Environmental and coastline changes controlling Holocene carbon accumulation rates in fjords of the western Strait of Magellan region

Ríos F.; Baeza-Urrea O.; Zindorf M.

Abstract

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.

Más información

Título según WOS: Environmental and coastline changes controlling Holocene carbon accumulation rates in fjords of the western Strait of Magellan region
Título según SCOPUS: Environmental and coastline changes controlling Holocene carbon accumulation rates in fjords of the western Strait of Magellan region
Título de la Revista: CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH
Volumen: 199
Editorial: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/J.CSR.2020.104101

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS