Advances in Earth Science ›› 2018, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (11): 1203-1214. doi: 10.11867/j.issn.1001-8166.2018.11.1203.

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Correlations Between Biogenic Components and Dust Input and Their Change Mechanism on Hess Rise, Central North Pacific, During the Late Quaternary *

Defang You( ), Rujian Wang *( ), Wenshen Xiao   

  1. State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China
  • Received:2018-09-07 Revised:2018-10-15 Online:2018-11-20 Published:2018-12-21
  • Contact: Rujian Wang E-mail:dfyou@tongji.edu.cn;rjwang@tongji.edu.cn
  • About author:

    First author: You Defang(1992-), male, Qingdao City, Shandong Province, Master student. Research areas include polar paleoceanography and micropaleontology. E-mail: dfyou@tongji.edu.cn

  • Supported by:
    Foundation item: Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China "Reconstruction of the glacial-interglacial evolution history of ice raft transport and surface currents during the late quaternary" (No.41776187);The Arctic and Antarctic Special Fund "2017 Arctic Ocean marine geological survey" (No.CHINARE2017-03-02).

Defang You, Rujian Wang, Wenshen Xiao. Correlations Between Biogenic Components and Dust Input and Their Change Mechanism on Hess Rise, Central North Pacific, During the Late Quaternary *[J]. Advances in Earth Science, 2018, 33(11): 1203-1214.

The study of marine export production is helpful to trace the changes of oceanic and global carbon reservoirs. Dust input is an important factor inspiring marine export production. Measurements of carbonate, Opal, TOC and Corg/N were performed on Core SO202-37-2, which was retrieved from Hess Rise, central North Pacific during the German SO202-INOPEX Expedition, for reconstructing variations of the local export production and dust input. The core age model is constructed via morphologically correlating its foraminifer oxygen isotope record with those of Core H3571 and the LR04 stack. XRF-Ti/Ca can be used as a proxy for dust input and its distribution pattern is consistent with that of Opal content, possibly indicating that dust input may have affected the local export production, i.e. the local export production increased (decreased) with enhancing (declining) dust input during interglacial (glacial) periods. Fluctuations in dust input might be due to southward/northward migration of the Westerly Jet over the dust source regions during interglacial and glacial periods. Although global dust output increased during glacial periods, meridional migration of the Westerly Jet in this area made the distribution pattern of the dust deposition in the study area different from that of other areas.

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