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Multiproxy assessment of the western equatorial Pacific hydrography during the last 30 kyr

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Title Multiproxy assessment of the western equatorial Pacific hydrography during the last 30 kyr
Names de Garidel-Thoron, Thibault (creator)
Rosenthal, Yair (creator)
Beaufort, Luc (creator)
Bard, Edouard (creator)
Sonzogni, Corinne (creator)
Mix, Alan C. (creator)
Date Issued 2007 (iso8601)
Note Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Sea surface temperature (SST) and salinity of the Western Pacific Warm Pool (WPWP) reflect global
climate effects such as the El Nin˜o–Southern Oscillation phenomenon. However, reconstructions of past
changes in the WPWP from the geologic record vary depending on the specific proxy record used. Here we
develop a multiproxy record of the last deglaciation from a radiocarbon-dated sediment core (MD97-2138)
retrieved in the heart of the WPWP. SST reconstructions for the past 30,000 years based on planktonic
foraminiferal Mg/Ca (Globigerinoides ruber and Globigerinoides sacculifer), alkenone unsaturation index, and
foraminiferal transfer functions differ notably. Mg/Ca-based SST estimates from the surface dwelling species
G. ruber in MD97-2138 indicate a larger surface cooling (3° ± 0.6°C) during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)
than inferred from Mg/Ca ratios in G. sacculifer (2.3° ± 0.7°C), statistical transfer functions based on planktonic
foraminiferal species assemblages, and Uk₃₇
0 (1°–2°C). These estimates are consistent with estimates from other
WPWP cores, thereby suggesting that the discrepancy is due to proxy compatibility rather than differences in
cores qualitity. Postdepositional dissolution above the lysocline might have altered the Mg/Ca-based temperature
estimates in our site, but this effect is insufficient to resolve discrepancies between Mg/Ca in G. ruber and the
other proxies. We suggest that the lower estimates obtained from Mg/Ca in G. sacculifer, faunal transfer
functions, and Uk₃₇
0 might reflect subsurface temperature changes rather than strict surface estimates.
Accounting for potential artefacts, including dissolution and bioturbation, we suggest that the glacial WPWP
SST was about 2.5° ± 0.7°C cooler than during the Holocene, whereas the subsurface/upper thermocline
temperature change was only about 1.8° ± 0.7°C. Interpreting variations in δ¹⁸OSW in terms of salinity changes
suggests a possibly slight decrease in surface salinity at the site of MD97-2138 during the LGM. Though LGM
freshening in MD97-2138 is not robust to postdeposition dissolution effects, this inferred freshening appears to
be a general feature of the western equatorial Pacific.
Genre Article
Identifier de Garidel-Thoron, T., Y. Rosenthal, L. Beaufort, E. Bard, C. Sonzogni, and A. C. Mix (2007), A multiproxy assessment of the western equatorial Pacific hydrography during the last 30 kyr, Paleoceanography, 22, PA3204, doi:10.1029/2006PA001269

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