Warnock, Jonathan Andren, Elinor Juggins, Stephen Lewis, Jonathan Ryves, David Andren, Thomas Weckstrom, Kaarina A high-resolution diatom-based Middle and Late Holocene environmental history of the Little Belt region, Baltic Sea <div> <p>The large-scale shifts in the salinity of the Baltic Sea over the Holocene are well understood and have been comprehensively documented using sedimentary proxy records. More recent work has focused on understanding how past salinity fluctuations have affected other ecological parameters (e.g. primary productivity, nutrient content) of the Baltic basin, and salinity changes over key events and over short timescales are still not well understood. The International Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 347 cored the Baltic basin in order to collect basin-wide environmental records through a glacial-interglacial cycle. Site M0059 is located in the Little Belt between the Baltic Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. A composite splice section from Site M0059 was analysed at a decadal resolution to study changes in salinity, nutrient conditions and other surface water column parameters based on changes in diatom assemblages and on quantitative diatom-based salinity inferences. A mesotrophic slightly brackish assemblage is seen in the lowermost analysed depths, corresponding to 7, 00 - 7 00 cal. a BP. An increase in salinity and nutrient content of the water column leads into a meso-eutrophic brackish phase. The observed salinity increase is rapid, lasting from 7 f OO to 7 150 cal. a BP. Subsequently, the Little Belt becomes oligotrophic and is dominated by tychopelagic diatoms from c 7f-100 to ·9\ 3/ 00 cal. a BP. This interval contains some of the highest salinities observed followed by diatom assemblages similar to that of the Northern Atlantic Ocean, composed primarily of cosmopolitan open ocean marine diatoms. A return to tychopelagic productivity is seen from 3,_850 to 980 cal. a BP. Anthropogenic eutrophication is detected in the last 300 years of the record which intensifies in the uppermost sediments. These results represent the first decadally-resolved record in the region and provide new insight into the transition to a brackish basin and subsequent ecological development. The large-scale shifts in the salinity of the Baltic Sea over the Holocene are well understood and have been comprehensively documented using sedimentary proxy records. More recent work has focused on understanding how past salinity fluctuations have affected other ecological parameters (e.g. primary productivity, nutrient content) of the Baltic basin, and salinity changes over key events and over short timescales are still not well understood. The International Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 347 cored the Baltic basin in order to collect basin-wide environmental records through a glacial-interglacial cycle. Site M0059 is located in the Little Belt between the Baltic Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. A composite splice section from Site M0059 was analysed at a decadal resolution to study changes in salinity, nutrient conditions and other surface water column parameters based on changes in diatom assemblages and on quantitative diatom-based salinity inferences. A mesotrophic slightly brackish assemblage is seen in the lowermost analysed depths, corresponding to 7, 00 - 7 00 content of the water column leads into a meso-eutrophic brackish phase. The observed salinity increase is rapid, lasting from 7 f OO to 7 150 cal. a BP. Subsequently, the Little Belt becomes oligotrophic and is dominated by tychopelagic diatoms from c 7f-100 to ·9\ 3/ 0 cal. a BP. This interval contains some of the highest salinities observed followed by diatom assemblages similar to that of the Northern Atlantic Ocean, composed primarily of cosmopolitan open ocean marine diatoms. A return to tychopelagic productivity is seen from 3,_850 to 980 cal. a BP. Anthropogenic eutrophication is detected in the last 300 years of the record which intensifies in the uppermost sediments. These results represent the first decadally-resolved record in the region and provide new insight into the transition to a brackish basin and subsequent ecological development</p></div> Paleontology;Geochemistry;Geology;Geophysics 2019-10-25
    https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/A_high-resolution_diatom-based_Middle_and_Late_Holocene_environmental_history_of_the_Little_Belt_region_Baltic_Sea/10031828