FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Environmental and coastline changes controlling Holocene carbon accumulation rates in fjords of the western Strait of Magellan region BT AF Ríos, Francisco Kilian, Rolf Lange, Carina B. Baeza-Urrea, Oscar Arz, Helge W. ZINDORF, Mark De Pol-Holz, Ricardo Lamy, Frank AS 1:1;2:1,2;3:3,4,5,6;4:1;5:7;6:8;7:9;8:10; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:;6:PDG-REM-EEP-LEP;7:;8:; C1 Universität Trier, Lehrstuhl für Geologie Fachbereich Geographie/Geowissenschaften (FB VI), Campus II, Behringstrasse 21, 54286, Trier, Deutschland Universidad de Magallanes, Avenida Bulnes, 01855, Punta Arenas, Chile Departamento de Oceanografía, Universidad de Concepción, Casilla 160-C, Concepción, Chile Centro de Investigación Oceanográfica COPAS Sur-Austral, Universidad de Concepción, Barrio Universitario, Concepción, Chile Centro de Investigación Dinámica de Ecosistemas Marinos de Altas Latitudes (IDEAL), Universidad Austral de Chile, Campus Isla Teja, Valdivia, Chile Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California, 92037, USA Leibniz-Institut für Ostseeforschung Warnemünde, Seestraße 15, 18119, Rostock-Warnemünde, Deutschland Ifremer - Centre de Brest, Laboratoire Environnement Profond, 29280, Plouzané, France Centro de Investigación GAIA-Antártica (CIGA) and Network for Extreme Environment Research (NEXER), Universidad de Magallanes, Avenida Bulnes, 01855, Punta Arenas, Chile Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar und Meeresforschung, 27570, Bremerhaven, Deutschland C2 UNIV TRIER, GERMANY UNIV MAGALLANES, CHILE UNIV CONCEPCION, CHILE UNIV CONCEPCION, CHILE UNIV AUSTRAL CHILE, CHILE UNIV CALIF SAN DIEGO, USA IOW, GERMANY IFREMER, FRANCE UNIV MAGALLANES, CHILE INST A WEGENER, GERMANY SI BREST SE PDG-REM-EEP-LEP IN WOS Ifremer UPR copubli-europe copubli-int-hors-europe IF 2.391 TC 6 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00614/72576/71536.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;Patagonian fjord sediments;Paleoproductivity;Carbon accumulation;Biogenic carbonate;Marine transgression;Holocene AB Organic-rich sediments of the southernmost Chilean Pacific coast and its fjord system constitute an important component of the global marine carbon budget. Sediment records from Trampa and Caribe bays and Churruca fjord in the western Magellan fjord system have been analyzed with the goal of understanding the factors controlling carbon accumulation and its regional fluctuation throughout the Holocene. The individual response in paleoproductivity at the different sites and related variations in accumulation rates document a very complex interplay among local and regional-scale environmental changes, and coastline elevation across the Holocene. Shallow sill basins close to the Pacific coast, as the ones studied here, are particularly sensitive to these processes, having responded with strong productivity changes throughout the Holocene. A Bayesian mixed model approach, using sediment archived provenance proxies, indicates that components of terrestrial plants and soils washed-out into these basins contribute with a variable proportion (20 to 80 wt%) of the total accumulated organic carbon. Accumulation rates of terrestrial carbon increase with the amount of precipitation in the hyper-humid mountain area, but also reflect distinct Holocene plant successions as well as long-term development of soil and vegetation cover that strongly overprint the direct precipitation impact. Over the Holocene accumulation rates of biogenic carbonate and aquatic-marine organic carbon range between 5 to 118 kg m-2 kyr-1 and 0.3 to 20 kg m-2 kyr-1, respectively. This variability depends on water column structure and conditions, which are regulated by the degree of marine transgression as a function of post glacial sea level rise and isostatic uplift as well as precipitation-related surface water freshening. In the Bahia Trampa record, a significant change in accumulation rates indicates a marine transgression at ca. 12.2 kyr BP, when the global sea level was 60–70 m lower than today and eustatic rise overcame isostatic rebound rates. In Caribe and Trampa records, CaCO3 accumulation rates were higher at ca. 7 kyr BP. The Churruca record shows organic carbon accumulation rates up to 36.2 kg m-2 kyr-1 during the early Holocene. PY 2020 PD AUG SO Continental Shelf Research SN 0278-4343 PU Elsevier BV VL 199 UT 000531077300002 DI 10.1016/j.csr.2020.104101 ID 72576 ER EF