2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2005.07.030
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Pliocene glacial cyclicity in a deep-sea sediment drift (Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Margin)

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Cited by 49 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…Although microfossil assemblages found in the ODP Leg 178 drift sediments show no evidence of significantly warmer surface water temperatures than today (Hillenbrand and Fütterer, 2002), Hepp et al (2006) have suggested open ocean conditions in the warm Early Pliocene, even during glacials. In addition, diatom evidence from ODP site 1165 (in the Southern Ocean at 64.384°S) reported by Whitehead and Bohaty (2003) gives MATs at 4°C.…”
Section: Southern Ocean and Sea Icementioning
confidence: 83%
“…Although microfossil assemblages found in the ODP Leg 178 drift sediments show no evidence of significantly warmer surface water temperatures than today (Hillenbrand and Fütterer, 2002), Hepp et al (2006) have suggested open ocean conditions in the warm Early Pliocene, even during glacials. In addition, diatom evidence from ODP site 1165 (in the Southern Ocean at 64.384°S) reported by Whitehead and Bohaty (2003) gives MATs at 4°C.…”
Section: Southern Ocean and Sea Icementioning
confidence: 83%
“…The XRF core scanner allows nondestructive, nearly continuous, and relatively fast analysis of the elements from Aluminum (Al, atomic number 13) through to Uranium (U, atomic number 92) [Richter et al, 2006]. Detailed XRF core scans have already successfully been used for high-resolution time series, stratigraphic correlations, and detailed sedimentary and climatic reconstructions on various timescales [e.g., Haug et al, 2001;Lamy et al, 2001;Röhl et al, 2001;Kuhlmann et al, 2004;Bahr et al, 2005;Grützner et al, 2005;Hepp et al, 2006;Jaccard et al, 2005;Westerhold et al, 2005].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, results from SHALDRIL cores and other data from the eastern Antarctic Peninsula shelf indicate progressive cooling and associated decline in vegetation over the past 37 My, culminating in early Pliocene ice sheet expansion onto the continental shelf . Results from Leg 178 cores from the western Antarctic Peninsula margin are consistent with repeated ice sheet advances throughout the Pliocene (Eyles et al, 2001;Hillenbrand and Ehrmann, 2005;Hepp et al, 2006;Bart, 2001) but also indicate significant oceanic warming during Pliocene interglacials (Hillenbrand and Cortese, 2006;Escutia et al, 2009;Hepp et al, 2009;Bart and Iwai, 2012). The proposed drill cores from the ASE will decipher whether the WAIS responded directly to the orbitally paced climatic cycles of the Pliocene and Quaternary or it varied at periods determined by its internal dynamics, as findings from Leg 178 suggest for the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet (Barker et al, 2002).…”
Section: Hypothesis H2: Ice-proximal Records Of Ice Sheet Dynamics Inmentioning
confidence: 58%
“…To obtain complete sedimentary sequences, at least one site will core deep-sea drifts on the continental rise offshore from the ASE. Similar drift sediments drilled on the western Antarctic Peninsula continental rise during Leg 178 provided excellent archives of Neogene to Quaternary ice sheet dynamics and paleoenvironmental changes (e.g., Hillenbrand and Ehrmann, 2005;Hepp et al, 2006Hepp et al, , 2009Escutia et al, 2009;Bart and Iwai, 2012). A comparable potential has already been demonstrated for Pleistocene drift sediments recovered from the Amundsen Sea continental rise In model experiments, incursions of relatively warm CDW onto the West Antarctic continental shelf have been implicated in regulating WAIS behavior on orbital and suborbital timescales (Thoma et al, 2008;Pollard and DeConto, 2009).…”
Section: Hypothesis H2: Ice-proximal Records Of Ice Sheet Dynamics Inmentioning
confidence: 62%