Glacial-interglacial changes in Subantarctic sea surface temperature and delta O-18-water using foraminiferal Mg

Citation
Ta. Mashiotta et al., Glacial-interglacial changes in Subantarctic sea surface temperature and delta O-18-water using foraminiferal Mg, EARTH PLAN, 170(4), 1999, pp. 417-432
Citations number
63
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
ISSN journal
0012821X → ACNP
Volume
170
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
417 - 432
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-821X(19990730)170:4<417:GCISSS>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Laboratory culturing experiments with living Globigerina bulloides indicate that Mg/Ca is primarily a function of seawater temperature and suggest tha t Mg/Ca of fossil specimens is an effective paleotemperature proxy. Using c ulturing results and a core-top Neogloboquadrina pachyderma calibration, we have estimated glacial-interglacial changes in sea surface temperature (SS T) using planktonic Mg/Ca records from core RC11-120 in the Subantarctic In dian Ocean (43 degrees S, 80 degrees E) and core E11-2 in the Subantarctic Pacific Ocean (56 degrees S, 115 degrees W). Our results suggest that glaci al SST was about 4 degrees C cooler in the Subantarctic Indian Ocean and 2. 5 degrees C cooler in the Subantarctic Pacific. Comparison of SST and plank tonic delta(18)O records indicates that changes in SST lead changes in delt a(18)O by on average 1-3 kyr. The glacial-interglacial temperature change i ndicated by the Subantarctic Mg/Ca records suggests that temperature accoun ts for 40-60% of the foraminiferal delta(18)O change. We have used the Mg/C a-based SST estimates and delta(18)O determinations to generate site-specif ic seawater delta(18)O records, which suggest that seawater delta(18)O was on average 1 parts per thousand more positive during glacial episodes compa red with interglacial episodes. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights r eserved.