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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: McKay, Robert M; Naish, Tim R; Carter, Lionel; Riesselman, Christina R; Dunbar, Robert G; Winter, Diane M; Sjunneskog, Charlotte; Sangiorgi, Francesca; Warren, Courtney E; Pagani, Mark; Schouten, Stefan; Willmott, Verónica; Levy, Richard H; DeConto, Robert M; Powell, Ross (2012): Antarctic and Southern Ocean influences on Late Pliocene global cooling. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(17), 6423-6428, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1112248109
    Publication Date: 2023-12-13
    Description: The influence of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean on Late Pliocene global climate reconstructions has remained ambiguous due to a lack of well-dated Antarctic-proximal, paleoenvironmental records. Here we present ice sheet, sea-surface temperature, and sea ice reconstructions from the ANDRILL AND-1B sediment core recovered from beneath the Ross Ice Shelf. We provide evidence for a major expansion of an ice sheet in the Ross Sea that began at ~3.3 Ma, followed by a coastal sea surface temperature cooling of ~2.5°C, a stepwise expansion of sea ice, and polynya-style deep mixing in the Ross Sea between 3.3 and 2.5 Ma. The intensification of Antarctic cooling resulted in strengthened westerly winds and invigorated ocean circulation. The associated northward migration of Southern Ocean fronts has been linked with reduced Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation by restricting surface water connectivity between the ocean basins, with implications for heat transport to the high latitudes of the North Atlantic. While our results do not exclude low-latitude mechanisms as drivers for Pliocene cooling, they indicate an additional role played by southern high-latitude cooling during development of the bipolar world.
    Keywords: Actinocyclus actinochilus; AND1-1B; AND-1B; Chaetoceros spp.; Counting, diatoms; Cycles; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Diatoms indeterminata; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Fragilariopsis curta; Fragilariopsis cylindrus; Fragilariopsis kerguelensis; Fragilariopsis obliquecostata; Fragilariopsis ritscheri; Fragilariopsis sublinearis; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; McMurdo Ice Shelf; McMurdo Station; MIS; Porosira pseudodenticulata; Rhizosolenia spp.; Rouxia antarctica; Shionodiscus tetraoestrupii; Stellarima microtrias; Stellarima stellaris; Thalassionema nitzschioides; Thalassiosira antarctica; Thalassiosira lentiginosa; Thalassiosira oliverana; Thalassiosira tumida; Thalassiothrix antarctica; Trichotoxon reinboldii
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5851 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Levy, Richard H; Cody, Rosemary; Crampton, James; Fielding, Christopher R; Golledge, Nicholas R; Harwood, David M; Henrys, Stuart A; McKay, Robert M; Naish, Timothy R; Ohneiser, Christian; Wilson, Gary S; Wilson, Terry; Winter, Diane M (2012): Late Neogene climate and glacial history of the Southern Victoria Land coast from integrated drill core, seismic and outcrop data. Global and Planetary Change, 80-81, 61-84, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2011.10.002
    Publication Date: 2024-04-29
    Description: Late Neogene stratigraphy of southern Victoria Land Basin is revealed in coastal and offshore drill cores and a network of seismic data in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. These data preserve a record of ice sheet response to global climate variability and progressive cooling through the past 5 million years. Application of a composite standard age model for diatom event stratigraphy to the McMurdo Sound drill cores provides an internally precise mechanism to correlate stratigraphic data and derive an event history for the basin. These marine records are indirectly compared to data obtained from geological outcrop in the Transantarctic Mountains to produce an integrated history of Antarctic Ice Sheet response to climate variability from the early Pliocene to Recent. Four distinct chronostratigraphic intervals reflect stages and steps in a transition from a relatively warm early Pliocene Antarctic coastal climate to modern cold polar conditions. Several of these stages and steps correlate with global events identified via geochemical proxy data recovered from deep ocean cores in mid to low latitudes. These correlations allow us to consider linkages between the high southern latitudes and tropical regions and establish a temporal framework to examine leads and lags in the climate system through the late Neogene and Quaternary. The relative influence of climate-tectonic feedbacks is discussed in light of glacial erosion and isostatic rebound that also influence the history along the Southern Victoria Land coastal margin.
    Keywords: AGE; Age, maximum/old; Age, minimum/young; Ageprofile Datum Description; Ageprofile Datum Type; AND1-1B; AND-1B; CIROS; CIROS-2; Commonwealth Glacier; Depth, reference; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DVDP; DVDP-10; DVDP-11; Event label; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; McMurdo Ice Shelf; McMurdo Sound; McMurdo Station; MIS; New Harbor; Sampling/drilling ice; Sampling on land
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 936 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2012. This article is posted here by permission of The Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 25, no. 3 (2012): 84-89, doi:10.5670/oceanog.2012.79.
    Description: Extensive field operations were conducted on the northwestern Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica from November 2010 through January 2011. A significant amount of equipment, supplies, and people safely traversed from McMurdo Station to establish a series of combined United States–New Zealand field camps at locations northeast of Ross Island. The ANDRILL (ANtarctic geological DRILLing) hot water drill system was used to melt multiple access holes through the ice shelf at each site to deploy a variety of sediment coring tools, cameras, and oceanographic instruments, as well as a remotely operated vehicle to characterize the ice shelf and sub-ice environment. These studies will contribute to future proposed geological drilling as part of the ANDRILL Coulman High Project.
    Description: This work is funded by US NSF-OPP Grant ANT-0838914 and by the NZ Foundation for Research, Science and Technology.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-08-10
    Description: Stratigraphic drilling from the McMurdo Ice Shelf in the 2006/2007 austral summer recovered a 1284.87 m sedimentary succession from beneath the sea floor. Key age data for the core include magnetic polarity stratigraphy for the entire succession, diatom biostratigraphy for the upper 600 m and 40Ar/39Ar ages for in-situ volcanic deposits as well as reworked volcanic clasts. A vertical seismic profile for the drill hole allows correlation between the drill hole and a regional seismic network and inference of age constraint by correlation with well‐dated regional volcanic events through direct recognition of interlayered volcanic deposits as well as by inference from flexural loading of pre‐existing strata. The combined age model implies relatively rapid (1 m/2–5 ky) accumulation of sediment punctuated by hiatuses, which account for approximately 50% of the record. Three of the longer hiatuses coincide with basin‐wide seismic reflectors and, along with two thick volcanic intervals, they subdivide the succession into seven chronostratigraphic intervals with characteristic facies: 1. The base of the cored succession (1275–1220 mbsf) comprises middle Miocene volcaniclastic sandstone dated at approx 13.5 Ma by several reworked volcanic clasts; 2. A late-Miocene sub-polar orbitally controlled glacial–interglacial succession (1220–760 mbsf) bounded by two unconformities correlated with basin‐wide reflectors associated with early development of the terror rift; 3. A late Miocene volcanigenic succession (760–596 mbsf) terminating with a ~1 my hiatus at 596.35 mbsf which spans the Miocene–Pliocene boundary and is not recognised in regional seismic data; 4. An early Pliocene obliquity-controlled alternating diamictite and diatomite glacial–interglacial succession (590–440 mbsf), separated from; 5. A late Pliocene obliquity-controlled alternating diamictite and diatomite glacial–interglacial succession (440–150 mbsf) by a 750 ky unconformity interpreted to represent a major sequence boundary at other locations; 6. An early Pleistocene interbedded volcanic, diamictite and diatomite succession (150–80 mbsf), and; 7. A late Pleistocene glacigene succession (80–0 mbsf) comprising diamictite dominated sedimentary cycles deposited in a polar environment.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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