A 300 000-year record of cold-water coral mound build-up at the East Melilla Coral Province (SE Alboran Sea, western Mediterranean)
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Published:2022-08-24
Issue:8
Volume:18
Page:1915-1945
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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:
Fentimen Robin, Feenstra Eline, Rüggeberg AndresORCID, Hall Efraim, Rime ValentinORCID, Vennemann Torsten, Hajdas IrkaORCID, Rosso AntoniettaORCID, Van Rooij David, Adatte Thierry, Vogel HendrikORCID, Frank NorbertORCID, Foubert Anneleen
Abstract
Abstract. This study provides a detailed reconstruction of cold-water coral
mound build-up within the East Melilla Coral Province (southeastern Alboran
Sea), more precisely at the northern part of Brittlestar Ridge I, over the
last 300 kyr. The multiproxy investigation of core MD13-3462G reveals that
mound build-up took place during both interglacial and glacial periods at
average aggradation rates ranging between 1 and 10 cm kyr−1. These
observations imply that corals never thrived but rather developed under
stressful environmental conditions. Maximum aggradation rates of 18 cm kyr−1 are recorded during the last glacial period, hence providing the
first evidence of coral mound development during this time period in the
western Mediterranean. The planktonic (Globigerina bulloides) and benthic (Lobatula lobatula) δ18O
records from core MD13-3462G show typical interglacial–glacial variations
during the last two interglacial–glacial cycles. This is in contrast with
δ18O records generally recovered from coral mounds and
highlights that the northern part of Brittlestar Ridge I experienced reduced
albeit relatively continuous accretion. High abundances of infaunal benthic
foraminifera (Bulimina marginata, Bulimina striata, and Uvigerina mediterranea) suggest that weak seafloor oxygenation associated with
important terrestrial organic matter input characterized interglacial
periods, whilst the dominance of large epibenthic species (Discanomalina coronata and Lobatula lobatula) and
Miliolids is probably linked to stronger Levantine Intermediate Water
circulation and fresher organic matter input during glacial periods. In
addition, the computed tomography (CT) quantification of macrofaunal remains shows that the
bryozoan Buskea dichotoma is present throughout the entire 300 kyr of mound build-up
history, with the exception of MIS 5, and is possibly a key contributor to
mound development during glacial periods. The comparison of our observations
to other long-term coral mound records demonstrates that western and central
Mediterranean coral mounds do not show concurrent build-up over
interglacial–glacial cycles, implying that their development may be driven
by regional and local environmental forcing.
Funder
Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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