Latest Miocene-Pleistocene productivity and deep-sea ventilation in the Northwestern Indian Ocean (Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 219)

Gupta, Anil K. ; Thomas, Ellen (1999) Latest Miocene-Pleistocene productivity and deep-sea ventilation in the Northwestern Indian Ocean (Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 219) Paleoceanography, 14 (1). pp. 62-73. ISSN 0883-8305

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Official URL: http://europa.agu.org/?uri=/journals/pa/1998PA9000...

Abstract

Knowledge of the biology of deep-sea benthic foraminifera was used to interpret the results of multivariate analyses (factor and cluster) on relative abundance data of benthic foraminifera at Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 219 (southeastern Arabian Sea; 1764 m depth) in combination with carbon and oxygen isotope data. Faunal data document major changes in deep-sea ventilation and productivity over the past 5.5 Ma, including the end of the Miocene-Pliocene Indo-Pacific "biogenic bloom" period at ~4.0 Ma. Interestingly, there is no simple correlation between high productivity and low oxygenation. Productivity fluctuated but became overall more pulsed, whereas overall oxygenation increased. We interpret the records as a combination of local to regional fluctuations in productivity probably caused by changes in monsoonal development, particularly its seasonality, and changes in oxygenation of intermediate depth waters in the Indian Ocean caused by global changes in climate and ocean circulation.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Geophysical Union.
ID Code:63282
Deposited On:28 Sep 2011 10:49
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