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Correcting for the influence of ice-rafted detritus on grain size-based paleocurrent speed estimates

Jonkers, Lukas ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0253-2639, Barker, Stephen ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7870-6431, Hall, Ian Richard ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6960-1419 and Prins, Maarten 2015. Correcting for the influence of ice-rafted detritus on grain size-based paleocurrent speed estimates. Paleoceanography 30 (10) , pp. 1347-1357. 10.1002/2015PA002830

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Abstract

The grain size of deep-sea sediments provides an apparently simple proxy for current speed. However, grain size-based proxies may be ambiguous when the size distribution reflects a combination of processes, with current sorting only one of them. In particular, such sediment mixing hinders reconstruction of deep circulation changes associated with ice-rafting events in the glacial North Atlantic because variable ice-rafted detritus (IRD) input may falsely suggest current speed changes. Inverse modelling has been suggested as a way to overcome this problem. However, this approach requires high-precision size measurements that register small changes in the size distribution. Here we show that such data can be obtained using electro sensing and laser diffraction techniques, despite issues previously raised on the low precision of electro sensing methods and potential grain shape effects on laser diffraction. Down-core size patterns obtained from a sediment core from the North Atlantic are similar for both techniques, reinforcing the conclusion that both techniques yield comparable results. However, IRD input leads to a coarsening that spuriously suggests faster current speed. We show that this IRD influence can be accounted for using inverse modelling as long as wide size spectra are taken into account. This yields current speed variations that are in agreement with other proxies. Our experiments thus show that for current speed reconstruction the choice of instrument is subordinate to a proper recognition of the various processes that determine the size distribution and that by using inverse modelling meaningful current speed reconstructions can be obtained from mixed sediments.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Earth and Environmental Sciences
Subjects: Q Science > QE Geology
Uncontrolled Keywords: current speed; sortable silt; grain size; inverse modelling; North Atlantic; ice-rafted detritus
Publisher: American Geophysical Union
ISSN: 0883-8305
Funders: Climate Change Consortium of Wales
Date of Acceptance: 29 September 2015
Last Modified: 16 Nov 2022 15:32
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/77643

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