CaCO3, foraminifer fragmentation, benthic carbon isotopes, coarse lithic counts and radiogenic isotopes (Sr, Nd, Pb) of the Pliocene and earliest Pleistocene terrigenous component (3.3-2.4 Ma) of IODP Site 306-U1313

We present Plio-Pleistocene records of sediment color, %CaCO3, foraminifer fragmentation, benthic carbon isotopes (d13C) and radiogenic isotopes (Sr, Nd, Pb) of the terrigenous component from IODP Site U1313, a reoccupation of benchmark subtropical North Atlantic Ocean DSDP Site 607. We show that (inter)glacial cycles in sediment color and %CaCO3 pre-date major northern hemisphere glaciation and are unambiguously and consistently correlated to benthic oxygen isotopes back to 3.3 million years ago (Ma) and intermittently so probably back to the Miocene/Pliocene boundary. We show these lithological cycles to be driven by enhanced glacial fluxes of terrigenous material (eolian dust), not carbonate dissolution (the classic interpretation). Our radiogenic isotope data indicate a North American source for this dust (~3.3-2.4 Ma) in keeping with the interpreted source of terrestrial plant wax-derived biomarkers deposited at Site U1313. Yet our data indicate a mid latitude provenance regardless of (inter)glacial state, a finding that is inconsistent with the biomarker-inferred importance of glaciogenic mechanisms of dust production and transport. Moreover, we find that the relation between the biomarker and lithogenic components of dust accumulation is distinctly non-linear. Both records show a jump in glacial rates of accumulation from Marine Isotope Stage, MIS, G6 (2.72 Ma) onwards but the amplitude of this signal is about 3-8 times greater for biomarkers than for dust and particularly extreme during MIS 100 (2.52 Ma). We conclude that North America shifted abruptly to a distinctly more arid glacial regime from MIS G6, but major shifts in glacial North American vegetation biomes and regional wind fields (exacerbated by the growth of a large Laurentide Ice Sheet during MIS 100) likely explain amplification of this signal in the biomarker records. Our findings are consistent with wetter-than-modern reconstructions of North American continental climate under the warm high CO2 conditions of the Early Pliocene but contrast with most model predictions for the response of the hydrological cycle to anthropogenic warming over the coming 50 years (poleward expansion of the subtropical dry zones).

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Cite this as

Lang, David C, Bailey, Ian, Wilson, Paul A, Beer, Christopher J, Bolton, Clara T, Friedrich, Oliver, Newsam, Cherry, Spencer, Megan R, Gutjahr, Marcus, Foster, Gavin L, Cooper, Matthew J, Milton, J Andy (2014). Dataset: CaCO3, foraminifer fragmentation, benthic carbon isotopes, coarse lithic counts and radiogenic isotopes (Sr, Nd, Pb) of the Pliocene and earliest Pleistocene terrigenous component (3.3-2.4 Ma) of IODP Site 306-U1313. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.829428

DOI retrieved: 2014

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.829428
Author Lang, David C
Given Name David C
Family Name Lang
More Authors
Bailey, Ian
Wilson, Paul A
Beer, Christopher J
Bolton, Clara T
Friedrich, Oliver
Newsam, Cherry
Spencer, Megan R
Gutjahr, Marcus
Foster, Gavin L
Cooper, Matthew J
Milton, J Andy
Source Creation 2014
Publication Year 2014
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Lang_2014
Subject Areas
Name: LandSurface

Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: The transition on North America from the warm humid Pliocene to the glaciated Quaternary traced by eolian dust deposition at a benchmark North Atlantic Ocean drill site
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.04.005
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2014
Source: Quaternary Science Reviews
Authors: Lang David C , Bailey Ian , Wilson Paul A , Beer Christopher J , Bolton Clara T , Friedrich Oliver , Newsam Cherry , Spencer Megan R , Gutjahr Marcus , Foster Gavin L , Cooper Matthew J , Milton J Andy .