Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene

Great quantities of fine-sized aragonite needles are produced in the shallow waters that cover the tops of the Bahama Banks and then exported to the bank margins where they accumulate with shells of pelagic organisms. To better understand these processes, we investigated Holocene-aged sediments in a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Slowey, N, Henderson, G
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2011
_version_ 1797077177864290304
author Slowey, N
Henderson, G
author_facet Slowey, N
Henderson, G
author_sort Slowey, N
collection OXFORD
description Great quantities of fine-sized aragonite needles are produced in the shallow waters that cover the tops of the Bahama Banks and then exported to the bank margins where they accumulate with shells of pelagic organisms. To better understand these processes, we investigated Holocene-aged sediments in a core from the southwestern margin of Little Bahama Bank. The aragonite content of the sediments, δ18O of planktonic foraminifera shells, and radiocarbon ages of aragonite-rich <63 μm sediments and coexisting planktonic foraminifera shells were determined. Sediment deposition was rapid overall, and a significant increase in deposition rate occurred 3,500-4,000 years ago, shortly after rising sea level flooded the bank top with seawater and caused a dramatic increase in the shallow water area where aragonite production occurred. During the latest Holocene when high deposition rates minimize effects of bioturbation, aragonite-rich <63 μm sediments are 400-600 years older than coexisting foraminifera. This difference indicates the net age of aragonite when it was exported from the bank top. It is consistent with expectations of the "hip-hop'n" model (Morse et al. in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 67: 2819-2826, 2003) whereby aragonite needles on the bank top, formed initially by biologic or other processes, continue to grow for hundreds of years via precipitation of epitaxial carbonate cement from seawater. Earlier in the Holocene, when sea level was lower and the top of Little Bahama Bank was subaerially exposed, the deposition rate and aragonite content of the sediments were less, and the aragonite-rich <63 μm sediments are about 1,000 years younger than coexisting foraminifera. This age difference can be explained by downward mixing of latest-Holocene <63 μm material into older early-Holocene sediments. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T00:14:09Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:7a3f52b1-10fe-460e-8669-86feef8cec82
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T00:14:09Z
publishDate 2011
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:7a3f52b1-10fe-460e-8669-86feef8cec822022-03-26T20:42:43ZRadiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the HoloceneJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7a3f52b1-10fe-460e-8669-86feef8cec82EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Slowey, NHenderson, GGreat quantities of fine-sized aragonite needles are produced in the shallow waters that cover the tops of the Bahama Banks and then exported to the bank margins where they accumulate with shells of pelagic organisms. To better understand these processes, we investigated Holocene-aged sediments in a core from the southwestern margin of Little Bahama Bank. The aragonite content of the sediments, δ18O of planktonic foraminifera shells, and radiocarbon ages of aragonite-rich <63 μm sediments and coexisting planktonic foraminifera shells were determined. Sediment deposition was rapid overall, and a significant increase in deposition rate occurred 3,500-4,000 years ago, shortly after rising sea level flooded the bank top with seawater and caused a dramatic increase in the shallow water area where aragonite production occurred. During the latest Holocene when high deposition rates minimize effects of bioturbation, aragonite-rich <63 μm sediments are 400-600 years older than coexisting foraminifera. This difference indicates the net age of aragonite when it was exported from the bank top. It is consistent with expectations of the "hip-hop'n" model (Morse et al. in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 67: 2819-2826, 2003) whereby aragonite needles on the bank top, formed initially by biologic or other processes, continue to grow for hundreds of years via precipitation of epitaxial carbonate cement from seawater. Earlier in the Holocene, when sea level was lower and the top of Little Bahama Bank was subaerially exposed, the deposition rate and aragonite content of the sediments were less, and the aragonite-rich <63 μm sediments are about 1,000 years younger than coexisting foraminifera. This age difference can be explained by downward mixing of latest-Holocene <63 μm material into older early-Holocene sediments. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
spellingShingle Slowey, N
Henderson, G
Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene
title Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene
title_full Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene
title_fullStr Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene
title_full_unstemmed Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene
title_short Radiocarbon Ages Constraints on the Origin and Shedding of Bank-Top Sediment in the Bahamas during the Holocene
title_sort radiocarbon ages constraints on the origin and shedding of bank top sediment in the bahamas during the holocene
work_keys_str_mv AT sloweyn radiocarbonagesconstraintsontheoriginandsheddingofbanktopsedimentinthebahamasduringtheholocene
AT hendersong radiocarbonagesconstraintsontheoriginandsheddingofbanktopsedimentinthebahamasduringtheholocene