Quaternary sediment in the Labrador Sea was derived from many proglacial sources in Greenland and eastern Canada. Understanding the spatial and temporal changes in sediment provenance provides information on ice extent and sediment dispersal patterns. Variations in mineral composition of sediment from late Quaternary cores has been determined by a whole pattern of quantitative X-ray diffraction procedure. Mineral facies were extracted statistically by a supervised analysis of 90 samples from bedrock and ice-rafted clasts, which were then used to predict the most probable mineral facies in 1443 marine sediment samples. We used a non-parametric Classification Decision Tree (CDT) to validate that decision. Only 26% of the samples were misclassified in the CDT. The six facies identified consisted of four facies reflecting differences in the composition of Canadian and Greenland Precambrian igneous and metamorphic bedrock, a set of samples dominated by high weight percentages of calcite and dolomite (detrital carbonate (DC) and Hudson Strait Heinrich (HS-H) events), and a “shale” facies. We isolated 284 sediments from the HS-H DC facies and determined that they could be divided into four categories based on differences in their mineral proportions. These categories vary geographically, based on non-carbonate sediment supply during these events from Greenland, the Canadian Shield, the Appalachians, and the outer continental shelf. In the Holocene of the Labrador Sea, dolomite is derived from Baffin Bay and abundance of calcite is influenced by both biogenic productivity and dissolution.
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Research Article|
September 15, 2022
Late Quaternary changes in sediment sources in the Labrador Sea
John T. Andrews;
(Conceptualization, Data curation, Investigation, Methodology, Software, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing)
a
Department of Geological Sciences and INSTAAR, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80303, USACorresponding author: John T. Andrews (email: [email protected])
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David J.W. Piper
David J.W. Piper
(Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Resources, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing)
b
Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada—Atlantic, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, NS B2Y 4A2, Canada
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John T. Andrews
Conceptualization, Data curation, Investigation, Methodology, Software, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing
a
Department of Geological Sciences and INSTAAR, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80303, USA
David J.W. Piper
Formal analysis, Funding acquisition, Resources, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing
b
Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada—Atlantic, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, NS B2Y 4A2, CanadaCorresponding author: John T. Andrews (email: [email protected])
Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
Received:
04 Mar 2022
Accepted:
02 Sep 2022
Accepted Manuscript:
15 Sep 2022
First Online:
09 Mar 2023
Online ISSN: 1480-3313
Print ISSN: 0008-4077
The Author(s)
Permission for reuse (free in most cases) can be obtained from copyright.com.
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2023) 60 (2): 189–213.
Article history
Received:
04 Mar 2022
Accepted:
02 Sep 2022
Accepted Manuscript:
15 Sep 2022
First Online:
09 Mar 2023
Citation
John T. Andrews, David J.W. Piper; Late Quaternary changes in sediment sources in the Labrador Sea. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 2022;; 60 (2): 189–213. doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2022-0026
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- Arctic region
- Atlantic Ocean
- bedrock
- Canada
- Cenozoic
- cores
- Eastern Canada
- glaciation
- Greenland
- Greenland ice sheet
- Holocene
- Labrador
- Labrador Sea
- Laurentide ice sheet
- lithofacies
- marine environment
- marine sediments
- mineral composition
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- North Atlantic
- paleoenvironment
- Pleistocene
- provenance
- Quaternary
- sediment transport
- sediments
- spectra
- statistical analysis
- transport
- upper Pleistocene
- X-ray diffraction data
- X-ray fluorescence spectra
Latitude & Longitude
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