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A revised calendar age for the last reconnection of the Black Sea to the global ocean ArchiMer
Soulet, Guillaume; Menot, G.; Lericolais, Gilles; Bard, E..
During the last decade, a debate arose regarding the timing and pattern of the last reconnection of the Black Sea "Lake" with the global ocean. On a geochemical basis, the radiocarbon age of Black Sea "Lake" surface water, during the time of reconnection, was determined to be similar to 8400 C-14 a. BP. Despite the potential bias induced by the hard water effect in lakes, the reconnection age was calibrated without any reservoir age correction, which led to an estimate of similar to 9400 cal a. BR Since knowledge for the actual calendar age has important hydrologic implications that would provide new insights regarding the mechanism of reconnection, determining the actual calendar age for the last reconnection remains important. Based upon modeling...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Black sea; Reconnection; Reservoir age; Bosphorus sill.
Ano: 2011 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00038/14909/12351.pdf
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Black Sea "Lake" reservoir age evolution since the Last Glacial - Hydrologic and climatic implications ArchiMer
Soulet, Guillaume; Menot, Guillemette; Garreta, Vincent; Rostek, Frauke; Zaragosi, Sebastien; Lericolais, Gilles; Bard, Edouard.
Chronologies of sediments that document the last glacial history of the Black Sea "Lake" are hampered by issues relating to reservoir age. Regulated by basin hydrology, reservoir ages represent a tool that could potentially be used to better understand the response of Black Sea "Lake" hydrology to climate change. Therefore, deciphering reservoir age evolution is crucial both for better constraining the basin chronological framework and for providing new insights into our understanding of Black Sea "Lake" hydrology. By tuning a meaningful new high-resolution geochemical dataset (obtained from core MD04-2790) to a climate reference record, here, we propose a reliable chronology spanning the last 32 kyr BP. The chronology is compared to a large AMS...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Black Sea; Reservoir age; Radiocarbon; Last Glacial; Last Deglaciation; Paleoclimate.
Ano: 2011 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00043/15379/12817.pdf
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Timing of Svalbard/Barents Sea Ice Sheet Decay during the Last Glacial Termination ArchiMer
Snow, Tasha.
The Arctic and North Atlantic underwent significant climactic changes since the Last Glacial Maximum (25,000 years before present (1950 AD); ka BP), but offsets in the timing of events between the two regions are poorly constrained due to age model uncertainties that arise from changing radiocarbon reservoir ages. Here, we use a relatively high-resolution, multi-proxy stable isotope and sedimentologic dataset from Eastern Fram Strait (ODP Leg 162 Site 986) marine sediments to constrain the timing of Svalbard/Barents Sea Ice Sheet decay and infer deglacial reservoir ages over the last 30 ka. We use magnetic susceptibility, inorganic and organic carbon, foraminiferal assemblage counts, planktonic foraminiferal isotopes, and iceberg-rafted debris proxies to...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Paleoceanography; Meltwater; Isotopes; Foraminifera; Fram Strait; Reservoir age.
Ano: 2014 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00499/61045/64452.pdf
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