Eolian records from sediment core RC27-61 in the Arabian Sea


Autoria(s): Clemens, Steven C; Prell, Warren L
Cobertura

LATITUDE: 16.625000 * LONGITUDE: 59.861667

Data(s)

12/08/1990

Resumo

The modern Indian Ocean summer monsoon is driven by differential heating between the Asian continent and the Indian Ocean to the south. This differential heating produces a strong pressure gradient which drives southwest monsoon winds during June, July, and August. Satellite and meteorological observations, aerosol measurements, sediment trap studies, and mineralogical studies indicate an atmospheric mode of transport for modern lithogenic sediments in the northwest Arabian Sea. Analyses of lithogenic grain size and mass accumulation rate (MAR) records from the Owen Ridge indicate that eolian transport has been the primary mode of transport for the past 370 kyr. Visual inspection shows that the MAR record is positively correlated with global ice volume as indicated by the marine delta18O record. In contrast, the grain-size record varies at a much higher frequency, showing little correlation to either the MAR or the delta18O records. Spectral analyses confirm these relationships, indicating that the lithogenic grain-size and MAR records are coherent only over the precession band whereby the grain size leads the MAR by 124° (~8 kyr). We conclude that an eolian transport mechanism is the only mechanism that allows for this phase difference and at the same time is supported by comparison of the grain size and MAR with independent eolian records. We use lithogenic grain size as a paleoclimatic indicator of summer monsoon wind strength and lithogenic MAR as a paleoclimatic indicator of source-area aridity. These interpretations are supported by comparison of the lithogenic records to independent indicators of wind strength (Globigerina bulloides upwelling record) and aridity (a loess record from central China). Such comparisons indicate high coherence and zero phase relationships. Our work supports the findings of previous studies which have documented the link between monsoon strength and the Earth's axial precession cycles. Both the lithogenic MAR and the grain-size records have high coherency with precessional insolation. Maximum lithogenic MAR (source-area aridity) is in phase with delta18O (global ice volume) and leads maximum precessional insolation by 88° (~6 kyr). We attribute this lead to the influence of glacial conditions on the aridity, and therefore the deflation potential, of the source areas. Maximum lithogenic grain size (summer monsoon wind strength) lags maximum precession by 148° (~9 kyr). We attribute this lag both to the influence of global and/or local ice volume and to the availability of latent heat from the southern hemisphere Indian Ocean, the two of which combine to determine the strength of the Indian Ocean monsoon.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.726547

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.726547

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Clemens, Steven C; Prell, Warren L (1990): Late Pleistocene variability of Arabian Sea summer monsoon winds and continental aridity: Eolian records from the lithogenic component of deep sea sediments. Paleoceanography, 5(2), 109-145, doi:10.1029/PA005i002p00109

Palavras-Chave #Acc rate terr; Accumulation rate, terrigeneous; Age model; Age model, SPECMAP chronology, Imbrie et al (1984, in Berger et al, Reidel Pub); Calculated; calculated ages; D50; DBD; Density, dry bulk; Depth; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Foraminifera, planktic d18O; Foram plankt d18O; Grain size, Elzone Particle Counter; Indian Ocean; Median, grain size; PC; Piston corer; RC27; RC27-61; Robert Conrad; Sedimentation rate; Sed rate; Terr; Terrigeneous; Wet-chemistry (Rea & Janecek, 1981)
Tipo

Dataset