Expedition 379T Preliminary Report, Digging Deeper with the JR100: Extending high resolution paleoclimate records from the Chilean Margin to the Eemian

Expedition 379T of the D/V JOIDES Resolution was the first in the new NSF funded JR100 program, intended to provide the US paleoceanographic community a new way for recovering long sediment records (up to 100 meters below seafloor) outside of the IODP program. As such, it bridges between the convent...

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Main Authors: Bova, Samantha Claudia, Rosenthal, Yair, Childress, Laurel, Aiello, Ivano, Avila, Alejandro, Charles, Christopher, Cheung, Anson, Clementi, Vincent, DeLong, Kimberly, Dove, Isabel, Du, Xiaojing, Estes, Emily, Garcia-Lasanta, Cristina, Goldstein, Steven, Hagemann, Julia, Hatfield, Robert, Haynes, Laura, Hess, Anya, Irvali, Nil, Kiro, Yael, Lambert, Jonathan, Li, Chen, Longo, William, McGrath, Sarah, Monteagudo, Minda, Riechelson, Hailey, Robinson, Rebecca, Sarao, John, Sproson, Adam, Taylor, Shawn, Wright, James, Yokoyama, Yusuke, Yu, Mark
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/5553428
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5553428
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Summary:Expedition 379T of the D/V JOIDES Resolution was the first in the new NSF funded JR100 program, intended to provide the US paleoceanographic community a new way for recovering long sediment records (up to 100 meters below seafloor) outside of the IODP program. As such, it bridges between the conventional coring capability on UNOLS ships and the deep sea drilling program. The primary objective of the expedition was to investigate links between oceanographic changes at the northern margin of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current and climate variability on the South American continent over the past few glacial-interglacial cycles, with a special emphasis on obtaining high-resolution records of the Eemian interval and the last two glacial terminations. Given very high sedimentation rates along the Chilean margins, the new cores will enable reconstruction of surface and intermediate water variability at centennial-to-millennial resolution, which will extend available records from previous coring expeditions (ODP Expedition 202), thus permitting comparison of Southern Hemisphere records of the Holocene and last interglacial (LIG- Eemian), terminations I and II, and the MIS 5e-5d glacial inception. Eight sites were cored during Expedition 379T, recovering a total of 2232 m of sediment cores in 670–3055 m water depth with an average recovery of 101.8% during 14.62 days of on-site operations. The eight sites extend over a wide latitudinal distance (46-36°S) covering the modern transition from the Antarctic subpolar to the subtropical zones as well as spanning water depths intersecting the Antarctic Intermediate Water (AAIW), Pacific Deep Water (PDW) and Circumpolar deep water (CPDW) water masses. Six of the sites are located on the Chilean margins at intermediate water depths (670-1534 mbsl) and the other two sites are situated in deep water off the shelf (2032 and 3055 mbsl). Three holes were APC cored in all but one site allowing for compositing complete splices for paleoceanographic reconstructions. Shipboard analyses of ...