The effect of submerged plateaux on Pleistocene gyral circulation and sea-surface temperatures in the Southwest Pacific

被引:55
|
作者
Hayward, Bruce W. [1 ]
Scott, George H. [2 ]
Crundwell, Martin P. [2 ]
Kennett, James P. [3 ]
Carter, Lionel [4 ]
Neil, Helen L. [5 ]
Sabaa, Ashwaq T. [1 ]
Wilson, Kate [2 ,6 ]
Rodger, J. Stuart [7 ]
Schaefer, Grace [7 ]
Grenfell, Hugh R. [1 ]
Li, Qianyu [8 ]
机构
[1] Geomarine Res, Auckland, New Zealand
[2] Inst Geol & Nucl Sci, Lower Hutt, New Zealand
[3] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Earth Sci, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
[4] Victoria Univ Wellington, Antarctic Res Ctr, Wellington, New Zealand
[5] Natl Inst Water & Atmosphere, Wellington, New Zealand
[6] Massey Univ, Inst Nat Resources, Palmerston North, New Zealand
[7] Univ Auckland, Dept Geol, Auckland, New Zealand
[8] Tongji Univ, State Key Lab Marine Geol, Shanghai 200092, Peoples R China
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Southwest Pacific; New Zealand; sea-surface temperatures; Quaternary paleoceanography; Chatham Rise; Subtropical Front; Subantarctic Front;
D O I
10.1016/j.gloplacha.2008.07.003
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Uniquely in the Southern Hemisphere the New Zealand micro-continent spans the interface between a subtropical gyre and the Subantarctic Circumpolar Current. Its 20 degrees latitudinal extent includes a complex of submerged plateaux, ridges, saddles and basins which, in the present interglacial, are partial barriers to circulation and steer the Subtropical (STF) and Subantarctic (SAF) fronts. This configuration offers a singular opportunity to assess the influence of bottom topography on oceanic circulation through Pleistocene glacial interglacial (G/I) cycles, its effect on the location and strength of the fronts, and its ability to generate significant differences in mixed layer thermal history over short distances. For this study we use new planktic foraminiferal based sea-surface temperature (SST) estimates spanning the past 1 million years from a latitudinal transect of four deep ocean drilling sites. We conclude that: 1. the effect of the New Zealand landmass was to deflect the water masses south around the bathymetric impediments: 2. the effect of a shallow submerged ridge on the down-current side (Chatham Rise), was to dynamically trap the STF along its crest, in stark contrast to the usual glacial-interglacial (G-I) mericlional migration that occurs in the open ocean; 3. the effect of more deeply submerged, downstream plateaux (Campbell, Bounty) was to dynamically trap the SAF along its steep southeastern margin; 4. the effects of saddles across the submarine plateaux was to facilitate the development of jets of subtropical and subantarctic surface water through the fronts, forming localized downstream gyres or eddies during different phases in the G-I climate cycles; 5. the deep Pukaki Saddle across the Campbell-Bounty Plateaux guided a branch of the SAF to flow northwards during each glacial, to form a strong gyre of circumpolar surface water in the Bounty Trough, especially during the mid-Pleistocene Climate Transition (MIS 22-16) when exceptionally high SST gradients existed across the STF; 6. the shallower Mernoo Saddle, at the western end of the Chatham Rise, provided a conduit for subtropical water to jet southwards across the STF in the warmest interglacial peaks (MIS 11, 5.5) and for subantarctic water to flow northwards during glacials; 7. although subtropical or subantarctic drivers can prevail at a particular phase of a G-I cycles, it appears that the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is the main influence on the regional hydrography. Thus complex submarine topography can affect distinct differences in the climate records over short distances with implications for using such records in interpreting global or regional trends. Conversely, the local topography can amplify the paleoclimate record in different ways in different places, thus enhancing its value for the study of more minor paleoceanographic influences that elsewhere are more difficult to detect. Such sites include DSDP 594, which like some other Southern Ocean sites, has the typical late Pleistocene asymmetrical saw-tooth G-I climate pattern transformed to a gap-tooth pattern of quasi-symmetrical interglacial spikes that interrupt extended periods of minimum glacial temperatures. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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页码:309 / 316
页数:8
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