Bioturbation supplying young carbon into West Antarctic continental margin sediment

被引:3
作者
Kim, Sunghan [1 ,2 ]
McKay, Robert M. [3 ]
Lee, Jae Il [1 ]
Yoo, Kyu-Cheul [1 ]
Lee, Min Kyung [1 ]
Moon, Heung Soo [1 ]
机构
[1] Korea Polar Res Inst, Incheon 21990, South Korea
[2] Univ Sci & Technol UST, Dept Polar Sci, Incheon 21990, South Korea
[3] Victoria Univ Wellington, Antarctic Res Ctr, Wellington 6140, New Zealand
关键词
Radiocarbon age; Young carbon; Bioturbation; Antarctica; Acid insoluble organic matter; ROSS-SEA; RADIOCARBON; RETREAT; SHELF; BASIN; AGE; CHRONOLOGY; PENINSULA; RECORDS; SCOTIA;
D O I
10.1016/j.palaeo.2022.111161
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) C-14 dating is a widely applied method for establishing high-precision chronologies used to underpin late Quaternary paleoclimatic studies. Feedbacks associated with Antarctic Ice Sheets (AIS) and Southern Ocean variance are thought to have played a critical role in regulating past global climate changes since the Last Glacial Maximum. However, determining the exact role of the AIS and Southern Ocean in these changes has proven difficult because of the sparse occurrence of biogenic carbonate suitable for AMS C-14 dating in Antarctica. Consequently, AMS C-14 dating is often measured on acid insoluble organic matter (AIOM) from bulk sediment samples, which are often biased towards ages that are older than the depositional age, due to pervasive reworking of old carbon. In this scenario, ages can still potentially provide maximum deposition ages, but such interpretations need to be assessed carefully. Here, we document AIOM and foraminifer AMS C-14 dates at the same depth intervals from Antarctic continental margin cores, and we find AIOM AMS C-14 dates can range between 2000 and 16,000 years younger than those of foraminifera samples. The younger AIOM C-14 dates were found in bioturbated sedimentary facies, which often have extremely low sedimentation rates in Antarctica. In cores with low sedimentation rates, the down sediment contribution of organic carbon from macro-benthos can be quite significant in the sediment column with low organic carbon concentration. After consid-ering possibilities of contamination, foraminifer reworking, and remineralization of secondary carbonate to explain this offset, we conclude that bioturbation plays an important role in the Antarctic carbon cycle as a young carbon supplier to depth into the sediment column. This has clear implications for using condensed sedimentary sections to date post-LGM records in Antarctica. These bioturbation processes also have implications for novel radiocarbon dating methods that have recently been developed to overcome sediment reworking processes and more accurately constrain timing of past AIS retreat, including ramped pyrolysis and compound specific isotopes methods.
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