Effects of diagenesis on paleoclimate reconstructions from modern and young fossil corals
نویسندگان
چکیده
The integrity of coral-based reconstructions of past climate variability depends on a comprehensive knowledge of the effects of post-depositional alteration on coral skeletal geochemistry. Here we combine millimeter-scale and micro-scale coral Sr/Ca data, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images, and X-ray diffraction with previously published dO records to investigate the effects of submarine and subaerial diagenesis on paleoclimate reconstructions in modern and young sub-fossil corals from the central tropical Pacific. In a 40-year-old modern coral, we find secondary aragonite is associated with relatively high coral dO and Sr/Ca, equivalent to sea-surface temperature (SST) artifacts as large as !3 and !5 !C, respectively. Secondary aragonite observed in a 350-year-old fossil coral is associated with relatively high dO and Sr/Ca, resulting in apparent paleo-SST offsets of up to !2 and !4 !C, respectively. Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) analyses of secondary aragonite yield Sr/Ca ratios ranging from 10.78 to 12.39 mmol/mol, significantly higher compared to 9.15 ± 0.37 mmol/mol measured in more pristine sections of the same fossil coral. Widespread dissolution and secondary calcite observed in a 750-year-old fossil coral is associated with relatively low dO and Sr/Ca. SIMS Sr/Ca measurements of the secondary calcite (1.96–9.74 mmol/mol) are significantly lower and more variable than Sr/Ca values from more pristine portions of the same fossil coral (8.22 ± 0.13 mmol/mol). Our results indicate that while diagenesis has a much larger impact on Sr/Ca-based paleoclimate reconstructions than dO-based reconstructions at our site, SIMS analyses of relatively pristine skeletal elements in an altered coral may provide robust estimates of Sr/Ca which can be used to derive paleo-SSTs. " 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Alteration of Enamel Carbonate Environments during Fossilization
An understanding of enamel diagenesis is necessary to ensure sound isotopic palaeodietary and palaeoenvironmental reconstructions. Although carbon isotope signals of browsing and grazing herbivores remain distinct in enamel even after millions of years, subtle alteration of isotopic signatures does occur. To better understand this change we analysed modern and fossil enamel from a number of Sou...
متن کاملExperimental maturation of feathers: implications for reconstructions of fossil feather colour.
Fossil feathers often preserve evidence of melanosomes-micrometre-scale melanin-bearing organelles that have been used to infer original colours and patterns of the plumage of dinosaurs. Such reconstructions acknowledge that evidence from other colour-producing mechanisms is presently elusive and assume that melanosome geometry is not altered during fossilization. Here, we provide the first tes...
متن کاملTesting multivariate analysis in paleoenvironmental reconstructions using pollen records from Lagoa Salgada, NE Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil.
Despite the indisputable significance of identification of modern analogs for Paleoecology research, relatively few studies attempted to integrate modern and fossil samples on paleoenvironmental reconstructions. In Palynology, this general pattern is not different from other fields of Paleoecology. This study demonstrates the practical application of modern pollen deposition data on paleoenviro...
متن کاملCoral records of central tropical Pacific radiocarbon variability during the last millennium
[1] The relationship between decadal to centennial changes in ocean circulation and climate is difficult to discern using the sparse and discontinuous instrumental record of climate and, as such, represents a large uncertainty in coupled ocean‐atmosphere general circulation models. We present new modern and fossil coral radiocarbon (DC) records from Palmyra (6°N, 162°W) and Christmas (2°N, 157°...
متن کاملAltered states: Effects of diagenesis on fossil tooth chemistry
Investigation of modern and fossil teeth from northern and central Kenya, using the ion microprobe, electron microprobe, and transmission electron microscope, confirms that fossil tooth chemistry is controlled not only by the diagenetic precipitation of secondary minerals but also by the chemical alteration of the biogenic apatite. Increases in the concentrations of Fe, Mn, Si, Al, Ba, and poss...
متن کامل