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Published November 17, 2006 | Published
Journal Article Open

A deep-sea coral record of North Atlantic radiocarbon through the Younger Dryas: Evidence for intermediate water/deepwater reorganization

Abstract

Our record of Younger Dryas intermediate-depth seawater Δ^(14)C from North Atlantic deep-sea corals supports a link between abrupt climate change and intermediate ocean variability. Our data show that northern source intermediate water (∼1700 m) was partially replaced by (14)^C-depleted southern source water at the onset of the event, consistent with a reduction in the rate of North Atlantic Deep Water formation. This transition requires the existence of large, mobile gradients of Δ^(14)C in the ocean during the Younger Dryas. The Δ^(14)C water column profile from Keigwin (2004) provides direct evidence for the presence of one such gradient at the beginning of the Younger Dryas (∼12.9 ka), with a 100‰ offset between shallow (<∼2400 m) and deep water. Our early Younger Dryas data are consistent with this profile and also show a Δ^(14)C inversion, with 35‰ more enriched water at ∼2400 m than at ∼1700 m. This feature is probably the result of mixing between relatively well ^(14)C ventilated northern source water and more poorly ^(14)C ventilated southern source intermediate water, which is slightly shallower. Over the rest of the Younger Dryas our intermediate water/deepwater coral Δ^(14)C data gradually increase, while the atmosphere Δ^(14)C drops. For a very brief interval at ∼12.0 ka and at the end of the Younger Dryas (11.5 ka), intermediate water Δ^(14)C (∼1200 m) approached atmospheric Δ14C. These enriched Δ^(14)C results suggest an enhanced initial Δ^(14)C content of the water and demonstrate the presence of large lateral Δ^(14)C gradients in the intermediate/deep ocean in addition to the sharp vertical shift at ∼2500 m. The transient Δ^(14)C enrichment at ∼12.0 ka occurred in the middle of the Younger Dryas and demonstrates that there is at least one time when the intermediate/deep ocean underwent dramatic change but with much smaller effects in other paleoclimatic records.

Additional Information

© 2006 American Geophysical Union. Received 12 July 2005; revised 25 May 2006; accepted 28 June 2006; published 17 November 2006. We wish to thank Jessie Shing-Lin Wang and Diego Fernandez for help with U-Th sample preparation and analysis at Caltech. We thank the staff of the UC Irvine KCCAMS laboratory and the staff of LLNL-CAMS for help with radiocarbon sample preparation and analysis. We are grateful to Steven Cairns at the Smithsonian for providing one of the samples (YD-3) used in this study and to the crew of the R/V Atlantis and DSV Alvin pilots, whose expertise made it possible for us to collect thousands of fossil samples from the New England seamounts. Luke Skinner and Jean Lynch-Stieglitz provided very helpful reviews of the manuscript. This work was supported by NSF grant OCE 0096373.

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Created:
September 14, 2023
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October 23, 2023