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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: Based on quantitative X-ray diffraction mineralogical analysis of cores HU2008029-0006/0008 (857-m water depth) located south of the Davis Strait sill, we seek answers to two questions: (i) the temporal correlation of NW Labrador Shelf Sea Heinrich (H-) and Baffin Bay detrital carbonate (BBDC) events, and (ii) the provenance of the sediments? A sediment-unmixing model (SedUnMix) is used to determine provenance variations. Although 12 radiocarbon dates were obtained there were many age reversals and we favour a depth/age model for HU2008029-0008PC based on correlations to well-dated neighbouring cores north and south of Davis Strait. We find no correlation between H- and BBDC events except for H-0, which appears to be a broadly synchronous event along the NE Canadian margin and is correlative with an episode of major moraine building along this flank of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Unmixing of the sediment composition based on six potential glacial source regions indicates that the bulk of the sediment in 0008PC is derived from glacial erosion of West Greenland, but is punctuated by intervals when dolomite-rich sediments, derived from outcrops north of Baffin Bay, dominate the composition. Estimated dates on these BBDC events are -13, 25 and 30–38 cal ka BP.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Highlights • Porewater calcite dissolution may have occurred during the deglacial interval. • There is a significant decoupling of coccolith and alkenone concentrations in core 004. • Non-calcifying haptophytes most likely produced the alkenones in the glacial interval. Abstract The important changes that took place in the glacial cycle at the termination, from the Last Glacial Maximum to the present interglacial, deserve an examination of ocean sedimentary records that document past productivity, carbon fluxes, and carbonate preservation. In this study, we analyzed coccoliths, alkenones, and foraminifers in core HU2008–029-004 PC (61.46°N and 58.04°W, water depth = 2,674 m) from the northwestern Labrador Sea to document linkages between hydrographic conditions, biogenic carbonate fluxes to the seafloor, and their preservation/dissolution during the last 25,000 years. Large changes in coccolith and foraminifer concentrations are recorded, with sediments from the last glacial interval containing significantly less carbonate microfossils (9.5 ± 3.9 × 105 coccoliths g−1 and 2,860 ± 580 planktonic foraminifers g−1) than sediments from the deglacial and postglacial intervals (up to 3.1 × 108 coccoliths g−1 and 2.9 × 104 foraminifers g−1). Three foraminifer-based calcite dissolution indices were used to evaluate biogenic carbonate preservation: the planktonic foraminifer fragmentation index, the ratio of benthic-to-planktonic foraminifers (B/P), and the ratio of organic linings to benthic foraminifers (OL/B). Fragmentation remained low throughout the postglacial (mean of 4%) but reached up to 8% in the deglacial and peaked at 16% in samples from the Bølling-Allerød of the late glacial interval. Samples from the Bølling-Allerød and the deglacial interval also display a slightly elevated B/P index (〉0.15), which suggests that some dissolution may have occurred. In contrast, with the exception of the Bølling-Allerød and the deglacial interval, near zero OL/B values characterize most of the sequence, suggesting good biogenic carbonate preservation, which implies that the low biogenic carbonate and coccolith content in sediments of the glacial stage mirror low productivity of calcifying organisms. The elevated fragmentation of foraminifers during the Bølling-Allerød and the deglacial interval, a time of elevated productivity and low percentages of ice-rafted debris, may indicate the development of calcite undersaturated porewaters and consequent dissolution resulting from oxic remineralization of sedimentary organic matter. We also identify a significant decoupling of coccolith and alkenone concentrations throughout the core. Colder-than-expected UK37-SST estimates from the alkenones of the glacial interval rule out possible allochthonous inputs from lower-latitude locations. Instead, our records imply that at least during the glacial interval, alkenones were produced by non-calcifying haptophytes that may not follow the canonical UK37-based temperature calibrations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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    Format: text
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