Expedition 382 summary
2021
International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 382, Iceberg Alley and Subantarctic
Ice and Ocean Dynamics, investigated the long-term climate history of Antarctica,
seeking to understand how polar ice sheets responded to changes in insolation and
atmospheric CO2 in the past and how ice sheet evolution influenced global sea level
and vice versa. Five sites (U1534–U1538) were drilled east of the Drake Passage: two
sites at 53.2°S at the northern edge of the Scotia Sea and three sites at 57.4°–59.4°S
in the southern Scotia Sea. We recovered continuously deposited late Neogene sediments
to reconstruct the past history and variability in Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) mass
loss and associated changes in oceanic and atmospheric circulation. The sites from
the southern Scotia Sea (Sites U1536–U1538) will be used to study the Neogene flux
of icebergs through “Iceberg Alley,” the main pathway along which icebergs calved
from the margin of the AIS travel as they move equatorward into the warmer waters
of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). In particular, sediments from this area
will allow us to assess the magnitude of iceberg flux during key times of AIS evolution,
including the middle Miocene glacial intensification of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet,
the mid-Pliocene warm period, the late Pliocene glacial expansion of the West Antarctic
Ice Sheet, the mid-Pleistocene transition (MPT), and the “warm interglacials” and
glacial terminations of the last 800 ky. We will use the geochemical provenance of
iceberg-rafted detritus and other glacially eroded material to determine regional
sources of AIS mass loss. We will also address interhemispheric phasing of ice sheet
growth and decay, study the distribution and history of land-based versus marine-based
ice sheets around the continent over time, and explore the links between AIS variability
and global sea level. By comparing north–south variations across the Scotia Sea between
the Pirie Basin (Site U1538) and the Dove Basin (Sites U1536 and U1537), Expedition
382 will also deliver critical information on how climate changes in the Southern
Ocean affect ocean circulation through the Drake Passage, meridional overturning in
the region, water mass production, ocean–atmosphere CO2 transfer by wind-induced upwelling,
sea ice variability, bottom water outflow from the Weddell Sea, Antarctic weathering
inputs, and changes in oceanic and atmospheric fronts in the vicinity of the ACC.
Comparing changes in dust proxy records between the Scotia Sea and Antarctic ice cores
will also provide a detailed reconstruction of changes in the Southern Hemisphere
westerlies on millennial and orbital timescales for the last 800 ky. Extending the
ocean dust record beyond the last 800 ky will help to evaluate dust-climate couplings
since the Pliocene, the potential role of dust in iron fertilization and atmospheric
CO2 drawdown during glacials, and whether dust input to Antarctica played a role in
the MPT. The principal scientific objective of Subantarctic Front Sites U1534 and
U1535 at the northern limit of the Scotia Sea is to reconstruct and understand how
intermediate water formation in the southwest Atlantic responds to changes in connectivity
between the Atlantic and Pacific basins, the “cold water route.” The Subantarctic
Front contourite drift, deposited between 400 and 2000 m water depth on the northern
flank of an east–west trending trough off the Chilean continental shelf, is ideally
situated to monitor millennial- to orbital-scale variability in the export of Antarctic
Intermediate Water beneath the Subantarctic Front. During Expedition 382, we recovered
continuously deposited sediments from this drift spanning the late Pleistocene (from
~0.78 Ma to recent) and from the late Pliocene (~3.1–2.6 Ma). These sites are expected
to yield a wide array of paleoceanographic records that can be used to interpret past
changes in the density structure of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, track
migrations of the Subantarctic Front, and give insights into the role and evolution
of the cold water route over significant climate episodes, including the most recent
warm interglacials of the late Pleistocene and the intensification of Northern Hemisphere
glaciation.
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