Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dipositint.ub.edu/dspace/handle/2445/202006
Title: Collapse of the Mediterranean Thermohaline Circulation during the Sapropel S1: New insights from Nd isotopes
Author: Pena González, Leopoldo David
Checa, Helena
Margaritelli, Giulia
Pérez-Asensio, José N. (José Noel)
Català, Albert
Garcia Solsona, Ester
Paredes, Eduardo
Rettori, Roberto
Lirer, Fabrizio
Keywords: Paleoceanografia
Circulació oceànica
Mediterrània (Regió)
Paleoceanography
Ocean circulation
Mediterranean Region
Issue Date: Sep-2023
Abstract: Sapropel events, organic-rich sedimentary layers that typically appear in the E-Mediterranean, have been often attributed to a combination of enhanced biological production in the surface ocean as well as a deficit in the renewal rate of deep basin waters leading to severe anoxic conditions that helped with the preservation of organic matter in the sediment. The sapropels are intrinsically linked to changes in the Mediterranean thermohaline circulation (MedTHC), but little is known on the drivers of these changes. For example, there are no evidences on how the main intermediate and deep convection cells in the E-Med responded during sapropels. Here we present a new reconstruction of the changes of the MedTHC circulation system during Sapropel 1 using Nd isotopes (εNd) in the Adriatic-North Ionian Sea region. Our study core site is located at the mixing line between the formation of Adriatic Deep Waters (ADW) and the arrival of E-Med Levantine Intermediate Water (LIW). Our newly measured Nd isotope ratios thus reflect changes in the mixing proportions of these two endmembers (ADW vs. LIW), and clearly show two distinctive collapse phases during the sapropel (S1a and S1b) as a result of reduced strength in the ADW convection cell and increased presence of LIW. The two sapropel phases where interrupted but a relatively short period where ADW resumed its convection into the north Ionian Sea. Further support to this interpretation comes from U/Mn ratios measured in foraminifera as well as benthic foraminiferal fauna supporting the idea that the changes in the intensity of deep water convection preceded both the establishment of anoxic conditions at depth and the increased organic matter export to the sediments. We conclude that the collapse of ADW convection cell led the deposition of the last sapropel layer and favoured the dominance of LIW at intermediate depths in the E-Med water column.
Note: Reproducció de part del document publicat a: https://icp14.w.uib.no/program/book-of-abstracts/
It is part of: Resum del pòster presentat a: 14th International Conference on Paleoceanography (ICP14). 29 August-2 September 2022. Bergen. (Poster Abstracts Topic 2: Ocean Circulation and its Variability - P2-023)
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/202006
Appears in Collections:Comunicacions a congressos (Dinàmica de la Terra i de l'Oceà)

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