179
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/islandora/object/ir%3A2490/datastream/TN/view/Climate%20Change%20During%20the%20Pliocene%3A%20Interpretations%20from%20Site%20697,%20the%20Jane%20Basin,%20Weddell%20Sea,%20Antarctica.jpg
https://digitalcollections.wesleyan.edu/object/ir-2490
long_lat ENVELOPE(-41.909,-41.909,-61.890,-61.890)
geographic Antarctic
Jane Basin
The Antarctic
Weddell
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
geographic_facet Antarctic
Jane Basin
The Antarctic
Weddell
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Iceberg*
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Iceberg*
Weddell Sea
West Antarctica
op_rights In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted (InC-NC)
op_doi https://doi.org/10.14418/wes01.2.179
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