Variability in the length of the sea ice season in the middle eocene arctic
Publication date
2012
Authors
Stickley, C.E.
Koç, N.
Pearce, R.B.
Kemp, A.E.S.
Jordan, R.W.
Sangiorgi, F.
St. John, K.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
Finely laminated Middle Eocene sediments from the central Arctic contain high abundances
of the delicate, sea ice–dwelling fossil diatoms Synedropsis spp. and sea ice–rafted
debris (sea ice–IRD), establishing an offshore seasonal sea ice regime ca. 47 Ma. Synedropsis
spp. co-occur with other diatom taxa and microfossils requiring open water. This strongly
indicates seasonality; nonetheless, seasonal reconstruction of the fl ux cycle cannot be
resolved by standard bulk-sediment analysis, which destroys sedimentary fabrics and averages
data within samples. Here we resolve and reconstruct seasonal-scale fl ux events from
these sediments using backscattered electron imagery (BSEI) of resin-embedded sediment,
a nondestructive technique that preserves the integrity of sedimentary microfabrics, thus
revealing discrete productivity-fl ux events at ultrahigh (e.g., <30 μm) resolution. Seasonality
is expressed at the submillimeter scale by successions of discrete mono-specifi c laminae and
micro-lenses of Synedropsis spp., terrigenous material (sea ice–IRD), and open-water taxa,
indicating that fi rst-year ice existed in the central Arctic. Further, BSEI reveals millimeterscale
alternation of bundles of laminae and microlenses of two distinct types: one characterized
by Synedropsis spp. and terrigenous material, the other by mainly open-water taxa and
little terrigenous material. The sedimentation rate and preliminary assessment of annual
cycles indicate suborbital variability on the order of multi-decadal to centennial duration;
we argue that this refl ects variations in the sea ice–season length.
Keywords
central Arctic, sedimentology