Glacio-isostatic control on hypoxia in a high-latitude shelf basin

Tom Jilbert*, Daniel J. Conley, Bo G. Gustafsson, Carolina P. Funkey, Caroline P. Slomp

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In high-latitude continental shelf environments, late Pleistocene glacial overdeepening and early Holocene eustatic sea-level rise combined to create restricted marine basins with a high vulnerability to oxygen depletion. Here we show that ongoing glacio-isostatic rebound during the Holocene may have played an important role in determining the distribution of past hypoxia in these environments by controlling the physical exchange of water masses and the distribution of large-scale phosphorus (P) sinks. We focus on the Baltic Sea, where sediment records from a large, presently oxic sub-basin show evidence for intense hypoxia and cyanobacteria blooms during the Holocene Thermal Maximum. Using paleobathymetric modeling, we show that this period was characterized by enhanced deep-water exchange, allowing widespread phosphorus regeneration. Intra-basin sills then shoaled over a period of several thousand years, enhancing P burial in one of the sub-basins. Together with climate forcing, this may have caused the termination of hypoxia throughout the Baltic Sea. Similar rearrangements of physical and chemical processes likely occurred in response to glacio-isostatic rebound in other high-latitude shelf basins during the Holocene.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)427-430
Number of pages4
JournalGeology
Volume43
Issue number5
Early online date19 Mar 2015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2015

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