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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: EGU2011-8738 At present, the Arctic is responding faster to global warming than most other areas on earth, as indicated by rising air temperatures, melting glaciers and ice sheets and a decline of the sea ice cover. As part of the meridional overturning circulation which connects all ocean basins and influences global climate, northward flowing Atlantic Water is the major means of heat and salt advection towards the Arctic where it strongly affects the sea ice distribution. Records of its natural variability are critical for the understanding of feedback mechanisms and the future of the Arctic climate system, but continuous historical records reach back only ca. 150 years. To reconstruct the history of temperature variations in the Fram Strait Branch of the Atlantic Current we analyzed a marine sediment core from the western Svalbard margin. In multidecadal resolution the Atlantic Water temperature record derived from planktic foraminifer associations and Mg/Ca measurements shows variations corresponding to the well-known climatic periods of the last millennium (Medieval Climate Anomaly, Little Ice Age, Modern/Industrial Period). We find that prior to the beginning of atmospheric CO2 rise at ca. 1850 A.D. average summer temperatures in the uppermost Atlantic Water entering the Arctic Ocean were in the range of 3-4.5°C. Within the 20th century, however, temperatures rose by ca. 2°C and eventually reached the modern level of ca. 6°C. Such values are unprecedented in the 1000 years before and are presumably linked to the Arctic Amplification of global warming. Taking into account the ongoing rise of global temperatures, further warming of inflowing Atlantic Water is expected to have a profound influence on sea ice and air temperatures in the Arctic.
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-09-29
    Description: During the past decades Mg/Ca ratios have been increasingly used in order to calculate past temperature variations independent from faunal assemblages. Especially in the Fram Strait, the main pathway of heat flux to the Arctic, new temperature estimation tools are urgently needed to better understand past complex interaction of different water masses and the extent of Atlantic Water advection to the Arctic Ocean. The Holocene section of a sediment core from the western Svalbard margin has been studied at high-resolution for benthic proxy indicators to reconstruct deepwater sources and mixing in the Arctic Gateway since the last ca 10,000 years. Benthic stable isotope values and sortable silt mean grain size data are compared to a first, preliminary data set of Mg/Ca paleotemperatures established from the benthic foraminifer species Cibicidoides wuellerstorfi in the eastern Fram Strait. When compared to planktic proxy indicators, this reconstruction of past bottom water temperatures at a northernmost site allows to estimate the linkage between deepwater inflow and AW advection within the West Spitsbergen Current. Furthermore, benthic Mg/Ca temperatures can help unravelling the local impact (e.g., by brine-enriched waters) from general trends in bottom water circulation. Short-lived decreases in benthic carbon isotope values seem to correlate to cold surface water events in the area such as the 8.2 ka event. Similarly, decreases in benthic carbon isotope values in the Nordic Seas around 8 ka have been assigned to decreased bottom water ventilation possibly due to an entrainment of relatively fresh water into the thermohaline system (Bauch et al., 2001). While sluggish bottom current speeds have been found for the 8.2 ka event north of our site on the Yermak Plateau (Hass, 2002), during colder events on the Western Svalbard margin sediment data seem to anticorrelate to benthic carbon isotope data either suggesting a rather unexpected increase in bottom current velocity or an impact of brine-enriched winter waters from the fjord/trough system which might have generated increased lateral coarser-grained sediment injections (Sarnthein et al., 2003). A Late Holocene trend towards significantly higher benthic oxygen isotopes may be either related to a cooling or increasing salinity in bottom waters. Higher salinity of bottom waters may be again caused by dense water formation during winter sea-ice formation in southern and western Svalbard fjords (e.g., Quadfasel et al., 1988; Rudels et al., 2005). Bauch, H. A., H. Erlenkeuser, R. F. Spielhagen, U. Struck, J. Matthiessen, J. Thiede, and J. Heinemeier (2001a), A multiproxy reconstruction of the evolution of deep and surface waters in the subarctic Nordic seas over the last 30,000 yr, Quaternary Science Reviews, 20(4), 659-678. Hass, H. C. (2002), A method to reduce the influence of ice-rafted debris on a grain size record from northern Fram Strait, Polar Research, 21(2), 299-306. Quadfasel, D., B. Rudels, and K. Kurz (1988), Outflow of dense water from a Svalbard fjord into the Fram Strait, Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers, 35(7), 1143-1150. Rudels, B., G. Bjork, J. Nilsson, P. Winsor, I. Lake, and C. Nohr (2005), The interaction between waters from the Arctic Ocean and the Nordic Seas north of Fram Strait and along the East Greenland Current: results from the Arctic Ocean-02 Oden expedition, Journal of Marine Systems, 55(1-2), 1-30. Sarnthein, M., S. van Krefeldt, H. Erlenkeuser, P. M. Grootes, M. Kucera, U. Pflaumann, and M. Schulz (2003), Centennial-to-millennial-scale periodicities of Holocene climate and sediment injections off the western Barents shelf, 75◦N, Boreas, 32, 447-461.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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