IODP Expedition 306:
North Atlantic Climate 2
Site Summary: Site 1314
PDF file is available for download.
April 22, 2005
Hole U1314A Latitude: 56°21.883'N, Longitude: 27°53.309'W
Hole U1314B Latitude: 56°21.896'N, Longitude: 27°53.311'W
Hole U1314C Latitude: 56°21.896'N, Longitude: 27°53.287'W
Water depth: 2799.6 m
IODP Site U1314 (Scientific Prospectus
Site GAR1B) is located on the southern Gardar Drift in a water depth of 2800 m.
Close to the location of Site U1314, a 33 m Marion Dufresne core (MD99-2253) was collected on the crest of the
Gardar Drift in 1999. The MD99-2253 piston core has a high sedimentation rate
of ~9 cm/ky for the last glacial cycle and well-defined planktonic delta18O and geomagnetic
paleointensity records. During ODP Leg 162, Site 983 and Site 984 were drilled
off Iceland on the northern part of the Gardar and Bjorn Drifts, respectively.
These sites have mean Pleistocene sedimentation rates in the 10-15 cm/ky range
and have produced high resolution climatic and geomagnetic records. ODP Sites
983 and 984, however, are located outside the main IRD belt and do not contain
a robust detrital carbonate (Heinrich layer) signal. Furthermore, both sites
are at shallower water depths (<2000 m) than Site U1314 and therefore
monitor intermediate water but not NADW. Site U1314, on the other hand, is
located (1) close enough to the IRD belt to record the Heinrich-type detrital
layers that monitor ice sheet instability, and (2) in water depth of 2800 m
allowing a high-resolution monitoring of NADW and its short-term (sub-)
millennial variability.
Three holes (Holes U1314A, U1314B, and
U1314C) were cored with the Advanced Piston Coring (APC) system and nonmagnetic
core barrels to a maximum depth of 258.4 mbsf, 279.5 mbsf, and 207.7 mbsf,
respectively. The average recovery was 102.7%. "Drill over" technique was not
required for the three holes.
The sedimentary sequence at Site U1314
mainly consists of nannofossil- and clay-rich sediments with minor and varying
proportions of diatoms and foraminifers. Only one lithostratigraphic unit has
been defined at Site U1314, which spans the late Pliocene to Holocene time
interval. In particular, two sets of lithologies can be identified: (1)
predominantly nannofossil oozes enriched in biogenic (mainly diatoms and
foraminifers) and terrigenous (principally clay minerals, quartz, opaque
minerals, and calcite) components, and (2) terrigenous silty clay with a
varying proportion of calcareous and siliceous organisms. The sediment varies
in color mainly from very dark gray to light gray to hues of greenish gray.
Slight to moderate bioturbation is typical for most of the section. Horizontal
and parallel bedding planes and color contacts without erosional relief suggest
that there is not visible evidence of significant sediment disturbance by
natural processes. Sand- and gravel-sized sediment, common at Site U1314 from 0
to 240 mbsf, provides direct evidence of ice-rafting and documents the
influence of Pliocene-Pleistocene glaciations in this region. Based on the
occurrence of mafic igneous and felsic igneous dropstones as well as
sand-sized, hematite-stained quartz, Iceland and Greenland are probable source
areas of the IRD material.
Site U1314 yields abundant assemblages
of calcareous and siliceous microfossils spanning the late Pliocene to
Holocene. Sedimentation rates based on microfossil datums and paleomagnetics
indicate decreasing rates from approximately 11-11.5 cm/ky during the late
Pliocene to ~7.0-7.5 cm/ky during the Pleistocene. Polar and subpolar species
dominate the assemblages, with a subordinate amount of transitional species
present as well.
Calcareous nannofossils are abundant and
generally well-preserved throughout the section. Minor amounts of Cretaceous
and Paleogene reworked nannofossils occur in all holes. Samples with increased
amounts of reworked material typically contain coarser sediment and reduced
abundances of in-situ nannofossils. Late Pliocene discoasters are rare, but
present, and can be used biostratigraphically, even though they are considered
warm-water species. Generally well-preserved planktonic foraminifers are the
dominant component in the sand fraction of most core catcher (CC) samples, with
lower proportions of benthic foraminifers, ostracods, siliceous microfossils,
and IRD. The fauna consists of species typical for transitional to subpolar
provinces in the Pleistocene and Pliocene. N. pachyderma (sin) is dominant in several of the glacial
samples.
Radiolarians show a great variation in
species and abundances among the three holes. The state of preservation is
generally good in all holes. Cycladophora davisiana is found in most samples, and with a first common
occurrence in Samples U1314A-25H-CC and U1314B-24H-CC. This species has a first
common abundance in the North Atlantic at about 2.6 Ma. Cycladophora
sakaii is commonly found in Samples 25H-CC
in Holes U1314A and U1314B. In the North Pacific, C. sakaii evolves into C. davisiana at about 2.6 Ma. This is the first documented
occurrence of C. sakaii in the
North Atlantic. The last occurrence of Spongaster ?tetras, 2.6 Ma, is found in Samples U1314A-28H-CC and U1314B-27H-CC.
Abundant and diverse boreal to
sub-arctic diatom flora, with a minor input of warm-water species, are present
in all holes. The exception is the interval around U1314A-13H-CC to 15H-CC, where few or rare diatoms
coincide with high content of siliciclastic material. The preservation is
generally moderate to good, with a deteriorating trend downhole, as well as
poor preservation coinciding with lithics-rich intervals. The flora is
dominated by long pennate specimens, as well as resting spores of Chaetoceros and fragments of big Coscinodiscus species.
The magnetostratigraphy at Site U1314
was constructed on the basis of continuous measurements of the natural remanent
magnetization (NRM) after alternating field (AF) demagnetization at a peak
field of 20 mT. NRM intensities after 20 mT AF demagnetization are in the range
of 10-1 to 10-2 A/m. These values are considerably greater than at Sites U1312
and U1313, owing to a higher magnetic mineral content. Site U1314 provides a very good record
of the Brunhes, Matuyama, and the upper part of the Gauss. The Brunhes/Matuyama
reversal occurs at 57.3±0.1 mbsf in Hole U1314A, 56.6±0.1 mbsf in Hole U1314B,
and 57.7±0.1 mbsf in Hole U1314C. The deepest magnetic polarity interval recorded at Site U1314
corresponds to the top normal interval of the Gauss (subchron 2An.1n; 2.58
Ma). Several short geomagnetic
intervals are present in the paleomagnetic record, such as the Cobb Mountain
and the Reunion event. The magnetostratigraphy is consistent with the
biostratigraphy throughout the section.
Stratigraphic correlation was straightforward at Site U1314 because most
of the sediment physical properties show prominent short-wavelength amplitude
variations related to changes in lithology. For depth-shifting the cores, we
relied mainly on between-hole correlation of distinctive magnetic
susceptibility and natural gamma ray variations. These correlations were
confirmed to be consistent with geomagnetic polarity reversals recorded in the
paleomagnetic inclination. The resulting mcd scale is well resolved, and the
spliced section is complete down to 281 mcd. Because of core disturbance in the
upper part of Hole U1314A, the splice in the interval 0-188.30 mcd was built
from Holes U1314B and U1314C, with the exception of a short interval
(65.80-69.50 mcd) where an undisturbed section of Core U1314A-8H was
incorporated into the composite section. From 188.30 to 300 mcd the splice was
constructed from Holes U1314A and U1314B, because Hole U1314C was drilled only
to 222 mcd. The two deepest cores U1314B-29H and 30H, which span an interval
not cored in Holes U1314A or U1314C, were appended to the splice. A growth
factor of 1.08 is calculated by linear regression for the three holes at Site
U1314, indicating an 8% increase in mcd relative to mbsf.
The ionic composition of the pore waters
at Site U1314 was measured between Cores U1314A-1H and 12H. Pore water
alkalinity increases downhole from 5.34 to 7.46 mM. Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations decrease downhole from 8.4 to 5.2 mM
and 48.7 to 37.4 mM, respectively. Fe2+ concentrations are variable
with the lowest value (6.5 µM) measured at 36.4 mbsf, which coincides with more
abundant darker lithologies. Ba2+concentration is higher at Site
U1314 than at the other IRD sites, ranging from 17 to 18.3 µM. Mn2+
concentration ranges from 46.8 to 15.9 µM and shows a rapid decrease downhole
between 17.4 and 36 mbsf. H4SiO4 concentration increases
with depth from 487.6 to 571.9 µM.
Calcium carbonate concentrations in the
sediments of Hole U1314A range from 3.7 to 70.5 wt%. The average carbonate
value linearly shifts from 20 wt% at 250 mbsf towards 40 wt% near the top. CaCO3
values show a good correlation to Lightness (L*) data throughout the section.
Total organic carbon (TOC) varies between <0.1 and 0.5 wt% with an average
of 0.2 wt%. The downhole TOC variation is similar to the variability in
magnetic susceptibility, suggesting that organic carbon at Site U1314 is
primarily of terrigenous origin. Based on initial results from eight samples,
solvent extractable organic matter at Site U1314 consists mainly of long-chain,
odd-numbered C25-C35 n-alkanes and long-chain C37-C40 alkenones. Except
for one sample from the upper Pliocene, all Pleistocene samples show a distinct
prevalence of n-alkanes relative
to alkenones, confirming the assumption of a mainly terrigenous origin of the
organic matter at Site U1314. Alkenone derived sea-surface temperatures vary
between ~10 and 13°C.
Physical property measurements at Site
U1314 included non-destructive measurements of magnetic susceptibility,
density, p-wave velocity, and natural gamma radiation. Working sections were
used to measure moisture and density (MAD) and compressional P-wave velocity.
These properties are positively correlated consistent with the terrigenous
nature of the sediment. The magnetic susceptibility records, for example, show
a highly variable record attributed to lithologic and/or mineralogic changes;
multiple excursions towards high values are generally associated with IRD
layers.
At Site U1314, a complete upper Pliocene
to Holocene sequence, characterized by high sedimentation rates of 7 to >11
cm/ky has been recovered. Due to its location close to the IRD belt and within
the North Atlantic Deep Water, as well as its high potential for paleomagnetic
and isotopic age control, this section will be used to establish a
high-resolution (millennial to submillennial) environmental record of
sea-surface and bottom-water characteristics and a detrital (Heinrich-type)
stratigraphy for the past ~2.7 Ma.
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