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Increased dissolved terrestrial input to the coastal ocean during the last deglaciation

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Title Increased dissolved terrestrial input to the coastal ocean during the last deglaciation
Names Klinkhammer, Gary P. (creator)
Mix, Alan C. (creator)
Haley, B. A. (creator)
Date Issued 2009-03-18 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Here we present the first downcore results for a new paleoproxy, the Mn/Ca ratio of foraminiferal
calcite, applied to sediment accumulated in the extreme Eastern Tropical North Pacific (ETNP) over the
last 30,000 years. The Mn/Ca results are compared to oxygen isotopes and sea surface temperature
calculated from Mg/Ca. We determined metal ratios using flow-through time-resolved analysis to minimize
the effects of secondary mineralization. The foraminiferal species used for this study calcify at different
depths. Core top ratios of these variant species change in proportion to the concentration of dissolved
manganese in the water column at the depth of calcification. Since terrestrial input and oxidation reduction
reactions control the levels of dissolved Mn in the oceans today, it therefore should be possible to use
the Mn/Ca ratios of foraminifera as a proxy for these processes in the past. Mn/Ca of a mixed-layer species
(G. ruber) suggest that dissolved terrestrial input to the surface waters of the ETNP during the last glacial
maximum was lower than today but began to increase with initial sea level rise and reached a maximum at
15 ka B.P. before coming down to present-day levels at the end of sea level rise in the mid-Holocene (7–
5 ka). Ratios of a deeper calcifying species (N. dutertrei) mimic those of G. ruber over this same time
period, consistent with shoaling of the 18°C thermocline. Mn/Ca of a benthic species (U. peregrina) does
not show a maximum at 15 ka, suggesting that Mn was efficiently remineralized in the water column
during deglaciation. Assuming that the period from the last glacial until the mid-Holocene was a time of
increased productivity, as elevated Mn might imply, the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) was at least as well
developed during deglaciation as it is today. Expansion of the OMZ may have contributed to the Mn/Ca
trends we observe through time.
Genre Article
Topic manganese
Identifier Klinkhammer, G. P., A. C. Mix, and B. A. Haley (2009), Increased dissolved terrestrial input to the coastal ocean during the last deglaciation, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 10, Q03009.

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