Increased productivity in the subantarctic ocean during Heinrich events

Publication Type: 
Year of Publication: 
2005
Journal Title: 
Nature
Journal Date: 
Apr 28
Volume: 
434
Issue: 
7037
Pages: 
1118-1121
ISBN Number: 
0028-0836
Accession Number: 
ISI:000228693300040
Abstract: 

Massive iceberg discharges from the Northern Hemisphere ice sheets, 'Heinrich events', coincided with the coldest periods of the last ice age(1). There is widespread evidence for Heinrich events and their profound impact on the climate and circulation of the North Atlantic Ocean, but their influence beyond that region remains uncertain(1). Here we use a combination of molecular fingerprints of algal productivity and radioisotope tracers of sedimentation to document eight periods of increased productivity in the subpolar Southern Ocean during the past 70,000 years that occurred within 1,000-2,000 years of a Northern Hemisphere Heinrich event. We discuss possible causes for such a link, including increased supply of iron from upwelling and increased stratification during the growing season, which imply an alteration of the global ocean circulation during Heinrich events. The mechanisms linking North Atlantic iceberg discharges with subantarctic productivity remain unclear at this point. We suggest that understanding how the Southern Ocean was altered during these extreme climate perturbations is critical to understanding the role of the ocean in climate change.

Notes: 

920MDTimes Cited:15Cited References Count:30

DOI: 
Doi 10.1038/Nature03544