Abstract Poor age control in Pleistocene sediments of the central Arctic Ocean generates considerable uncertainty in paleoceanographic reconstructions. This problem is rooted in the perplexing magnetic polarity patterns recorded in Arctic marine sediments and the paucity of microfossils capable of providing calibrated biostratigraphic biohorizons or continuous oxygen isotope stratigraphies. Here, we document the occurrence of two key species of calcareous nannofossils in a single marine sediment core from the central Arctic Ocean that provide robust, globally calibrated age constraints for sediments younger than 500 ka. The key species are the coccolithophores Pseudoemiliania lacunosa, which went extinct during marine isotope...
Turborotalita quinqueloba is a species of planktic foraminifera commonly found in the sub-polar Nort...
Cenozoic biostratigraphic, cosmogenic isotope, magnetostratigraphic, and cyclostratigraphic data der...
The role of the Arctic Ocean in Earth's climatic and oceanographic development is significant but ha...
Poor age control in Pleistocene sediments of the central Arctic Ocean generates considerable uncerta...
This paper presents new results from Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating on a sediment co...
The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Arctic Coring Expedition (ACEX) Hole 4C from the Lomon...
The Quaternary paleoenvironmental history of the Arctic Ocean remains uncertain, mainly due to the l...
Late Pleistocene and Holocene stratigraphic distributions of calcareous nannofossils have been inves...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112–140 million years ago, the Arctic r...
The Arctic Ocean is the smallest and perhaps least accessible of the worlds oceans. It occupies only...
The long-term rate of racemization for amino acids preserved in planktonic foraminifera was determin...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Despite its importance in the global climate system, age-calibrated marine geologic records reflecti...
Cenozoic biostratigraphic, cosmogenic isotope, magnetostratigraphic, and cyclostratigraphic data der...
Turborotalita quinqueloba is a species of planktic foraminifera commonly found in the sub-polar Nort...
Cenozoic biostratigraphic, cosmogenic isotope, magnetostratigraphic, and cyclostratigraphic data der...
The role of the Arctic Ocean in Earth's climatic and oceanographic development is significant but ha...
Poor age control in Pleistocene sediments of the central Arctic Ocean generates considerable uncerta...
This paper presents new results from Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating on a sediment co...
The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Arctic Coring Expedition (ACEX) Hole 4C from the Lomon...
The Quaternary paleoenvironmental history of the Arctic Ocean remains uncertain, mainly due to the l...
Late Pleistocene and Holocene stratigraphic distributions of calcareous nannofossils have been inves...
Since the Arctic Ocean began forming in the Early Cretaceous 112–140 million years ago, the Arctic r...
The Arctic Ocean is the smallest and perhaps least accessible of the worlds oceans. It occupies only...
The long-term rate of racemization for amino acids preserved in planktonic foraminifera was determin...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Despite its importance in the global climate system, age-calibrated marine geologic records reflecti...
Cenozoic biostratigraphic, cosmogenic isotope, magnetostratigraphic, and cyclostratigraphic data der...
Turborotalita quinqueloba is a species of planktic foraminifera commonly found in the sub-polar Nort...
Cenozoic biostratigraphic, cosmogenic isotope, magnetostratigraphic, and cyclostratigraphic data der...
The role of the Arctic Ocean in Earth's climatic and oceanographic development is significant but ha...