Trace elements and cathodoluminescence of detrital quartz in Arctic marine sediments - a new ice-rafted debris provenance proxy
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/5985Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
The records of ice-rafted debris (IRD) provenance
in the North Atlantic–Barents Sea allow the reconstruction
of the spatial and temporal changes of ice-flow drainage patterns
during glacial and deglacial periods. In this study a new
approach to characterization of the provenance of detrital
quartz grains in the fraction > 500 μm of marine sediments
offshore of Spitsbergen is introduced, utilizing scanning
electron microscope backscattered electron and cathodoluminescence
(CL) imaging, combined with laser ablation inductively
coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Based on their
micro-inclusions, CL and trace element characteristics, the
investigated IRD grains can be classified into five distinct
populations. Three of the populations are indicative of potential
IRD provenance provinces in the Storfjord area including
Barentsøya and Edgeøya. The results imply that under modern
(interglacial) conditions IRD deposition along the western
Spitsbergen margin is mainly governed by the East Spitsbergen
Current controlling the ice-drift pattern. The presence
of detrital quartz from local provinces, however, indicates
that variations in IRD supply from western Spitsbergen may
be quantified as well. In this pilot study it is demonstrated
that this new approach applied on Arctic continental margin
sediments bears a considerable potential for the definition of
the sources of IRD and thus of spatial/temporal changes in
ice-flow drainage patterns during glacial/interglacial cycles.
Publisher
CopernicusCitation
Climate of the Past 9(2013) nr. 6 s. 2615-2630Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
The following license file are associated with this item: