Published March 15, 2011 | Version v1
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Proceedings of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program 323: Bering Sea Paleoceanography

Description

Paleoclimate and paleoceanographic studies present opportunities to study the dynamics of the climate system by examining how it responds to external forcing (e.g., greenhouse gas and solar radiation changes) and how its interacting components generate climate oscillations and abrupt changes. Of note is the amplified recent warming of the high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, which is presumably related to sea ice albedo feedback and teleconnections to other regions; both the behavior of sea ice–climate interactions and the role of large-scale atmospheric and oceanic circulation in climate change can be studied with geologic records of past climate change in the Bering Sea. Drilling in the Bering Sea may help answer questions not only about the global extent of climate trends and oscillations but also about the mechanisms that produce them. In addition to having important sedimentary records of past climate change, the Bering Sea is a region of relatively high surface productivity, elevated intermediate-water and deepwater nutrient concentrations, and microbially mediated biogeochemical cycling. Thus, Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 323 was also dedicated to examining for the first time subseafloor biomass and microbial processes in high-productivity regions. The major objectives of Expedition 323 in the Bering Sea are (1) To elucidate a detailed evolutionary history of climate and surface-ocean conditions since the earliest Pliocene in the Bering Sea, where amplified high-resolution changes in climatic signals are recorded; (2) To shed light on temporal changes in the origin and intensity of NPIW and possibly deeper water mass formation in the Bering Sea; (3) To characterize the history of continental glaciation, river discharges, and sea ice formation in order to investigate the link between the continental and oceanic conditions of the Bering Sea and adjacent land areas; (4) To investigate, through comparison to pelagic records, linkages between ocean/climate processes that occur in the more sensitive marginal sea environment of the Bering Sea and those that occur in the North Pacific and/or globally. This objective includes an evaluation of how the ocean/climate history of the Bering Strait gateway region may have affected North Pacific and global conditions; and (5) To constrain global models of subseafloor biomass and microbial respiration by quantifying subseafloor cell abundance and pore water chemistry in an extremely high productivity region of the ocean. We also aim to determine how subseafloor community composition is influenced by high productivity in the overlying water column. During Expedition 323 in the Bering Sea, 5741 m of sediment (97.4% recovery) was drilled at seven sites covering three different areas. The highlights of our findings include the following: (1) An understanding of the long-term evolution of surface water mass distribution during the past 5 m.y., including the southward expansion of seasonal sea ice to Bowers Ridge between 3.0 and 2.5 Ma and the intensification of seasonal sea ice at both Bowers Ridge and the Bering slope at ~1.0 Ma (the mid-Pleistocene Transition); (2) The characterization of intermediate-water and deepwater masses, including evidence from benthic foraminifers and sediment laminations, for episodes of low-oxygen conditions in the Bering Sea in the last 5 m.y.; (3) The terrigenous and biogenic sedimentary history of the Bering Sea, including evidence for strong climatological and sea level control of siliciclastic deposition at all sites. Records of lithostratigraphic variations indicate that Bering Sea environmental conditions were strongly linked to global climate change; this is apparent both in long-term, million year trends and in orbital, millennial, and shorter oscillations within the lithostratigraphic records generated at sea; and (4) A large range of inferred microbial activity with notable site-to-site variations, including significant activity as deep as 700 mbsf at the Bering slope sites, and, in contrast, low rates of microbially mediated sulfate reduction at Bowers Ridge.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.2204/iodp.proc.323.2011
ISBN
978-1-954252-16-5
ISSN
1930-1014