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Surface water productivity and sediment transport by Bering Strait throughflow in the Chukchi Shelf (the western Arctic Ocean) during the Holocene

Cited 3 time in wos
Cited 4 time in scopus
Title
Surface water productivity and sediment transport by Bering Strait throughflow in the Chukchi Shelf (the western Arctic Ocean) during the Holocene
Other Titles
척치해 대륙붕의 홀로세 동안 표층수 생산성과 베링해협 유입수에 의한 퇴적물 수송
Authors
Khim, Boo-Keun
Lee, Mi Jung
Cho, Hyen Goo
Park, Kwangkyu
Subject
Physical GeographyGeology
Keywords
Bering StraitHolocenegeochemistryisotopepaleoceanographysea-level changesediment source
Issue Date
2018-05
Citation
Khim, Boo-Keun, et al. 2018. "Surface water productivity and sediment transport by Bering Strait throughflow in the Chukchi Shelf (the western Arctic Ocean) during the Holocene". HOLOCENE, 28(5): 814-826.
Abstract
Diverse paleoceanographic proxies from three sediment cores (GC12ex, JPC35, and JPC30) collected from the Chukchi Shelf north of the Bering Strait elucidate the Holocene paleoceanographic changes (surface water productivity and sediment transport) caused by the Bering Strait throughflow from the Bering Sea into the Chukchi Sea. Lithology of three sediment cores identified the same three units. Based on comparison and correlation to adjacent age-dated cores as well as AMS C-14 dates of core GC12ex, the boundary between Unit 1 and Unit 2a is dated about 8500 cal. yr BP, and the boundary between Unit 2a and Unit 2b is also dated about 4500 cal. yr BP. Consistent down-core profiles of the geochemical and isotopic properties among the three cores differentiate the paleoceanographic conditions corresponding to lithologic units. Based on the biogenic opal, total organic carbon, and delta C-13 values, Unit 1 is characterized by low surface water marine productivity under relatively shallow water with weak transport of Bering Strait throughflow. Unit 2a shows a mixture of terrestrial and marine contributions, indicating the onset of increased marine surface water productivity after the main flooding (similar to 11,500 cal. yr BP) of the Bering Strait by the Holocene sea-level rise. Unit 2b exhibits stable and enhanced marine biogenic opal production similar to the present-day oceanographic conditions. Such paleoceanographic changes were confirmed by the clay minerals (smectite, illite, kaolinite, and chlorite) and detrital isotopes (epsilon(Nd) and Sr-87/Sr-86). Thus, the Bering Strait throughflow played an important role on surface water productivity and sediment deposition in the Chukchi Shelf in response to Holocene sea-level rise after the opening of the Bering Strait.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/13021
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959683617744265
Type
Article
Station
Araon
Indexed
SCI
Appears in Collections  
2016 Polar Academic Program (PE16900)
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