Publication | Open Access
Sediment focusing in the central equatorial Pacific Ocean
103
Citations
33
References
2001
Year
Sedimentary RecordMarine GeologyExcess 230Earth ScienceEngineeringPaleoenvironmental ChangePaleoceanographySediment FocusingBurial RateOceanographic ResearchOceanographyEarth SciencesGeochronologySedimentologySediment Transport
At four sites in the central equatorial Pacific Ocean the flux of extraterrestrial ³He, determined using the excess 230 Th profiling method, is 8 × 10 −13 cm³ STP cm −2 ka −1 . This supply rate is constant to within 30%. At these same sites, however, the burial rate of ³He, determined using chronostratigraphic accumulation rates, varies by more than a factor of 3. The lowest burial rates, which occur north of the equator at 1°N, 139°W are lower than the global average rate of supply of extraterrestrial ³He by 20% and indicate that sediment winnowing may have occurred. The highest burial rates, which are recorded at the equator and at 2°S, are higher than the rate of supply of extraterrestrial ³He by 100%, and these provide evidence for sediment focusing. By analyzing several proxies measured in core PC72 sediments spanning the past 450 kyr we demonstrate that periods of maximum burial rates of 230 Th, ³He, 10 Be, Ti, and barite, with a maximum peak‐to‐trough amplitude of a factor of 6, take place systematically during glacial time. However, the ratio of any one proxy to another is constant to within 30% over the entire length of the records. Given that each proxy represents a different source ( 234 U decay in seawater, interplanetary dust, upper atmosphere, continental dust, or upper ocean), our preferred interpretation for the covariation is that the climate‐related changes in burial rates are driven by changes in sediment focusing.
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