Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T01:10:48.322Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Multicentury-Scale Records of Carbonate (Hydrographic?) Variability on the Northern Iceland Margin over the Last 5000 Years1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

J.T. Andrews
Affiliation:
INSTAAR and Department of Geological Sciences, Box 450, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, 80309
Gudrun Helgadottir
Affiliation:
Marine Research, Institute, Skulagata 4, Reykjavik, 101, Iceland
Aslaug Geirsdottir
Affiliation:
Department of Geosciences, University of Iceland, Reykjavik, 101, Iceland
Anne E. Jennings
Affiliation:
INSTAAR and Department of Geological Sciences, Box 450, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, 80309

Abstract

The waters off northern Iceland are subjected to extreme hydrographic variability on annual to decadal timescales. In years when cold low-salinity water moves coastward and sea ice is prevalent (i.e., the late 1960s), marine productivity of surface waters is low because the water column is well stratified. In the opposite oceanographic mode, warm, salty Atlantic Water dominates the shelf and vertical mixing results in high productivity. We track these two contrasting modes by measuring the carbonate content of marine sediments, a proxy for productivity, in three cores from northern Iceland. The fjord record (B997-328PC) is anchored by eleven 14C AMS dates and has a resolution of one sample every 50 yr. Thirteen oscillations occurred over the last 4800 cal yr with an average length of 370 yr; these are superimposed on a long-term decrease in net carbonate accumulation. The Little Ice Age is marked by the largest decrease in carbonate content and in flux, with smaller minima at 2300 and 3000 cal yr B.P. Marked peaks in carbonate (optima) occurred at 2000 and 3800 cal yr B.P. The carbonate record from B997-328PC can be correlated with records on the inner shelf (B997-330PC) and midshelf (B997-327PC), indicating that significant regional changes in oceanography occurred at the southern margin of the Norwegian–Greenland Sea. The marine carbonate fluctuations closely track temperature reconstructions from the Greenland Summit site for the last 2000 cal yr and show similar, but slightly offset, oscillations between 2000 and ca. 4800 cal yr B.P.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
University of Washington

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

P.A.R.C.S. Contribution #162.

References

Alley, R.B, Agustsdottir, A.M, and Fawcett, P.J Ice-core evidence of late-Holocene reduction in North Atlantic ocean heat transport. Clark, P.U, Webb, A.R.S, and Keigwin, L.D Mechanisms of Global Climate Change at Millennial Time Scales. (1999). American Geophysical Union, Washington. 301 312.Google Scholar
Andrews, J.T, Barber, D.C, and Jennings, A.E Errors in generating time-series and dating events at late Quaternary (radiocarbon) time-scales: Examples from Baffin Bay, Labrador Sea, and East Greenland. Clark, P.U, Webb, A.R.S, and Keigwin, L.D Mechanisms of Global Climate Change at Millennial Time Scales. (1999). American Geophysical Union, Washington. 23 33.Google Scholar
Andrews, J.T, Caseldine, C, Weiner, N.J, and Hatton, J Late Quaternary (∼4 ka) marine and terrestrial environmental change in Reykjarfjördur, N. Iceland: Climate and / or settlement?. Journal Quaternary Sciences 16, (2001). 133 143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belkin, I.M, Levitus, S, Antonov, J, and Malmberg, S.-A “Great Salinity Anomalies” in the North Atlantic. Progress in Oceanography 41, (1998). 1 68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergthorsson, P An estimate of drift ice and temperature in Iceland in 1000 years. Jokull 19, (1969). 94 101.Google Scholar
Bianchi, G.G, and McCave, I.N Holocene periodicity in North Atlantic climate and deep-ocean flow south of Iceland. Nature 397, (1999). 515 517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bjornsson, H Sea ice conditions and the atmospheric circulation north of Iceland. Jokull 19, (1969). 11 28.Google Scholar
Bond, G, Showers, W, Cheseby, M, Lotti, R, Almasi, P, deMenocal, P, Priore, P, Cullen, H, Hajdas, I, and Bonani, G A pervasive millennial-scale cycle in North Atlantic Holocene and glacial climates. Science 278, (1997). 1257 1266.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broecker, W.S Thermohaline circulation, the Achilles Heel of our climate system: Will man-made CO2 upset the current balance?. Science 278, (1997). 1582 1588.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Broecker, W.S, Sutherland, S, and Peng, T.-H A possible 20th-century slowdown of Southern Ocean Deep Water formation. Science 286, (1999). 1132 1135.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Casteneda, I.S Holocene Paleoceanographic and Climatic Variations of the Inner North Iceland Continental Shelf, Reykjarfjordur. (2001). University of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Chave, K.E Recent carbonate sediments: An unconventional view. Geological Education 7, (1967). 200 204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, D.K, and Maynard, N.G Coastal zone color scanner imagery of phytoplankton pigment distribution in Icelandic waters. The International Society of Optical Engineering. (1986). SPIE, Orlando. p. 350357.Google Scholar
Crowley, T.J Correlating high frequency climate variations. Paleoceanography 14, (1999). 271 272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowley, T.J, and Lowery, T.S How warm was the Medieval Warm Period?. Ambio 29, (2000). 51 54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuffey, K.M, and Clow, G.D Temperature, accumulation, and ice sheet elevation in central Greenland through the last deglacial transition. Journal of Geophysical Research 102, (1997). 26,383 26,396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickson, R, Lazier, J, Meincke, J, Rhines, P, and Swift, J Long-term cordinated changes in the convective activity of the North Atlantic. Progress in Oceanography 38, (1996). 241 295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickson, R.R, Meincke, J, Malmberg, S, and Lee, A The “Great Salinity Anomaly” in the northern North Atlantic 1968–1982. Progress in Oceanography 20, (1988). 103 151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eiriksson, J, Knudsen, K.L, Haflidason, H, and Henriksen, P Late-glacial and Holocene paleoceanography of the North Iceland Shelf. Journal of Quaternary Science 15, (2000). 23 42.3.0.CO;2-8>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eiriksson, J, Knudsen, K.L, Haflidason, H, and Heinemeier, H Chronology of the late Holocene climatic events in the northern North Atlantic based on AMS 14C dates and tephra markers from the volcano, Hekla, Iceland. Journal of Quaternary Science 15, (2000). 573 580.3.0.CO;2-A>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giraudeau, G, Cremer, M, Manthe, S, Laberrie, L, and Bond, G Coccolith evidence for instabilities in surface circulation south of Iceland during Holocene times. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 179, (2000). 257 268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haflidason, H, Eiriksson, J, and Van Kreveld, S The tephrachronology of Iceland and the North Atlantic region during the Middle and Late Quaternary: A review. Journal of Quaternary Science 15, (2000). 3 22.3.0.CO;2-W>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helgadottir, G Paleoclimate (0 to >14 ka) of W. and NW Iceland: An Iceland / USA Contribution to P.A.L.E., Cruise Report B9-97. Marine Research Institute of Iceland, Reykjavik. Hafrannsoknastofnun Fjölrit Npp. 62. (1997). Google Scholar
Hopkins, T.S The GIN Sea—A synthesis of its physical oceanography and literature review 1972–1985. Earth Science Reviews 30, (1991). 175 318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurrell, J.W Decadal trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation: Regional temperatures and precipitation. Science 269, (1995). 676 679.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jansen, E, and Koc, N Century to decadal scale records of Norwegian sea surface temperature variations of the past 2 millennia. PAGES Newsletter 8, (2000). 13 14.Google Scholar
Jennings, A.E, and Weiner, N.J Environmental change on eastern Greenland during the last 1300 years: Evidence from foraminifera and lithofacies in Nansen Fjord, 68° N. The Holocene 6, (1996). 179 191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jennings, A.E, Hardardottir, J, Stein, R, Ogilvie, A.E.J, and Jonsdottir, I Oceanographic change and terrestrial human impacts in a post 1400 AD record from the southwest Iceland Shelf. Climatic Change 48, (2001). 83 100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnsen, S, Clausen, H.B, Dansgaard, W, Gundestrup, N.S, Hansson, M, Johnsson, P, Steffensen, P, and Sveinbjornsdottir, A.E A “deep” ice core from East Greenland. Meddelelser om Gronland, Geoscience 29, (1992). 22 Google Scholar
Keigwin, L.D The Little Ice Age and Medieval Warm Period in the Sargasso Sea. Science 274, (1996). 1504 1508.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keigwin, L.D, and Pickart, R.S Slope water current over the Laurentian Fan on interannual to millennial time scales. Science 286, (1999). 520 523.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kerr, R.A A North Atlantic climate pacemaker for the centuries. Science 288, (2000). 1984 1986.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lamb, H.H Climatic variations and changes in the wind and ocean circulation: The Little Ice Age in the Northeast Atlantic. Quaternary Research 11, (1979). 1 20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malmberg, S.-A The water masses between Iceland and Greenland. Journal Marine Research Institute 9, (1985). 127 140.Google Scholar
Miller, G.H, Geirsdottir, A, and Korner, R.M Sea ice in the climate system: Lessons from the North Atlantic Arctic. Eos, Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 82, (2001). 97 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ogilvie, A.E.J Climatic change in Iceland A.D. c.865 to 1598. Acta Archaeologica 61, (1991). 233 251.Google Scholar
Ogilvie, A.E.J, and Jonsson, T The Iceberg in the Mist: Northern Research in Pursuit of a ‘Little Ice Age.’. (2001). Kluwer Academic Press, Boston. p. 263 Google Scholar
Ogilvie, A, Barlow, L.K, and Jennings, A North Atlantic climate c. AD 1000: Millenial reflections on the Viking discoveries of Iceland, Greenland and North America. Weather 55, (2000). 34 45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olafsson, J Connections between oceanic conditions off N-Iceland, Lake Myvatn temperature, regional wind direction variability and the North Atlantic Oscillation. Rit Fiskideildar 16, (1999). 41 57.Google Scholar
Paillard, D, Labeyrie, L, and Yiou, P Macintosh program performs time-series analysis. Eos, Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 77, (1996). 379 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodwell, M.J, Rowell, D.P, and Folland, C.K Oceanic forcing of the wintertime North Atlantic Oscillation and European climate. Nature 398, (1999). 320 323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmutz, C, Luterbacher, J, Gyalistras, D, Xoplaki, E, and Wanner, H Can we trust proxy-based NAO index reconstructions?. Geophysical Research Letters 27, (2000). 1135 1138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, L. M and Licht, K. J. (2000). Radiocarbon Date List IX: Antarctica, Arctic Ocean, and the Northern North Atlantic. INSTAAR, University of Colorado.Google Scholar
Stefansson, U Temperature variations in the North Icelandic coastal area during recent decades. Jokull 19, (1969). 18 28.Google Scholar
Stotter, J, Wastl, M, Caseldine, C, and Haberle, T Holocene paleoclimatic reconstructions in northern Iceland: Approaches and results. Quaternary Science Reviews 18, (1999). 457 474.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stuiver, M, Reimer, P.J, Bard, E, Beck, J.W, Hughen, K.A, Kromer, B, McCormack, F.G, v.d. Plicht, J, and Spurk, M INTCAL98 radiocarbon age calibration 24,000–0 cal B.P. Radiocarbon 40, (1998). 1041 1083.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thorarinsson, S Oscillations of Iceland glaciers during the last 250 years. Geographical Annuls 25, (1953). 1 54.Google Scholar
Thordardottir, T Primary production in North Icelandic waters in relation to recent climatic change. Polar Oceans: Proceedings of the Oceanographic Congress. (1977). p. 655665.Google Scholar