Surface and subsurface Labrador Shelf water mass conditions during the last 6000 years
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Published:2020-07-03
Issue:4
Volume:16
Page:1127-1143
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Lochte Annalena A.ORCID, Schneider Ralph, Kienast MarkusORCID, Repschläger JanneORCID, Blanz Thomas, Garbe-Schönberg DieterORCID, Andersen NilsORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The Labrador Sea is important for the modern global
thermohaline circulation system through the formation of intermediate
Labrador Sea Water (LSW) that has been hypothesized to stabilize the modern
mode of North Atlantic deep-water circulation. The rate of LSW formation is
controlled by the amount of winter heat loss to the atmosphere, the expanse
of freshwater in the convection region and the inflow of saline waters from
the Atlantic. The Labrador Sea, today, receives freshwater through the East
and West Greenland currents (EGC, WGC) and the Labrador Current (LC).
Several studies have suggested the WGC to be the main supplier of freshwater
to the Labrador Sea, but the role of the southward flowing LC in Labrador
Sea convection is still debated. At the same time, many paleoceanographic
reconstructions from the Labrador Shelf focussed on late deglacial to early
Holocene meltwater run-off from the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS), whereas
little information exists about LC variability since the final melting of
the LIS about 7000 years ago. In order to enable better assessment of the
role of the LC in deep-water formation and its importance for Holocene
climate variability in Atlantic Canada, this study presents high-resolution
middle to late Holocene records of sea surface and bottom water
temperatures, freshening, and sea ice cover on the Labrador Shelf during the
last 6000 years. Our records reveal that the LC underwent three major
oceanographic phases from the mid- to late Holocene. From 6.2 to 5.6 ka,
the LC experienced a cold episode that was followed by warmer conditions
between 5.6 and 2.1 ka, possibly associated with the late Holocene
thermal maximum. While surface waters on the Labrador Shelf cooled
gradually after 3 ka in response to the neoglaciation, Labrador Shelf
subsurface or bottom waters show a shift to warmer temperatures after 2.1 ka. Although such an inverse stratification by cooling of surface and
warming of subsurface waters on the Labrador Shelf would suggest a
diminished convection during the last 2 millennia compared to the
mid-Holocene, it remains difficult to assess whether hydrographic conditions
in the LC have had a significant impact on Labrador Sea deep-water
formation.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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