Article Dans Une Revue Nature Communications Année : 2025

Onset of strong Iceland-Scotland overflow water 3.6 million years ago

Boris-Theofanis Karatsolis
  • Fonction : Auteur
Paul N Pearson
Anne Briais
Sidney R Hemming
Leah J Levay
Tom Dunkley Jones
Ying Cui
Anita Di Chiara
Justin P Dodd
  • Fonction : Auteur
Deepa Dwyer
  • Fonction : Auteur
Deborah E Eason
Sarah A Friedman
Emma Hanson
Katharina Hochmuth
Halima E Ibrahim
Claire E Jasper
Saran Lee-Takeda
Danielle E Leblanc
Melody R Lindsay
David D Mcnamara
Sevasti E Modestou
Margaret A Morris
Bramley J Murton
  • Fonction : Auteur
Suzanne Oconnell
Gabriel Pasquet
Sheng-Ping Qian
  • Fonction : Auteur
Yair Rosenthal
Sara Satolli
Takuma Suzuki
  • Fonction : Auteur
Thena Thulasi
Bridget S Wade
Nicholas J White
  • Fonction : Auteur
Tao Wu
Alexandra Y Yang
Ross E Parnell-Turner

Résumé

North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW), the return flow component of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), is a major inter-hemispheric ocean water mass with strong climate effects but the evolution of its source components on million-year timescales is poorly known. Today, two major NADW components that flow southward over volcanic ridges to the east and west of Iceland are associated with distinct contourite drift systems that are forming off the coast of Greenland and on the eastern flank of the Reykjanes (mid-Atlantic) Ridge. Here we provide direct records of the early history of this drift sedimentation based on cores collected during International Ocean Discovery Programme (IODP) Expeditions 395C and 395. We find rapid acceleration of drift deposition linked to the eastern component of NADW, known as Iceland–Scotland Overflow Water at 3.6 million years ago (Ma). In contrast, the Denmark Strait Overflow Water feeding the western Eirik Drift has been persistent since the Late Miocene. These observations constrain the long-term evolution of the two NADW components, revealing their contrasting independent histories and allowing their links with climatic events such as Northern Hemisphere cooling at 3.6 Ma, to be assessed.

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Cite 10.5281/zenodo.15065343 Jeu de données Parnell-Turner, R., Briais, A., LeVay, L., Morris, M., Cui, Y., Di Chiara, A., Dodd, J. P., Dunkley Jones, T., Dwyer, D., Eason, D., Friedman, S., Hemming, S., Hochmuth, K., Ibrahim, H. E., Jasper, C., Karatsolis, B.-T., Lee, S., LeBlanc, D., Lindsay, M., … Sperling, C. (2025). IODP Expedition 395 Site U1602 X-ray fluorescence (XRF) (Version v1) [Data set]. International Ocean Discovery Program. https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.15065343

Dates et versions

hal-05135605 , version 1 (30-06-2025)

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Matthias Sinnesael, Boris-Theofanis Karatsolis, Paul N Pearson, Anne Briais, Sidney R Hemming, et al.. Onset of strong Iceland-Scotland overflow water 3.6 million years ago. Nature Communications, 2025, 16 (1), pp.4323. ⟨10.1038/s41467-025-59265-5⟩. ⟨hal-05135605⟩
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