TY - JOUR
T1 - Late Younger Dryas and early Holocene palaeoenvironments in the Skagerrak, eastern North Atlantic
T2 - A multiproxy study
AU - Erbs-Hansen, Dorthe Reng
AU - Knudsen, Karen Luise
AU - Gary, Anthony Cavedo
AU - Jansen, Eystein
AU - Gyllencreutz, Richard
AU - Scao, Vincent
AU - Lambeck, Kurt
PY - 2011/10
Y1 - 2011/10
N2 - A high-resolution study of palaeoenvironmental changes through the late Younger Dryas and early Holocene in the Skagerrak, the eastern North Atlantic, is based on multiproxy analyses of core MD99-2286 combined with palaeowater depth modelling for the area. The late Younger Dryas was characterized by a cold ice-distal benthic foraminiferal fauna. After the transition to the Preboreal (c. 11650cal. a BP) this fauna was replaced by a Cassidulina neoteretis-dominated fauna, indicating the influence of chilled Atlantic Water at the sea floor. Persisting relatively cold bottom-water conditions until c. 10300cal. a BP are presumably a result of an outflow of glacial meltwater from the Baltic area across south-central Sweden, which led to a strong stratification of the water column at MD99-2286, as also indicated by C. neoteretis. A short-term peak in the C/N ratio at c. 10200cal. a BP is suggested to indicate input of terrestrial material, which may represent the drainage of an ice-dammed lake in southern Norway, the Glomma event. After the last drainage route across south-central Sweden closed, c. 10300cal. a BP, the meltwater influence diminished, and the Skagerrak resembled a fjord with a stable inflow of waters from the North Atlantic through the Norwegian Trench and a gradual increase in boreal species. Full interglacial conditions were established at the sea floor from c. 9250cal. a BP. Subsequent warm stable conditions were interrupted by a short-term cooling around 8300-8200cal. a BP, representing the 8.2ka event.
AB - A high-resolution study of palaeoenvironmental changes through the late Younger Dryas and early Holocene in the Skagerrak, the eastern North Atlantic, is based on multiproxy analyses of core MD99-2286 combined with palaeowater depth modelling for the area. The late Younger Dryas was characterized by a cold ice-distal benthic foraminiferal fauna. After the transition to the Preboreal (c. 11650cal. a BP) this fauna was replaced by a Cassidulina neoteretis-dominated fauna, indicating the influence of chilled Atlantic Water at the sea floor. Persisting relatively cold bottom-water conditions until c. 10300cal. a BP are presumably a result of an outflow of glacial meltwater from the Baltic area across south-central Sweden, which led to a strong stratification of the water column at MD99-2286, as also indicated by C. neoteretis. A short-term peak in the C/N ratio at c. 10200cal. a BP is suggested to indicate input of terrestrial material, which may represent the drainage of an ice-dammed lake in southern Norway, the Glomma event. After the last drainage route across south-central Sweden closed, c. 10300cal. a BP, the meltwater influence diminished, and the Skagerrak resembled a fjord with a stable inflow of waters from the North Atlantic through the Norwegian Trench and a gradual increase in boreal species. Full interglacial conditions were established at the sea floor from c. 9250cal. a BP. Subsequent warm stable conditions were interrupted by a short-term cooling around 8300-8200cal. a BP, representing the 8.2ka event.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=80053272478&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1502-3885.2011.00205.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1502-3885.2011.00205.x
M3 - Article
SN - 0300-9483
VL - 40
SP - 660
EP - 680
JO - Boreas
JF - Boreas
IS - 4
ER -