Aeolian particles in marine cores as a tool for quantitative high-resolution reconstruction of upwelling favorable winds along coastal Atacama Desert, Northern Chile
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Flores Aqueveque, Valentina
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Aeolian particles in marine cores as a tool for quantitative high-resolution reconstruction of upwelling favorable winds along coastal Atacama Desert, Northern Chile
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Abstract
Upwelling areas play a major role in ocean biogeochemical cycles and ultimately in global climate,
especially in higly productive regions as the South Eastern Pacific. This work is based on the analysis of
the aeolian lithic particles accumulated in laminated sediments off Mejillones (23 S) in the eastern
boundary Humboldt Current System. It proposes a high-resolution quantitative reconstruction of the
upwelling-favorable southerly wind strength in the past 250 years, comparing its variability with
changes in organic carbon export/preserved changes to the sea bottom. The increase of the intensity and
variability in fluxes of particles larger than 35 lm and 100 lm since the second half of the 19th century
and during the 20th century confirms a general strengthening of southerly winds in the region. Spectral
analysis on the complete time-series of yearly depositional fluxes indicates that sedimentary variability
can be explained by a combination of interannual (ENSO) to decadal (PDO) oscillations similar to the ones
yielded by the analysis of the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation index. However, when applied separately to
the lithic fluxes of the first and last centuries of the time-series, the method shows that relative to the one of
the interannual mode of variability, the influence of the decadal mode has increased in the recent period.
Based on the presence/absence of particles with sizes larger than 35/100 lm, each year of the time series
is classified as a ‘Low wind’ (<6 m/s), ‘Intermediate wind’ (6–8 m/s), or ‘Strong wind’ (10 to >12 m/s) year.
From the AD 1754–1820 period to the AD 1878–1998 one, the proportion of Low and Intermediate wind
years decreased from 12% and 74% to 3% and 68%, respectively, whereas the proportion of strong wind years
increased from 14% to 29%. For these periods the mean organic carbon also increased 22%, stating the
strong relation between export/preservation productivity rate and southerly wind intensity.
In the recent period (from AD 1950 on) for which the Oceanic Niño Index is available, the strong wind
years (AD 1982, 1983, 1994, and 1997) correspond to large values of this index, suggesting that constructive
interferences that result from the interplay between interannual and decadal oscillations modes might
explain in part the reinforcement of the winds along the North Chilean coast.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
project FONDECYT
11121543
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/133489
DOI: DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2015.02.003
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Progress in Oceanography 134 (2015) 244–255
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