You're currently viewing an old version of this dataset. To see the current version, click here.

Response of marine palynomorphs to Neogene climate cooling in the Iceland Sea, ODP Hole 151-907A

The present study on ODP Leg 151 Hole 907A combines a detailed analysis of marine palynomorphs (dinoflagellate cysts, prasinophytes, and acritarchs) and a low-resolution alkenone-based sea-surface temperature (SST) record for the interval between 14.5 and 2.5 Ma, and allows to investigate the relationship between palynomorph assemblages and the paleoenvironmental evolution of the Iceland Sea. A high marine productivity is indicated in the Middle Miocene, and palynomorphs and SSTs both mirror the subsequent long-term Neogene climate deterioration. The diverse Middle Miocene palynomorph assemblages clearly diminish towards the impoverished assemblages of the Late Pliocene; parallel with a somewhat gradual decrease of SSTs being as high as 20 °C at ~13.5 Ma to around 8 °C at ~3 Ma. Superimposed, palynomorph assemblages not only reflect Middle to Late Miocene climate variability partly coinciding with the short-lived global Miocene isotope events (Mi-events), but also the initiation of a proto-thermohaline circulation across the Middle Miocene Climate Transition, which led to increased meridionality in the Nordic Seas. Last occurrences of species cluster during three events in the Late Miocene to Early Pliocene and are ascribed to the progressive strengthening and freshening of the proto-East Greenland Current towards modern conditions. A significant high latitude cooling between 6.5 and 6 Ma is depicted by the supraregional "Decahedrella event" coeval with lowest Miocene productivity and a SST decline. In the Early Pliocene, a transient warming is accompanied by surface water stratification and increased productivity that likely reflects a high latitude response to the global biogenic bloom. The succeeding crash in palynomorph accumulation, and a subsequent interval virtually barren of marine palynomorphs may be attributed to enhanced bottom water oxygenation and substantial sea ice cover, and indicates that conditions seriously affecting marine productivity in the Iceland Sea were already established well before the marked expansion of the Greenland Ice Sheet at 3.3 Ma.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Schreck, Michael, Méheust, Marie, Stein, Ruediger, Matthiessen, Jens (2013). Dataset: Response of marine palynomorphs to Neogene climate cooling in the Iceland Sea, ODP Hole 151-907A. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.807163

DOI retrieved: 2013

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.807163
Author Schreck, Michael
Given Name Michael
Family Name Schreck
More Authors
Méheust, Marie
Stein, Ruediger
Matthiessen, Jens
Source Creation 2013
Publication Year 2013
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Schreck_2013
Subject Areas
Name: Paleontology

Related Identifiers
Title: Response of marine palynomorphs to Neogene climate cooling in the Iceland Sea (ODP Hole 907A)
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marmicro.2013.03.003
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2013
Source: Marine Micropaleontology
Authors: Schreck Michael , Méheust Marie , Stein Ruediger , Matthiessen Jens .