Boundary scavenging at the East Atlantic margin does not negate use of 231Pa/ 230Th to trace Atlantic overturning

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Jörg Lippold
  • Stefan Mulitza
  • Gesine Mollenhauer
  • Stefan Weyer
  • David Heslop
  • Marcus Christl

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • Heidelberg University
  • University of Bremen
  • Goethe University Frankfurt
  • Australian National University
  • ETH Zurich
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)317-331
Number of pages15
JournalEarth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume333-334
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2012

Abstract

The 231Pa/ 230Th method is a promising tool to reconstruct Ocean circulation over the past Glacial-Interglacial cycle. However, marine particle flux may constrain the applicability of this ratio as a direct quantitative proxy for the strength of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) by influencing the fractionation between the in situ produced 231Pa and 230Th in ocean water. Here we present 231Pa/ 230Th down-core profiles from high particle flux areas off Namibia and Senegal covering the past ~35ka. The 231Pa/ 230Th profiles at these sites show very different responses to temporal variations of particle fluxes and to changes in water masses. Our results show that sedimentary 231Pa/ 230Th in the Eastern Atlantic margin is linked to particle flux, but controlled primarily by the mode of the AMOC. Our data suggest that during the past ~30ka the high productivity Eastern margin was not capable of importing and storing significant amounts of 231Pa from the open Ocean. Consequently, the applicability of the 231Pa/ 230Th proxy to reconstruct past ocean circulation is not hampered by this potentially additional 231Pa sink.

Keywords

    Pa/ Th, African margin, AMOC, Boundary scavenging, LGM, North Atlantic Deep Water

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Sustainable Development Goals

Cite this

Boundary scavenging at the East Atlantic margin does not negate use of 231Pa/ 230Th to trace Atlantic overturning. / Lippold, Jörg; Mulitza, Stefan; Mollenhauer, Gesine et al.
In: Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Vol. 333-334, 01.06.2012, p. 317-331.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Lippold J, Mulitza S, Mollenhauer G, Weyer S, Heslop D, Christl M. Boundary scavenging at the East Atlantic margin does not negate use of 231Pa/ 230Th to trace Atlantic overturning. Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 2012 Jun 1;333-334:317-331. doi: 10.1016/j.epsl.2012.04.005
Lippold, Jörg ; Mulitza, Stefan ; Mollenhauer, Gesine et al. / Boundary scavenging at the East Atlantic margin does not negate use of 231Pa/ 230Th to trace Atlantic overturning. In: Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 2012 ; Vol. 333-334. pp. 317-331.
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title = "Boundary scavenging at the East Atlantic margin does not negate use of 231Pa/ 230Th to trace Atlantic overturning",
abstract = "The 231Pa/ 230Th method is a promising tool to reconstruct Ocean circulation over the past Glacial-Interglacial cycle. However, marine particle flux may constrain the applicability of this ratio as a direct quantitative proxy for the strength of Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) by influencing the fractionation between the in situ produced 231Pa and 230Th in ocean water. Here we present 231Pa/ 230Th down-core profiles from high particle flux areas off Namibia and Senegal covering the past ~35ka. The 231Pa/ 230Th profiles at these sites show very different responses to temporal variations of particle fluxes and to changes in water masses. Our results show that sedimentary 231Pa/ 230Th in the Eastern Atlantic margin is linked to particle flux, but controlled primarily by the mode of the AMOC. Our data suggest that during the past ~30ka the high productivity Eastern margin was not capable of importing and storing significant amounts of 231Pa from the open Ocean. Consequently, the applicability of the 231Pa/ 230Th proxy to reconstruct past ocean circulation is not hampered by this potentially additional 231Pa sink.",
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AU - Mollenhauer, Gesine

AU - Weyer, Stefan

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N1 - Funding information: We thank Augusto Mangini, Evelyn Böhm, Sibylle Reuter, Frank Wombacher and Alexander Hofmann for helpful impulses and/or extensive lab work. We thank Alexander Thomas and one anonymous reviewer for improvement of the manuscript. This study has been funded by the German Science Foundation DFG (grant Ma821/38-2 and Li1815/2 ). Gesine Mollenhauer and Stefan Mulitza were funded through the DFG Research Centre/Excellence Cluster “The Ocean in the Earth System”. Samples were supplied through the assistance of the University of Bremen, Geosciences Department and MARUM. We thank Dirk Nürnberg (IFM-GEOMAR Kiel) and Gerhard Kuhn (AWI Bremerhaven) for readily providing help with the opal measurements.

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