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Article Dans Une Revue Marine Geology Année : 1996

The glacial ocean productivity hypothesis: The importance of regional temporal and spatial studies

Résumé

Higher ocean productivity has often been proposed to explain lower atmospheric carbon dioxide during the last glacial episodes. But recent consideration of marine cores from different areas show that higher local productivity can be postulated for interglacials as well as for glacial periods. Based on the detailed study of two piston cores from the northwest Africa upwelling system, the results presented here, including delta(18)O stratigraphy, organic carbon contents and fluxes, Ti/Al ratios and grain size measurements, clearly indicate that the two cases of sedimentary records can even co-exist within a single upwelling system. This regional heterogeneity is presumably attributed to combined wind stress and sea-level changes that would induce different sedimentary records in the northern and in the southern part of the system. These results emphasize the importance to understand and to model the response of the main kinds of highly productive oceanographic regional systems which are spatially heterogeneous due to complex continent-ocean interactions, or to the presence of mobile hydrodynamic heterogeneities. For such an understanding it is not necessary to acquire a huge amount of core data throughout the world ocean, but to increase the density of cores as well as the regional-scale modelling efforts in systems such as coastal and equatorial upwelling areas, and the migration areas of the southern polar front.

Dates et versions

hal-01460395 , version 1 (07-02-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

Pierre Bertrand, G. Shimmield, P. Martinez, F. Grousset, F. Jorissen, et al.. The glacial ocean productivity hypothesis: The importance of regional temporal and spatial studies. Marine Geology, 1996, 130 (1-2), pp.1-9. ⟨10.1016/0025-3227(95)00166-2⟩. ⟨hal-01460395⟩
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