Journal article

The Pliocene to recent history of the Kuroshio and Tsushima Currents: a multi-proxy approach

SJ Gallagher, A Kitamura, Y Iryu, T Itaki, I Koizumi, PW Hoiles

Progress in Earth and Planetary Science | Published : 2015

Abstract

The Kuroshio Current is a major western boundary current controlled by the North Pacific Gyre. It brings warm subtropical waters from the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool to Japan exerting a major control on Asian climate. The Tsushima Current is a Kuroshio offshoot transporting warm water into the Japan Sea. Various proxies are used to determine the paleohistory of these currents. Sedimentological proxies such as reefs, bedforms, sediment source and sorting reveal paleocurrent strength and latitude. Proxies such as coral and mollusc assemblages reveal past shelfal current activity. Microfossil assemblages and organic/inorganic geochemical analyses determine paleo- sea surface temperature and salinity..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Ryuji Tada for inviting this submission. The detailed comments of and Ken Ikehara and two anonymous reviewers improved the text. We thank Marc Humblet for comments on the "Coral reef" section. SG was supported by ARC LP0219312 and an ANZIC IODP analytical grant (2012). YI was partly financially supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI (Grant-In-Aid for Scientific Research) Grant Number 25247083.