Improved Pleistocene sediment stratigraphy and paleoenvironmental implications for the western Arctic Ocean off the East

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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Improved Pleistocene sediment stratigraphy and paleoenvironmental implications for the western Arctic Ocean off the East Siberian and Chukchi margins Michael Schreck1,2 · Seung‑Il Nam2 · L. Polyak3 · C. Vogt4 · G.‑S. Kong5 · R. Stein6 · J. Matthiessen6 · F. Niessen6 Received: 25 January 2018 / Accepted: 22 June 2018 © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2018

Abstract Sediment cores from the East Siberian and Chukchi margins and adjacent basins are used to refine the upper Pleistocene stratigraphy and better constrain the timing of major glacial advances in the western Arctic Ocean. Cores have been analysed using high-resolution non-destructive physical properties (density, magnetic susceptibility and colour) and X-ray fluorescence elemental measurements (manganese and calcium contents). All analysed cores reveal a spatially coherent stratigraphic pattern that enables robust correlations from the East Siberian margin to the Mendeleev and Northwind Ridges, thus highlighting the potential of such multiproxy approach for improving stratigraphic framework. The distribution of sedimentary units resulting from core correlation indicates decreasing sedimentation rates by more than one order of magnitude from the East Siberian margin east- and northwards, reflecting an increased distance from the main sediment sources, increasing seaice cover, and longer residence times in the Beaufort Gyre circulation. The stratigraphy presented, consistent with existing geophysical data, indicates the most recent major glacial advance from the East Siberian margin with ice grounding at water depth > 800 m during estimated Marine Isotope Stages 4/3, roughly contemporaneous with the Middle Weichselian glaciation in northern Eurasia. Earlier glacial events are potentially indicated by glaciogenic units in cores away from the margin, where they are not overprinted by a younger ice advance. Sediment thickness increase towards the Siberian margin also suggests the possibility of a limited MIS 2 glaciation, although no direct evidence for such an ice sheet has been found thus far. Keywords  Arctic Ocean · Non-destructive measurements · Stratigraphy · Middle and Late Weichselian glaciation

Introduction

Electronic supplementary material  The online version of this article (https​://doi.org/10.1007/s4106​3-018-0057-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Insufficiently constrained sediment stratigraphy continues to be a major impediment for comprehending climatic and oceanographic development of the Arctic Ocean. Its nearly land-locked, circumpolar position and a profound role of

* Michael Schreck [email protected]

4



Fachbereich Geowissenschaften, University Bremen, Klagenfurter Strasse 2‑4, 28359 Bremen, Germany

* Seung‑Il Nam [email protected]

5



Korea Institute for Geoscience and Mineral Resources, 124 Gwahak‑ro, Yuseong‑gu, Daejeon 305‑350, Republic of Korea

6



Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, Am Alten Hafen 2