EGU22-9431
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-9431
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Late Glacial paleoceanography in the outer Norske Trough, NE Greenland

Tuomas Junna, Christof Pearce, Katrine Hansen, Joanna Davies, Adrián Quirós, and Marit-Solveig Seidenkrantz
Tuomas Junna et al.
  • Aarhus university, Department of geoscience, Aarhus, Denmark (tuomas.junna@geo.au.dk)

The NE Greenland shelf, together with the Fram Strait, form the main sea ice and cold-water transport pathway between the Arctic Ocean and the Nordic seas. As such, these regions play a part in the Atlantic meridional overturning cell that is driven by the thermohaline convection taking place in subpolar and Polar regions. The ocean circulation, freshwater export and sea ice extent are heavily influenced by the interplay of oceanography, climate, glacial landforms and bathymetry.

Over the outer NE Greenland shelf, a layer of low salinity, cold Polar Water overlies a body of Atlantic Water (AW) that is either recirculated directly across the Fram Strait or further in the Arctic Ocean from where it returns as colder, modified Arctic-Atlantic Water. The relative contributions of these two types of AW recirculation bear significant implications to the deep-water formation and thus, the global ocean circulation, but little is known about the change in AW source over time and how it affects the local environmental settings.

This study aims to describe the paleoceanographic development of the outer Norske Trough using a multi-proxy approach to sediment gravity core DA17-NG-ST12-135G.  The core was taken on the NorthGreen17 Expedition from the outmost location in an east-west transect of cores along the trough. When combined with the other cores, it can be used to reconstruct the  oceanic forcing on the northeastern Greenland Ice Sheet  and its deglaciation history along the Norske Trough. The data used includes AMS 14C dating, sedimentary description, grain size analysis, µ-XRF core scanning and benthic foraminifera analysis. The preliminary results suggest intermittent early AW water influence and high seasonal productivity just east of the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream grounding line during the early deglaciation. AW influence on the outer NE Greenland Shelf is relatively constant after the deglaciation, but changes in productivity and current strengths are captured by the data.

How to cite: Junna, T., Pearce, C., Hansen, K., Davies, J., Quirós, A., and Seidenkrantz, M.-S.: Late Glacial paleoceanography in the outer Norske Trough, NE Greenland, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-9431, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-9431, 2022.