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Geology | 1997

Arctic Ocean evidence for late Quaternary initiation of northern Eurasian ice sheets

Robert F. Spielhagen; Georges Bonani; Anton Eisenhauer; Martin Frank; Thomas Frederichs; Heidemarie Kassens; Peter W. Kubik; Augusto Mangini; Niels Nøgaard Pedersen; Norbert R Nowaczyk; Stefan Schäper; Ruediger Stein; Jörn Thiede; Ralf Tiedemann; Monika Wahsner

A high-resolution multiparameter stratigraphy allows the identification of late Quaternary glacial and interglacial cycles in a central Arctic Ocean sediment core. Distinct sandy layers in the upper part of the otherwise fine-grained sediment core from the Lomonosov Ridge (lat 87.5°N) correlate to four major glacials since ca. 0.7 Ma. The composition of these ice-rafted terrigenous sediments points to a glaciated northern Siberia as the main source. In contrast, lithic carbonates derived from North America are also present in older sediments and indicate a northern North American glaciation since at least 2.8 Ma. We conclude that large-scale northern Siberian glaciation began much later than other Northern Hemisphere ice sheets.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 1997

Secular changes of lead and neodymium in central Pacific seawater recorded by a FeMn crust

Wafa Abouchami; Steven L. Goldstein; S.J.G. Gazer; Anton Eisenhauer; A. Mangini

Oceanic and atmospheric circulation patterns varied considerably during the Tertiary and Quaternary and influenced the geochemical cycles of elements in seawater. We report the first resolution lead and neodymium isotopic record of such changes at a high time resolution in two depths profiles from a hydrogenous Feue5f8Mn crust. The crust, Va13-2, is located in the central Pacific (146°W, 9°25′N, 4830 m) and has previously been dated by 230Th and 10Be. The first profile was drilled with a sample time resolution of ∼3 kyr and allows evaluation of short-term changes to lead and neodymium sources to central Pacific seawater over the last 400 kyr (marine δ18O stages 2 to 11). Longer-term changes were monitored at lower time resolution in a second profile to an age of 10 Ma. n nShort-term variations in lead and neodymium isotope ratios are resolved in the high resolution profile (0 to 400 kyr). Superimposed on the short-term variations is a secular decrease in 206Pb204Pb ratios beginning at ∼130 kyr in marine δ18O stage 5, implying a change in the lead sources to the central Pacific. Lead and neodymium isotopic compositions indicate an increased influence from Central American eolian sources to Pacific seawater at this time. Lead isotopes are found to be statistically more variable during interglacial than glacial periods. These observations are supported by the greater eolian dust fluxes found in sediment cores from the equatorial Pacific during interglacial stages. n nThe most important paleoceanographic event of the last 10 Ma to affect Pacific seawater was the closure of the Panama gateway. Changes in lead and neodymium isotopes in Val3-2 during the last 10 Ma occurred along with gradual closure of the Panama straits. However, these changes did not occur in tandem: while neodymium isotope ratios increase between 10 and 8 Ma, lead isotope ratios remain constant. In contrast, the period 7 to 1 Ma is marked by a secular increase in lead isotope ratios but nearly constant neodymium. These changes are consistent with a source of radiogenic lead and neodymium conveyed by the Circumpolar Current into the Pacific, rather than by the Panama gateway, and involve 20 to 40% Southern Component Water (SCW) input of lead and neodymium. Modelling of lead and neodymium isotopic mixing between the different water masses involved in generating Pacific deep waters lead us to the following conclusions: (1) Small variations in the strength and composition of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) have a relatively minor effect on the amounts of lead and neodymium from SCW contributing to the Pacific and (2) an enhanced SCW flow with an open isthmus of Panama, as suggested by General Circulation Models (GCM), requires a corresponding reduction in NADW Pb and Nd contributions to SCW. n nThe general agreement between the isotopic compositions of surface layers of Mn nodules, integrated over such long time intervals, and those of present-day bottom waters at their respective locations show that the present-day ocean circulation pattern has dominated through the Pleistocene. Our study of Mn crust Va13-2 shows that shorter-term changes in lead and neodymium isotope ratios can be resolved, provided that such crusts are sampled at an appropriate time resolution.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1998

Natural CF4 and SF6 on Earth

Jochen Harnisch; Anton Eisenhauer

The occurrence of CF4 and SF6 in natural fluorites (CaF2) is reported. Contents are found to be typically 200–2000 ppt-mass for CF4 and 50–100 ppt-mass for SF6. CF4 and SF6 were also detected in granites where fluorite is an accessory mineral. CF4 and SF6 thus possess a large reservoir in the continental crust that by degassing can sustain natural atmospheric background levels of 40 ppt-mole and up to 0.01 ppt-mole, respectively. The article also discusses how natural SF6 may cause interference in hydrological tracer studies.


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 1995

Sediment redistribution versus paleoproductivity change: Weddell Sea margin sediment stratigraphy and biogenic particle flux of the last 250,000 years deduced from 230Thex, 10Be and biogenic barium profiles

Martin Frank; Anton Eisenhauer; Wolfgang J Bonn; Peter Walter; Hannes Grobe; Peter W. Kubik; Beate Dittrich-Hannen; Augusto Mangini

High resolution 230Thex and 10Be and biogenic barium profiles were measured at three sediment gravity cores (length 605–850 cm) from the Weddell Sea continental margin. Applying the 230Thex dating method, average sedimentation rates of 3 cm/kyr for the two cores from the South Orkney Slope and of 2.4 cm/kyr for the core from the eastern Weddell Sea were determined and compared to δ18O and lithostratigraphic results. Strong variations in the radionuclide concentrations in the sediments resembling the glacial/interglacial pattern of the δ18O stratigraphy and the 10Be stratigraphy of high northern latitudes were used for establishing a chronostratigraphy. Biogenic Ba shows a pattern similar to the radionuclide profiles, suggesting that both records were influenced by increased paleoproductivity at the beginning of the interglacials. However, 230Thex0 fluxes (0 stands for initial) exceeding production by up to a factor of 4 suggest that sediment redistribution processes, linked to variations in bottom water current velocity, played the major role in controlling the radionuclide and biogenic barium deposition during isotope stages 5e and 1. The correction for sediment focusing makes the ‘true’ vertical paleoproductivity rates, deduced from the fluxes of proxy tracers like biogenic barium, much lower than previously estimated. Very low 230Thex0 concentrations and fluxes during isotope stage 6 were probably caused by rapid deposition of older, resedimented material, delivered to the Weddell Sea continental slopes by the grounded ice shelves and contemporaneous erosion of particles originating from the water column.


Paleoceanography | 2002

Intra-annual variation in the stable oxygen and carbon and trace element composition of sclerosponges

Peter K. Swart; Simon R. Thorrold; Brad E. Rosenheim; Anton Eisenhauer; C. G. A. Harrison; M. Grammer; C. Latkoczy

[1]xa0This paper presents data to support the presence of (1) intra-annual signals in the chemical composition (δ18O and Sr/Ca) of the skeletons of sclerosponges from the Bahamas and (2) variable rates of skeletal accretion. These conclusions are based on data obtained by using a microsampling method for the stable oxygen and carbon isotopes in which material was extracted at a resolution of one sample every 34 μm and a laser microprobe which obtained trace element data every 20 μm (Sr, Mg, and Pb). An age model was established using a combination of changes in the concentration of Pb, the change in the δ13C of the skeleton of the sclerosponges, and U/Th isotopic measurements. These methods yield a mean growth rate of 220 μm/yr but suggest that the growth rate in this particular sclerosponge was not constant. The calculated growth rate is within error identical to that determined by U/Th methods. The variable growth rate was confirmed through spectral analysis of the δ18O and Sr/Ca data that showed peaks corresponding to the annual cycle in these parameters as well as peaks corresponding to growth rates of approximately 128, 212, 270, and 400 μm/yr. The presence of these additional frequencies suggests a growth rate between approximately 100 and 300 μm/yr. These conclusions were supported by modeling of oxygen isotopic data measured on a scleractinian coral as well as model isotope data generated on synthetic time series. These findings have important implications for the use of sclerosponges as proxies of paleoclimate because they emphasize the need for a precise yearly chronology in order that proxy data can be compared with climatic variables.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2000

Natural fluorinated organics in fluorite and rocks

Jochen Harnisch; Matthias Frische; R. Borchers; Anton Eisenhauer; Armin Jordan

Results of measurements of fluorinated compounds in gasses extracted from igneous and metamorphic rocks are reported. A new extraction method analogous to a pepper mill for geological samples is described. It permits extraction at low temperatures and ensures a rapid transfer of extracted gases from active surfaces to cryogenic pre-concentration loop. Values for CF4, CF3Cl, CF2Cl2, CFCl3, CHF3, SF6 and NF3 in fluorites, granites, basalts and other igneous and metamorphic rocks are reported. It is proposed that trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) that was recently discovered in various environmental archives could also origin from similar geogenic sources.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2005

Salinity change in the subtropical Atlantic: Secular increase and teleconnections to the North Atlantic Oscillation

Brad E. Rosenheim; Peter K. Swart; Simon R. Thorrold; Anton Eisenhauer; Philippe Willenz

[1]xa0Recent studies comparing shipboard data between the 1950s and the 1990s have shown significant, heterogeneous adjustments of the temperature-salinity structure of the N. Atlantic Ocean. Here, we present proxy records of temperature and salinity from aragonite sclerosponge skeletons, extending existing records of the Salinity Maximum Waters (SMW) of the N. Atlantic back to 1890. These proxy records show secular temperature increases of 1.6–2.0°C, higher than published global averages, and salinity increases of 0.35–0.5 psu, smaller than short-term secular trends recently measured. Salinity reconstructions vary more significantly on the decadal scale, showing changes that are related to low-frequency variations of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). On both secular and decadal time scales, the records indicate significant thermohaline changes in the SMW, either via forcing at the surface or increasing depths of density surfaces in the Bahamas.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2002

226Raexcess/Ba growth rates and U-Th-Ra-Ba systematic of Baltic Mn/Fe crusts

Volker Liebetrau; Anton Eisenhauer; N. C. Gussone; Gerhard Wörner; Bent T. Hansen; Thomas Leipe

Abstract We analyzed 238U, 234U, 232Th, 230Th, and 226Ra by thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) and Ba by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) on eight Mn/Fe crusts from the Mecklenburg Bay (SW Baltic) and on one from the Bothnian Bay (N Baltic) to test the 226Raex/Ba ratio as potential geochronometer. 226Raex/Ba ratios decrease as a function of depth within the concretions in all analyzed profiles. Calculated diffusion coefficients are relatively low (∼9 · 10−7 cm2/yr for Ra and 5 · 10−7 cm2/yr for Ba) and suggest that diffusion is negligible for the Ra and Ba record. In addition, 226Raex/Ba ages are consistent and independent from the growth rate and growth direction within a crust. Thus, the decline in 226Raex/Ba ratio is most likely due to radioactive decay of 226Raex, although the influence of varying oxic conditions has still to be evaluated. 226Raex/Ba growth rates range from 0.021 to 0.0017 mm/yr and tend to be lower than those calculated and based on stratigraphic methods (1 to 0.013 mm/yr). 226Raex/Ba ages of concretions from shallow water environment (20 m depth, Mecklenburg Bay/SW Baltic) cover a time interval from 990 ± 140 yr to 4310 ± 310 yr BP corresponding to the stabilization of the sea level close to the present position about 5500 to 4500 yr ago. One sample from greater depth (70 m, Bothnian Bay-/N Baltic) showed a higher 226Raex/Ba age of 6460 ± 520 yr BP.


Geophysical Journal International | 1994

Magnetostratigraphic data from late Quaternary sediments from the Yermak plateau, Arctic Ocean : Evidence For Four Geomagnetic Polarity Events Within the Last 170 Ka of the Brunhes Chron

Norbert R Nowaczyk; Thomas Frederichs; Anton Eisenhauer; Gunilla Gard


Geophysical Research Letters | 1998

Natural CF 4 and SF 6 on Earth

Jochen Harnisch; Anton Eisenhauer

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Bent T. Hansen

University of Göttingen

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Brad E. Rosenheim

University of South Florida

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Simon R. Thorrold

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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