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Surface sediment samples from the Norwegian-Greenland Sea were investigated to reconstruct the spatial distribution of recent carbonate dissolution on the seafloor. Additionally, carbonate dissolution records of Ocean Drilling Program sites 985 and 987 are presented to outline the development of Pleistocene carbonate preservation. Today, well-preserved carbonate tests can be observed along the inflow of warm Atlantic surface water, extending as far as into the northernmost Norwegian-Greenland Sea. Increased dissolution is indicated along the continental margins and in the deepest parts of the Greenland Basin. Factors favoring carbonate preservation were found to be supersaturation of the water column with respect to calcium carbonate, high carbonate rain and probably excess alkalinity of bottom waters supplied by the arctic river discharge. Supralysoklinal dissolution is most important for recent carbonate dissolution in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea, whereas the deepest parts of the Greenland Basin reaches the calcite saturation horizon. Pleistocene dissolution records show some prominent peaks of extreme carbonate dissolution. During the Brunhes chron, carbonate dissolution maxima can be related to meltwater pulses, which probably inhibited deep-water formation in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea during deglaciation events. Long-term severe carbonate dissolution is evident during the late Matuyama chron. This can be probably related to low carbonate rain, due to a more eastwards located East Greenland Current and the nearly absence of the not yet polar adapted Neogloboquadrina pachyderma sin. during that period. Extreme dissolution events during the late Matuyama indicate strongly reduced deep-water formation.

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Although they are fossils of uncertain origin, bolboforms are the best calcareous microfossil group for Neogene biostratigraphy in the North Atlantic. Fifty-two Bolboforma species were observed at the Hatton-Rockall Basin in Ocean Drilling Program Holes 982A (26 samples) and 982B (301 samples) and in Deep Sea Drilling Project Hole 116 (71 samples). The sequence investigated spans the interval from lower Miocene to upper Pliocene. Fourteen zones/subzones were identified and correlated with the calcareous nannoplankton zones, the planktonic foraminifer biostratigraphy, and the time (Ma). The last occurrence of the genus Bolboforma can be dated to 2.84 Ma. Different Bolboforma specimens of middle Miocene age, observed in upper Miocene and upper middle Miocene sediments at Site 982, document redeposition of sediment from the Rockall Bank into the Hatton-Rockall Basin during the latest middle Miocene and late Miocene.

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A geochemical study of sediments from Ocean Drilling Program Site 983 was conducted to examine low-frequency variations in carbonate content as expressed by blue-band reflectance (450-500 nm) over the last 1.2 Ma. Sedimentary percent organic carbon, percent carbonate, and excess barium (Ba[ex]) were used as the primary tools to evaluate the factors responsible for these long-term changes. We observe positive correlation between the mass-accumulation rate of various biogenic components and the mass-accumulation rate of Ba(ex), especially in sediments younger than ~600 ka. Deeper in the section (~600-1200 ka), the correlation between Ba(ex) and the other biogenic tracers is weak. The lack of correlation between Ba(ex) and biogenic carbonate likely results either from a higher supply of terrigenous material at that time (which confounds Ba[ex] estimation), or remobilization of Ba resulting from low pore-water sulfate ion concentrations, or both. Nonbiogenic sediments at Site 983, represented by Th, K2O, and the molar Ti/Al ratio, exhibit cyclic variations that represent mixing between continental and oceanic (i.e., basaltic) terrigenous sources. The timing of these cycles matches that of the major glacial-interglacial cycles, which suggests that they result from the supply of continental material as ice-rafted debris during glacial periods and fine-grained basaltic material by bottom currents during interglacial periods. Given these observations, the most likely causes for the low-frequency carbonate variations observed in the Site 983 sediments are shifts in surface productivity and, to a lesser extent, dilution by the input of terrigenous material.