CONTINUOUS LATE PLEISTOCENE PALEOCLIMATE RECORD FROM THE SW AFRICAN MARGIN
Our proxy record for continental weathering (% terrigenous, clay mineralogy and bulk elemental geochemistry) is anticipated to vary downcore with southern hemisphere solar insolation. It also provides a means of corroborating the 1085 color reflectance data (highest reflectance indicates highest carbonate values). The sediments are generally comprised of carbonate (benthic and planktonic foraminifera, and calcareous nannofossils) so deviations from high color reflectance indicates a greater percentage of terrigenous or organic carbon. We use a lower color reflectance as a proxy for productivity or increased terrigenous input. Our weight percent sand data increases when color reflectance is high and expect changes in the coarse fraction weight percent to covary with insolation. In the absence of an isotope chronology, which is under construction, the proxy records are compared with SPECMAP (Imbrie et al, 1984) oxygen isotope record in order to determine possible periodicity and the relationship to Northern Hemisphere glaciation and we anticipate productivity will vary with glaciation. Comparison of our data with the Pretoria Saltpan record from NE South Africa (Partridge et al., 1997) will provide further insight into continental climate dynamics.