EGU23-15115
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-15115
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

U/Ca and U/Mn in foraminiferal coatings as a proxy for ocean oxygenation changes: new calibration and constraints on glacial oxygenation changes

Rong Hu
Rong Hu
  • Nanjing University

Deep-sea oxygen concentrations reflect combined effects of air-sea exchange in high-latitude surface waters, ventilation through ocean circulation and the organic carbon remineralization at depth. Reconstruction of past bottom water oxygen (BWO) concentrations has been challenging due to limitations of each existing BWO proxy whose fidelity may be complicated by diagenetic or depositional factors. Therefore, evaluations on BWO changes with multiple-proxy approach are always preferred. In this study, we exploit the authigenic uranium content on mixed planktonic foraminiferal coatings as a BWO proxy by presenting new foraminiferal U/Ca and U/Mn ratios of the Holocene and last glacial maximum (LGM) sediments from 54 sites throughout the Pacific Ocean, covering a range of modern BWO from 8-210 μmol/kg. As expected, foraminiferal U/Ca and U/Mn are influenced by sedimentation rates and organic carbon fluxes. Nevertheless, we also observe a negative correlation of Holocene U/Ca and U/Mn with BWO, with decreasing sensitivities towards higher BWO, suggesting the control of BWO on foraminiferal U/Ca and U/Mn variations. Based on the comparison of our foraminiferal U/Ca and U/Mn ratios between the Holocene and LGM and existing redox proxy data, we provide new constraints on Equatorial and South Pacific oxygenation changes during the LGM. First, the boundary between better oxygenated upper ocean and less oxygenated deeper ocean in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific was limited to a narrower water depth range between ~0.6 and 0.7 km. Second, our data imply better oxygenation in the upper and bottom waters of the Pacific Ocean and mid-depth deoxygenation, which contrasts with findings in the deep Atlantic and Indian Oceans. After excluding influences from other factors such as sedimentation rates and productivity, our study demonstrates foraminiferal U/Ca and U/Mn provide a useful proxy for BWO reconstruction in the Pacific, thus helping to constrain the glacial-interglacial oceanic carbon cycle.

How to cite: Hu, R.: U/Ca and U/Mn in foraminiferal coatings as a proxy for ocean oxygenation changes: new calibration and constraints on glacial oxygenation changes, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-15115, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-15115, 2023.