The Late Miocene‐Early Pliocene Biogenic Bloom: An Integrated Study in the Tasman Sea

Author:

Gastaldello M. E.12ORCID,Agnini C.1ORCID,Westerhold T.3ORCID,Drury A. J.4ORCID,Sutherland R.5ORCID,Drake M. K.6ORCID,Lam A. R.7ORCID,Dickens G. R.8ORCID,Dallanave E.9ORCID,Burns S.10ORCID,Alegret L.211ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Geoscienze Università degli Studi di Padova Padova Italy

2. Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra Universidad de Zaragoza Zaragoza Spain

3. MARUM‐Center for Marine Environmental Sciences University of Bremen Bremen Germany

4. Department of Earth Sciences University College London London UK

5. Victoria University of Wellington Wellington New Zealand

6. Ocean Sciences Department University of California Berkeley CA USA

7. Department of Geological Sciences and Environmental Studies Binghamton University Binghamton NY USA

8. Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland

9. Faculty of Geosciences University of Bremen Bremen Germany

10. Department of Geosciences University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst MA USA

11. Instituto de Investigación en Ciencias Ambientales de Aragón Universidad de Zaragoza Zaragoza Spain

Abstract

AbstractThe Late Miocene‐Early Pliocene Biogenic Bloom (∼9–3.5 Ma) was a paleoceanographic phenomenon defined by anomalously high accumulations of biological components at multiple open ocean sites, especially in certain regions of the Indian, and Pacific oceans. Its temporal and spatial extent with available information leaves fundamental questions about driving forces and responses unanswered. In this work, we focus on the middle part of the Biogenic Bloom (7.4–4.5 Ma) at International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1506 in the Tasman Sea, where we provide an integrated age model based on orbital tuning of the Natural Gamma Radiation, benthic foraminiferal oxygen isotopes, and calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy. Benthic foraminiferal assemblages suggest changes in deep water oxygen concentration and seafloor nutrient supply during generally high export productivity conditions. From 7.4 to 6.7 Ma, seafloor conditions were characterized by episodic nutrient supply, perhaps related to seasonal phytoplankton blooms. From 6.7 to 4.5 Ma, the regime shifted to a more stable interval characterized by eutrophic and dysoxic conditions. Combined with seismic data, a regional change in paleoceanography is inferred at around 6.7 Ma, from stronger and well‐oxygenated bottom currents to weaker, oxygen‐depleted bottom currents. Our results support the hypothesis that the Biogenic Bloom was a complex, multiphase phenomenon driven by changes in ocean currents, rather than a single uniform period of sustained sea surface water productivity. Highly resolved studies are thus fundamental to its understanding and the disentanglement of local, regional, and global imprints.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Paleontology,Atmospheric Science,Oceanography

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