Mid Holocene origin of the sea-surface salinity low in the subarctic North Pacific

IMAGES core MD01-2416 (511N, 1681E) provides the first centennial-scale multiproxy record of Holocene variation in North Pacific sea-surface temperature (SST), salinity, and biogenic productivity. Our results reveal a gradual decrease in subarctic SST by 3–51C from 11.1 to 4.2 ka and a stepwise long-term decrease in sea surface salinity (SSS) by 2–3 p.s.u. Early Holocene SSS were as high as in the modern subtropical Pacific. The steep halocline and stratification that is characteristic of the present-day subarctic NorthPacific surface ocean is a fairly recent feature, developed as a product of mid-Holocene environmental ch ange. HighSSS matched a salient productivity maximum of biogenic opal during Bolling-to-Early Holocene times, reaching levels similar to those observed during preglacial times in the warm mid-Pliocene prior to 2.73 Ma. Similar productivity spikes marked every preceding glacial termination of the last 800 ka, indicating recurrent short-term events of mid-Pliocene-style intense upwelling of nutrient-rich Pacific Deepwater in the Pleistocene. Such events led to a repeated exposure of CO2-richdeepwater at the ocean surface facilitating a transient CO2 release to the atmosphere, but the timing and duration of these events repudiate a long-term influence of the subarctic NorthPacific on global atmosph eric CO 2 concentration. r 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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