76 research outputs found
Global-mean marine δ13C and its uncertainty in a glacial state estimate
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Quaternary Science Reviews 125 (2015): 144-159, doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2015.08.010.A paleo-data compilation with 492 δ13C and δ18O observations provides the opportunity
to better sample the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and infer its global
properties, such as the mean δ13C of dissolved inorganic carbon. Here, the paleocompilation
is used to reconstruct a steady-state water-mass distribution for the
LGM, that in turn is used to map the data onto a 3D global grid. A global-mean
marine δ13C value and a self-consistent uncertainty estimate are derived using the
framework of state estimation (i.e., combining a numerical model and observations).
The LGM global-mean δ13C is estimated to be 0:14h±0:20h at the
two standard error level, giving a glacial-to-modern change of 0:32h±0:20h.
The magnitude of the error bar is attributed to the uncertain glacial ocean circulation
and the lack of observational constraints in the Pacific, Indian, and Southern
Oceans. Observations in the Indian and Pacific Oceans generally have 10 times
the weight of an Atlantic point in the computation of the global mean. To halve
the error bar, roughly four times more observations are needed, although strategic
sampling may reduce this number. If dynamical constraints can be used to better
characterize the LGM circulation, the error bar can also be reduced to 0:05 to 0:1h, emphasizing that knowledge of the circulation is vital to accurately map
δ13CDIC in three dimensions.GG is supported
by NSF grants OIA-1124880 and OCE-1357121, the WHOI Ocean and Climate
Change Institute, and The Joint Initiative Awards Fund from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
A stratigraphically controlled multi-proxy chronostratigraphy for the Eastern Mediterranean
An Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) 14C dated multiparameter event stratigraphy is developed for the Aegean Sea on the basis of highly resolved (centimeter to subcentimeter) multiproxy data collected from four late glacial to Holocene sediment cores. We quantify the degree of proportionality and synchroneity of sediment accumulation in these cores and use this framework to optimize the confidence levels in regional marine, radiocarbon-based chronostratigraphies. The applicability of the framework to published, lower-resolution records from the Aegean Sea is assessed. Next this is extended into the wider eastern Mediterranean, using new and previously published high-resolution data from the northern Levantine and Adriatic cores. We determine that the magnitude of uncertainties in the intercore comparison of AMS 14C datings based on planktonic foraminifera in the eastern Mediterranean is of the order of ±240 years (2 SE). These uncertainties are attributed to synsedimentary and postsedimentary processes that affect the materials dated. This study also offers a background age control that allows for vital refinements to radiocarbon-based chronostratigraphy in the eastern Mediterranean, with the potential for similar frameworks to be developed for any other well-studied region
Pliocene-Pleistocene stack of globally distributed benthic stable oxygen isotope records
We present a 5.3-Myr stack (the ''LR04'' stack) of benthic d18O records from 57 globally distributed sites aligned by an automated graphic correlation algorithm. This is the first benthic delta18O stack composed of more than three records to extend beyond 850 ka, and we use its improved signal quality to identify 24 new marine isotope stages in the early Pliocene. We also present a new LR04 age model for the Pliocene-Pleistocene derived from tuning the delta18O stack to a simple ice model based on 21 June insolation at 65 N. Stacked sedimentation rates provide additional age model constraints to prevent overtuning. Despite a conservative tuning strategy, the LR04 benthic stack exhibits significant coherency with insolation in the obliquity band throughout the entire 5.3 Myr and in the precession band for more than half of the record. The LR04 stack contains significantly more variance in benthic delta18O than previously published stacks of the late Pleistocene as the result of higher resolution records, a better alignment technique, and a greater percentage of records from the Atlantic. Finally, the relative phases of the stack's 41- and 23-kyr components suggest that the precession component of delta18O from 2.7-1.6 Ma is primarily a deep-water temperature signal and that the phase of d18O precession response changed suddenly at 1.6 Ma
A Pliocene-Pleistocene stack of 57 globally distributed benthic δ18O records
International audienc
- …