Geochemical records provide evidences for the evolution of the marine redox environment in the southwestern Sumatra waters over the past 35,000 years

被引:1
|
作者
Zhang, Hui [1 ,2 ]
Liu, Shengfa [1 ,2 ]
Cao, Peng [1 ,2 ]
Li, Ziye [3 ]
Troa, Rainer Arief [4 ]
Zuraida, Rina [5 ]
Triarso, Eko [4 ]
Hendrizan, Marfasran [5 ]
Shi, Xuefa [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Minist Nat Resources, Inst Oceanog 1, Key Lab Marine Geol & Metallogeny, Qingdao 266061, Peoples R China
[2] Laoshan Lab, Lab Marine Geol, Qingdao 266061, Peoples R China
[3] Ocean Univ China, Coll Marine Geosci, Qingdao 266100, Peoples R China
[4] Minist Marine Affairs & Fisheries, Jakarta 10110, Indonesia
[5] Natl Res & Innovat Agcy, Res Ctr Climate & Atmosphere, Bandung 40135, Indonesia
关键词
Last glaciation; Redox environment; Trace element; Upwelling; Indian monsoon; Sumatra waters; EASTERN INDIAN-OCEAN; EQUATORIAL PACIFIC; TRACE-METALS; SUNDA STRAIT; SEA-LEVEL; TEMPERATURE; MONSOON; BARIUM; SEDIMENT; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1016/j.jseaes.2023.105759
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The marine redox environment (MRE) can affect marine productivity and nutrient cycling, as well as governs material and energy transport. However, its evolution process and driving mechanism in different historical periods revealed significant regional characteristics. Southwestern Sumatra waters, located at the Indo-Pacific Ocean convergence, are an ideal region for studying the evolution of MRE due to significant upwelling and variable productivity levels resulting from the seasonal monsoonal activity. In this study, based on the sediment core SO184-10043, systematic trace element geochemical analysis was conducted for reconstructing the MRE over the past 35,000 years using redox proxies, namely, Ni/Co, U/Th, and biogenic Barium (Babio). Ni/Co and U/ Th varied in a range of 1-4 and 0.2-1, indicating general oxic conditions with matching productivity levels indicated by Babio (ranging from 300 x 10-6 to 580 x 10-6). A comparison with other reconstructed archives indicated that the MRE records of the sediment core in this study were in consistence in responding to the highlatitude climate records with strong semi-precession and millennial fluctuations. Suggestively, these fluctuations correspond to the natural summertime insolation, triggering the latitudinal motions of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), as well as leading to corresponding changes in the seasonal Indian monsoon system. Freshwater lids modulate the mixing effect by acting as barriers and influencing the upwelling development, thereby leading to strong oxic conditions in the MRE. Therefore, robust evidence on the millennial-scale variability in MRE driven by the ITCZ movement and regional monsoon changes in the tropical Indian Ocean is provided by the trace element archives employed in the present study, thereby providing novel insights into the evolution of MRE in response to global and local climate changes.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 13 条
  • [1] Changes in marine sedimentation patterns in the northeastern South China Sea in the past 35,000 years
    Chen, Kuan-Ting
    Hsu, Shu-Kun
    Lin, Andrew Tien-Shun
    Su, Chih-Chieh
    Babonneau, Nathalie
    Ratzov, Gueorgui
    Lallemand, Serge
    Huang, Pi-Chun
    Lin, Lien-Kai
    Lin, Hsiao-Shan
    Tsai, Ching-Hui
    Lin, Jing-Yi
    Chen, Song-Chuen
    COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT, 2024, 5 (01):
  • [2] PALEOMAGNETIC RECORD OVER THE PAST 35,000 YEARS OF A SEDIMENT CORE FROM OFF SHIKOKU, SOUTHWEST JAPAN
    OHNO, M
    HAMANO, Y
    MURAYAMA, M
    MATSUMOTO, E
    IWAKURA, H
    NAKAMURA, T
    TAIRA, A
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1993, 20 (13) : 1395 - 1398
  • [3] Marine and terrestrial biomarker records for the last 35,000 years at ODP site 658C off NW Africa
    Zhao, MX
    Eglinton, G
    Haslett, SK
    Jordan, RW
    Sarnthein, M
    Zhang, ZH
    ORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY, 2000, 31 (09) : 919 - 930
  • [4] Persistent export of 231Pa from the deep central Arctic Ocean over the past 35,000 years
    Sharon S. Hoffmann
    Jerry F. McManus
    William B. Curry
    L. Susan Brown-Leger
    Nature, 2013, 497 : 603 - 606
  • [5] Persistent export of 231Pa from the deep central Arctic Ocean over the past 35,000 years
    Hoffmann, Sharon S.
    McManus, Jerry F.
    Curry, William B.
    Brown-Leger, L. Susan
    NATURE, 2013, 497 (7451) : 603 - +
  • [6] Paleoenvironmental dynamics in South Amazonia, Brazil, during the last 35,000 years inferred from pollen and geochemical records of Lago do Saci
    Fontes, D.
    Cordeiro, R. C.
    Martins, G. S.
    Behling, H.
    Turcq, B.
    Sifeddine, A.
    Seoane, J. C. S.
    Moreira, L. S.
    Rodrigues, R. A.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2017, 173 : 161 - 180
  • [7] Climate variability over the last 35,000 years recorded in marine and terrestrial archives in the Australian region: an OZ-INTIMATE compilation
    Reeves, Jessica M.
    Barrows, Timothy T.
    Cohen, Timothy J.
    Kiem, Anthony S.
    Bostock, Helen C.
    Fitzsimmons, Kathryn E.
    Jansen, John D.
    Kemp, Justine
    Krause, Claire
    Petherick, Lynda
    Phipps, Steven J.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2013, 74 : 21 - 34
  • [8] Sedimentary environment evolution and biogenic silica records over 33,000 years in the Liaohe delta, China
    Liu, Jin
    Ye, Siyuan
    Laws, Edward Allen
    Xue, Chunting
    Yuan, Hongming
    Ding, Xigui
    Zhao, Guangming
    Yang, Shixiong
    He, Lei
    Wang, Jin
    Pei, Shaofeng
    Wang, Yongbiao
    Lu, Qingyuan
    LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY, 2017, 62 (02) : 474 - 489
  • [9] Orbitally-induced changes of the Atlantic and Indian monsoons over the past 20,000 years: New insights based on the comparison of continental and marine records
    Lezine, Anne-Marie
    Bassinot, Franck
    Peterschmitt, Jean-Yves
    BULLETIN DE LA SOCIETE GEOLOGIQUE DE FRANCE, 2014, 185 (01): : 3 - 12
  • [10] Oxygenation history of bottom waters in the Cariaco Basin, Venezuela, over the past 578,000 years: Results from redox-sensitive metals (Mo, V, Mn, and Fe)
    Yarincik, KM
    Murray, RW
    Lyons, TW
    Peterson, LC
    Haug, GH
    PALEOCEANOGRAPHY, 2000, 15 (06): : 593 - 604