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Contourite stratigraphic models linked to the light intermediate versus dense deep Mediterranean water flow regime variations (Alboran Sea, SW Mediterranean)
- Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- Several water masses are involved in the circulation of oceans, their bottom layers impacting on sedimentation through contourites. The majority of palaeoceanographic studies on regional contourites are performed for one water mass despite that their joint study would offer relevant clues to understand past ocean and climate interaction. This works presents for the first time a an analysis about the impact of the Light Intermediate Mediterranean (LMW) and Dense Deep Mediterranean (DMW) bottom currents on the sedimentation in the Alboran Sea (SW Mediterranean) and its paleoceanographic significance in response to climatic oscillations from the last glacial period to the Holocene. To do this, an integration of chronostratigraphical, sedimentological, and compositional data is carried out from contourites formed by those water masses. That integration enable us to define three distinct contourite stratigraphic models. (I) The contourite terrace model, characterized by coarse-grained contourites, which is an archive of the interplay between the high-energy Atlantic Water-LMW interface and glacioeustasy from the Younger Dryas (YD) to the Holocene. (II) The contourite drift models, which are archives of rapid ocean-climate coupled fluctuations since 29.5 kyr. They comprise coarse-grained contourites formed by a relatively fast LMW and fine-grained contourites formed by a relatively weak DMW, except for the Heinrich Stadials HS3 to HS1 and YD when coarse-grained contourites were deposited. (III) The contourite/turbidite mixed model represents another archive of DMW and glacioeustasy interplay from the end of the late Pleistocene to Holocene. That contourite stratigraphy allows us to infer for the first time the relative variability of the LMW versus DMW flow regimes, which records differences and similarities. The similarities indicate that the LMW and DMW fluctuations occur in parallel at millennial and centennial time scales. The differences refer to the overall higher v
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1416001140
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource