Holocene sea-surface temperatures and related coastal upwelling regime recorded by vermetid assemblages, southeastern Brazil (Arraial do Cabo, RJ)
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Authors
Areias, Camila
Spotorno-Oliveira, Paula
Bassi, Davide
Iryu, Yasufumi
Nash, Merinda
de Alencar Castro, Joao Wagner
de Souza Tamega, Frederico Tapajos
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Elsevier
Abstract
In places where ocean currents cause upwelling, nearshore sea-surface temperatures (SST) are often cooler than
nearby offshore waters. In the Arraial do Cabo Bay coast upper Holocene aragonitic vermetids are represented by
monospecific clusters of overgrowing Petaloconchus varians occurring in supratidal/intertidal carbonate and
mixed siliciclastic-carbonate deposits. Based on stable isotope composition (δ13C, δ18O) of fossil vermetid shells,
radiocarbon ages and altimetric survey, the upper Holocene upwelling system of the Cabo Frio area (southeastern Brazil, Rio de Janeiro) is assessed. In the studied region, at 3700 cal. years BP the maximum relative sea
level (RSL) was +4.0 m with a SST of 20.7 °C. Subsequently, vermetid-based SST decreased from ~22.8 to
~17 °C (at ~3300 cal. years BP), with the coldest temperatures recording a strong upwelling event at around
2000 cal. years BP when the RSL was at +2 m. The intensification in upwelling water masses is identified by the
13C enrichment, along with higher δ18O, in the vermetid shells. The decreasing SST trend assessed from ~3300
to ~2000 cal. years BP can be related to more frequent South Atlantic Coastal Water intrusions on the surface
layer in the mid-shelf, increasing the nutrient concentration in the upper layer. From ~1900 to ~1300 cal. years
BP, a higher SST up to ~21 °C occurred during the continuous sea-level fall.
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Marine Geology
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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