2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 10
Presentation Time: 3:45 PM

A SEVERAL-CENTURY RECORD OF LOW-OXYGEN CONDITIONS FROM TWO GRAVITY CORES FROM THE LOUISIANA CONTINENTAL SHELF


OSTERMAN, Lisa E.1, SWARZENSKI, Peter W.1, POORE, Richard Z.1, RICARDO, John P.1 and CAMPBELL, Pamela2, (1)U.S. Geol Survey, 600 Fourth St, South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701, (2)University of South Florida, St. Petersburg, FL 33701, osterman@usgs.gov

The relative abundance of three low-oxygen-tolerant benthic foraminifers (Pseudononion atlanticum, Epistominella vitrea, and Buliminella morgani) is used as a proxy for present hypoxic (dissolved oxygen concentrations <2 mg L-1 ) conditions on the Louisiana Shelf. An up-core increase in this proxy (the PEB index) in sediment cores from ~1950 to present coincides with the well-known increased occurrence of hypoxic bottom-water conditions on the Louisiana Shelf. This seasonal hypoxic condition on the Louisiana Shelf has been linked to increased nutrient influx from the Mississippi River drainage basin.

Using a sedimentation rate extrapolated from excess 210Pb activities, down-core changes in the PEB index in cores PE0305-GC1 (120 cm) and MRD05-04 (228 cm) suggest that periodic low-oxygen events pre-date the start of extensive commercial fertilizer use within the Mississippi Basin (~1910). Additionally, high concentrations of terrestrial (beta-sitosterol) biomarkers co-vary with the PEB index. Together these data support the hypothesis that the earlier low-oxygen conditions are likely associated with freshwater and nutrients delivered to the continental shelf by Mississippi River flood events. Multiple pre-1900 low-oxygen events are well developed in both cores suggesting that significant widespread fluctuations of bottom-water oxygen has occurred naturally on the Louisiana Shelf for the last few centuries. Our results thus indicate that the development of low-oxygen bottom water on the Louisiana Shelf is a complex natural process that has been enhanced by human activities.