Back to Search Start Over

The Middle to Late Miocene “Carbonate Crash” in the Equatorial Indian Ocean

Authors :
Lübbers, Julia
Kuhnt, Wolfgang
Holbourn, Ann E.
Bolton, Clara T.
Gray, Emmeline
Usui, Yoichi
Kochhann, Karlos G. D.
Beil, Sebastian
Andersen, Nils
Source :
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology; May 2019, Vol. 34 Issue: 5 p813-832, 20p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We integrate benthic foraminiferal stable isotopes, X‐ray fluorescence elemental ratios, and carbonate accumulation estimates in a continuous sedimentary archive recovered at International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1443 (Ninetyeast Ridge, Indian Ocean) to reconstruct changes in carbonate deposition and climate evolution over the interval 13.5 to 8.2 million years ago. Declining carbonate percentages together with a marked decrease in carbonate accumulation rates after ~13.2 Ma signal the onset of a prolonged episode of reduced carbonate deposition. This extended phase, which lasted until ~8.7 Ma, coincides with the middle to late Miocene carbonate crash, originally identified in the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. Interocean comparison reveals that intense carbonate impoverishment at Site U1443 (~11.5 to ~10 Ma) coincides with prolonged episodes of reduced carbonate deposition in all major tropical ocean basins. This implies that global changes in the intensity of chemical weathering and riverine input of calcium and carbonate ions into the ocean reservoir were instrumental in driving the carbonate crash. An increase in U1443 Log (Ba/Ti) together with a change in sediment color from red to green indicate a rise in organic export flux to the sea floor after ~11.2 Ma, which predates the global onset of the biogenic bloom. This early rise in export flux from biological production may have been linked to increased advection of nutrients and intensification of upper ocean mixing, associated with changes in the seasonality and intensity of the Indian Monsoon. Extended episode of low carbonate accumulation (carbonate crash) between ~13.2 and ~8.7 Ma in the equatorial Indian OceanMost intense phase of carbonate crash in Indian Ocean coincides with reduced carbonate deposition in Atlantic and Pacific OceansEarly onset of biogenic bloom at ~11.2 Ma in Indian Ocean related to intensification of Indian Monsoon

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25724517 and 25724525
Volume :
34
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs50328601
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2018PA003482