2001
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.650
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Holocene variations of sea‐surface conditions in the southeastern Barents Sea, reconstructed from dinoflagellate cyst assemblages

Abstract: Palynomorphs were analysed in two sediment cores from the southeastern Barents Sea representing the past 8.3 and 4.4 kyr. High dinocyst contents and species diversity enabled the application of the best analogue method to quantitatively reconstruct sea-surface salinities, temperatures and ice cover using 677 modern reference sites from the North Atlantic and Arctic seas, including new data from the Barents Sea reported here. At the southern core site, where waters are affected by the Atlantic inflow, sea-surfa… Show more

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Cited by 83 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Several studies record a cooling in the late Holocene in both the bottom (Ślubowska-Woldengen et al, 2007;Risebrobakken et al, 2010) and surface water masses (Voronina et al, 2001;Hald et al, 2007;Rasmussen et al, 2007;Risebrobakken et al, 2010), which could be related to declining summer insolation (Berger and Loutre, 1991) or displacements of Arctic and polar water masses (Hald et al, 2007). Opposite to this cooling, two high-resolution studies from Bear Island and the western and northern Svalbard shelf (Jernas et al, 2013) infer a warming over the last ∼ 200 yr induced by the renewed inflow of Atlantic water.…”
Section: E Groot Et Al: Reconstruction Of Atlantic Water Variabimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies record a cooling in the late Holocene in both the bottom (Ślubowska-Woldengen et al, 2007;Risebrobakken et al, 2010) and surface water masses (Voronina et al, 2001;Hald et al, 2007;Rasmussen et al, 2007;Risebrobakken et al, 2010), which could be related to declining summer insolation (Berger and Loutre, 1991) or displacements of Arctic and polar water masses (Hald et al, 2007). Opposite to this cooling, two high-resolution studies from Bear Island and the western and northern Svalbard shelf (Jernas et al, 2013) infer a warming over the last ∼ 200 yr induced by the renewed inflow of Atlantic water.…”
Section: E Groot Et Al: Reconstruction Of Atlantic Water Variabimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and Voronina, E. 2001. Dinoflagellate cyst assemblages as tracers of sea-surface conditions in the northern North Atlantic, Arctic and sub-Arctic seas: the new 'n = 677' data base and its application for quantitative palaeoceanographic reconstruction.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(1) The concentrations of dinoflagellate cysts in the sediments of the White Sea are 20 times as low as those calculated previously for the Barents Sea [46] and are compatible with the values obtained for other Arctic seas, for example, for the Laptev Sea [30]. Their quantitative distribution over the White Sea is controlled by the grain-size composition of the sediments, which is responsible for the preservation and conditions of existence of cysts, and by the salinity of the surface waters, which governs the number of planktonic species of dinoflagellates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Meanwhile, only one-fifth of them form cysts that can be conserved in the sediments [30,34]. In the recent years, the studies of the dinocysts of the Arctic seas have made great progress and allowed scientists to reveal the general regularities of their composition and distribution in the bottom sediments depending on the hydrological and ice conditions of the shelf [26,30,31,35,40,46]. Up to the present, for this group of microfossils with different degrees of detailing, the characteristics of the species and quantitative compositions of their assemblages in the sediments of almost all of the Arctic seas have been obtained except for in the East Siberian and White seas.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%