Aridification of northwest Australia and nutrient decline in the Timor
Sea during the 40 kyr world
Abstract
Studying tropical hydroclimate and productivity change in the past is
critical for understanding global climate dynamics. Northwest Australia
is an ideal location for investigating Australian monsoon dynamics, the
variability of the Indonesian Throughflow (ITF), and their impact on
past productivity and warm pool evolution, which remain poorly
understood during the 40 kyr world in the mid-early Pleistocene. In this
study, we present multi-proxy records from International Ocean Discovery
Program (IODP) Site U1483 in the Timor Sea spanning the last 2000 ka,
including orbitally-resolved records from the 40 kyr world between 2000
and 1300 ka. Our results suggest that northwest Australia underwent a
step of increased aridification and that productivity in the Timor Sea
declined during the transition from ~ 1700 to
~ 1400 ka. We attribute this aridification to the
reduced moisture supply to this region caused by the ITF restriction and
warm pool contraction. We ascribe the declined productivity to a
decrease in the nutrient supply of the Pacific source water associated
with global nutrient redistribution. At orbital timescale, multiple
mechanisms, including sea level changes, monsoon, and the Intertropical
Convergence Zone (ITCZ) dynamics, and variations in the ITF and Walker
circulation could control variations of productivity and terrigenous
input in the Timor Sea during the 40 kyr world. Our bulk nitrogen and
benthic carbon isotope records suggest a strong coupling to
biogeochemical changes in the Pacific during this period. This research
contributes to a better understanding of tropical hydroclimate and
productivity changes during the 40 kyr world.