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Oxygen and carbon isotope record of East Pacific core V19-30: implications for the formation of deep water in the late Pleistocene North Atlantic
Authors:NJ Shackleton  J Imbrie  MA Hall
Institution:1. Godwin Laboratory for Quaternary Research, University of Cambridge, Free School Lane, Cambridge CB2 3RS England;2. Department of Geological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912 U.S.A.
Abstract:A detailed oxygen and carbon isotope record has been obtained from benthic Foraminifera in core V19-30 from the Carnegie Ridge on the south side of the Panama Basin. Expressing these records and the oxygen and carbon isotope records previously published for Atlantic core M-12392 on a common timescale, it is apparent that the oxygen isotope records are very similar but that the carbon isotope records are quite different. By obtaining the carbon isotope gradient between the two sites as a function of time we show that the production of North Atlantic Deep Water has varied over a wide range during the late Pleistocene, and that the pattern of variation is not simply related to the well known oxygen isotope record. Although the two oxygen isotope records are very similar, changes in the interoceanic gradient are detectable and support the hypothesis that in the glacial mode the North Atlantic was colder, and less oxygenated, than it is today.Shackleton's 1] 1977 interpretation whereby the carbon isotope record from the Atlantic core reflects changes in the terrestrial biomass, is an over-simplification. However, the record from the Pacific core V19-30 probably can be explained in these terms since it probably approximates the carbon isotope record of global mean oceanic dissolved CO2.
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