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Climatically driven changes in oceanic processes throughout the equatorial Pacific

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Climatically driven changes in oceanic processes throughout the equatorial Pacific
Names Paytan, Adina (creator)
Lyle, Mitchell (creator)
Mix, Alan C. (creator)
Chase, Zanna (creator)
Date Issued 2004 (iso8601)
Note Copyright 2004 by the American Geophysical Union
Abstract The mass accumulation rates of sedimentary components (carbonate, organic carbon, opal, barite, reactive
phosphate, iron, terrigenous minerals, etc.) are used in many paleoceanographic reconstructions to learn about
temporal and spatial changes in surficial Earth processes including wind stress and direction, oceanic circulation,
weathering rates, marine productivity and ecosystem structure, climate change, and more. In most studies it is
assumed/desired that the sediment accumulation represents the production and deposition of particles from the
overlying water column since substantial horizontal transport imply homogenization of paleoceanographic
proxies and little confidence in any paleoceanographic time series. In this note we highlight some discrepancies
between the different approaches used to reconstruct sediment mass accumulation rates and specifically discuss
the consequences of these discrepancies to the reconstruction of paleoproductivity in the equatorial Pacific. We
pose research questions and suggest possible approaches/research strategies for the community to solve
them.
Genre Article
Identifier Paytan, A., M. Lyle, A. Mix, and Z. Chase (2004), Climatically driven changes in oceanic processes throughout the equatorial Pacific, Paleoceanography, Vol. 19, doi:10.1029/2004PA001024

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