Foraminifer and ostracod occurrence in a cool-water carbonate factory of the cape adare (Ross sea, Antarctica): A key lecture for the climatic and oceanographic variations in the last 30,000
Foraminifers and ostracods were studied in a gravity-core recovered near Cape Adare
(Ross Sea, Antarctica) with the aim of identifying the climatic and oceanographic variations during
the last 30 ka. The sedimentary sequence represents conditions of a cool-water carbonate factory,
which evidences that during the Marine Isotope Stage 2 (MIS2) the area was ice-free and very
productive. The overall preservation of delicate skeletal remains such as bryozoans and molluscs
indicated moderate bottom currents. This carbonate factory was interrupted by some terrigenous
levels, representing conditions of instability/retreat of the ice shelves southward. The younger levels
were referred to the meltwater pulse (MWP)-1A and 1B events. The Holocene sequence comprised
more terrigenous sediments, reflecting high bottom-currents similar to the present-day conditions.
Very abundant and well preserved foraminifers and ostracods, representative of shelf-upper slope
paleoenvironments, were recovered. Epistominella exigua, among the foraminifers, suggested the
influence of the Circumpolar Deep Water during some periods of the late Quaternary. Heavy-test
taxa, such as Cibicides refulgens, indicated strengthening bottom hydrodynamics. As for the
ostracods, peaks in the presence of Australicythere devexa, Bairdoppilata simplex and Pseudocythere aff.
caudata together with significant values of Polycope spp. allowed us to identify environments rich in
nutrients with the influence of cold and deep water upwelling phenomena.