This paper includes the results of a detailed quantitative provenance investigation on gravel-size clasts occurring within the late Early to Late Miocene sedimentary glacimarine section recovered for the first time by the AND-2A core in the SW sector of the Ross Sea (southern McMurdo Sound, Antarctica). This period of time is of crucial interest, as it includes two of the major Cenozoic events in the global climatic evolution: the mid-Miocene climatic optimum and the middle Miocene climate transition. Petrographical and mineral chemistry data on basement clasts allow to individuate two different diagnostic clast assemblages, which clearly suggest two specific sectors of southern Victoria Land as the most likely sources: the Mulock-Skelton glacier and the Koettlitz-Blue glacier regions. Distribution patterns reveal high fluctuations of the detritus source areas throughout the investigated core interval, variations which can be interpreted as the direct result of an evolving McMurdo Sound paleogeography during the late Early to Late Miocene. Consistently with sedimentological studies, gravel-fraction clast distribution patterns clearly testify that the Antarctic ice sheet experienced a dramatic contraction at ca. 17.35 ± 0.14. Ma (likely correlated to the onset of the climatic optimum), and in a < ca. 100. ka time window passing from a glacial scenario comparable to the last glacial maximum (Phase 1) to a very dynamic glacial environment (Phase 2). Phase 2 conditions persisted through the early Middle Miocene (to ca. 14.2. Ma), when a major expansion of the Antarctic ice sheet is hypothesized, likely contemporaneously to the onset of the middle Miocene climate transition. Therefore, provenance and distribution studies of gravel-fraction clasts show that the variations of paleoenvironmental drivers characterising this period were able to exert deep transformation of the Antarctic ice sheet and reveal the methodology to be a powerful tool for the reconstruction of paleo-glacial-flow direction and paleogeographic scenarios. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.

Sandroni, S., Talarico, F.M. (2011). The record of Miocene climatic events in AND-2A drill core (Antarctica): Insights from provenance analyses of basement clasts. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 75(1-2), 31-46 [10.1016/j.gloplacha.2010.10.002].

The record of Miocene climatic events in AND-2A drill core (Antarctica): Insights from provenance analyses of basement clasts

SANDRONI, S.;TALARICO, F. M.
2011-01-01

Abstract

This paper includes the results of a detailed quantitative provenance investigation on gravel-size clasts occurring within the late Early to Late Miocene sedimentary glacimarine section recovered for the first time by the AND-2A core in the SW sector of the Ross Sea (southern McMurdo Sound, Antarctica). This period of time is of crucial interest, as it includes two of the major Cenozoic events in the global climatic evolution: the mid-Miocene climatic optimum and the middle Miocene climate transition. Petrographical and mineral chemistry data on basement clasts allow to individuate two different diagnostic clast assemblages, which clearly suggest two specific sectors of southern Victoria Land as the most likely sources: the Mulock-Skelton glacier and the Koettlitz-Blue glacier regions. Distribution patterns reveal high fluctuations of the detritus source areas throughout the investigated core interval, variations which can be interpreted as the direct result of an evolving McMurdo Sound paleogeography during the late Early to Late Miocene. Consistently with sedimentological studies, gravel-fraction clast distribution patterns clearly testify that the Antarctic ice sheet experienced a dramatic contraction at ca. 17.35 ± 0.14. Ma (likely correlated to the onset of the climatic optimum), and in a < ca. 100. ka time window passing from a glacial scenario comparable to the last glacial maximum (Phase 1) to a very dynamic glacial environment (Phase 2). Phase 2 conditions persisted through the early Middle Miocene (to ca. 14.2. Ma), when a major expansion of the Antarctic ice sheet is hypothesized, likely contemporaneously to the onset of the middle Miocene climate transition. Therefore, provenance and distribution studies of gravel-fraction clasts show that the variations of paleoenvironmental drivers characterising this period were able to exert deep transformation of the Antarctic ice sheet and reveal the methodology to be a powerful tool for the reconstruction of paleo-glacial-flow direction and paleogeographic scenarios. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.
2011
Sandroni, S., Talarico, F.M. (2011). The record of Miocene climatic events in AND-2A drill core (Antarctica): Insights from provenance analyses of basement clasts. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 75(1-2), 31-46 [10.1016/j.gloplacha.2010.10.002].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11365/8087
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