Biostratigraphy of Late Holocene bottom sediments from the Northern part of Chukchi Sea

Authors

  • Vologina E.G. 1
  • Kulagina N.V. 1
  • Chernyaeva G.P. 1
  • Sturm M. 2
  • Kolesnik A.N. 3
  • 1 Institute of the Earth’s Crust, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Science, 128 Lermontov street Irkutsk, 664033, Russia
    2 Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 133 Überlandstrasse, Dübendorf, 8600, Switzerland
    3 Il’ichev Pacific Oceanological Institute, Far East Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, 43 Baltiyskaya street, Vladivostok 690041, Russia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31951/2658-3518-2024-A-2-48

Keywords:

Chukchi Sea, bottom sediments, Little Ice Age, recent sedimentation, pollen, diatoms

Abstract

The research goal is the investigation of environmental processes of recent sedimentation in the Arctic Ocean area. A short core (length – 37 cm) was taken from the Northern part of the Chukchi Sea. Analytical methods included macroscopic sedimentological description by smear-slides, dating by γ-measurements of 137Cs and 210Pb, diatom and palynological analyses. Sedimentation rates at the research site have been determined to be 1 mm y-1. Thus, the age of the cored sediments spans approximately 400 years, which includes the period of the Little Ice Age. Abundant cold-water diatom species and spores of terrestrial plants within the lower part of the sediment core are characteristic for cold climate conditions, which dominated the Little Ice Age. The occurrence of Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Neogene species of spores and pollen in the Holocene deposits are the evidence of coastal abrasion and the subsequent transfer of the material to the coring site by currents. Southern, subtropical, and tropical species of diatoms within the upper, more recent part of the core reveal the transfer of material by currents from the Pacific Ocean to the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait. The results of biostratigraphic analyses indicate environmental changes during the last 400 years, revealed in bottom sediments of the Northern part of the Chukchi Sea.

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Published

2024-04-27

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Articles