Publication | Closed Access
Pore Fluid Constraints on the Temperature and Oxygen Isotopic Composition of the Glacial Ocean
475
Citations
23
References
1996
Year
EngineeringPaleoceanographyDelta18o ChangeMarine ChemistryOxygen IsotopeOceanographyPore Fluid ConstraintsGlacial ProcessBarbados CoralsEarth ScienceCold SeepsGeochronologySea-level HistoryIce-water SystemMarine GeologyGlacial OceanChemical OceanographyTropical Atlantic OceanCryospherePaleoclimatologyClimate DynamicsOxygen Isotopic CompositionGeochemistry
Pore fluids from the upper 60 meters of sediment 3000 meters below the surface of the tropical Atlantic indicate that the oxygen isotopic composition (delta18O) of seawater at this site during the last glacial maximum was 0.8 ± 0.1 per mil higher than it is today. Combined with the delta18O change in benthic foraminifera from this region, the elevated ratio indicates that the temperature of deep water in the tropical Atlantic Ocean was 4°C colder during the last glacial maximum. Extrapolation from this site to a global average suggests that the ice volume contribution to the change in delta18O of foraminifera is 1.0 per mil, which partially reconciles the foraminiferal oxygen isotope record of tropical sea surface temperatures with estimates from Barbados corals and terrestrial climate proxies.
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