15 research outputs found

    Infrared spectroscopic biosignatures from hidden cave, New Mexico: possible applications for remote life detection

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    Subsurface environments are known to support and preserve diverse microbial communities. Giant pool fingers from Hidden Cave, New Mexico consist of mm-scale dark micritic calcite layers alternating with clear dogtooth spar crystals and contain morphological and geochemical evidence of past microbial communities. We used Fourier Transform infrared spectroscopy to identify fatty acids, proteins, PO2-carrying compounds, and polysaccharides spatially related to morphological fossil filaments throughout the surface micritic laminations and central pool finger regions. These biomolecular signatures are important components that contribute to the biosignature suite under development that identify microbial involvement in carbonate precipitation on Earth and remotely

    Intertropical convergence zone variability in the Neotropics during the Common Era

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    Large changes in hydroclimate in the Neotropics implied by proxy evidence, such as during the Little Ice Age, have been attributed to meridional shifts of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ), although alternative modes of ITCZ variability have also been suggested. Here, we use seasonally resolved stalagmite rainfall proxy data from the modern northern limit of the ITCZ in southern Belize, combined with records from across the Neotropics and subtropics, to fingerprint ITCZ variability during the Common Era. Our data are consistent with models that suggest ITCZ expansion and weakening during globally cold climate intervals and contraction and intensification during global warmth. As a result, regions currently in the margins of the ITCZ in both hemispheres are likely transitioning to more arid and highly variable conditions, aggravating current trends of increased social unrest and mass migration

    COnstructing Proxy-Record Age models (COPRA)

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    Reliable age models are fundamental for any palaeoclimate reconstruction. Available interpolation procedures between age control points are often inadequately reported, and very few translate age uncertainties to proxy uncertainties. Most available modeling algorithms do not allow incorporation of layer counted intervals to improve the confidence limits of the age model in question. We present a framework that allows detection and interactive handling of age reversals and hiatuses, depth-age modeling, and proxy-record reconstruction. Monte Carlo simulation and a translation procedure are used to assign a precise time scale to climate proxies and to translate dating uncertainties to uncertainties in the proxy values. The presented framework allows integration of incremental relative dating information to improve the final age model. The free software package COPRA1.0 facilitates easy interactive usage

    Cova del Rinoceront (Castelldefels, Barcelona): a terrestrial record for the Last Interglacial period (MIS 5) in the Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula

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    Abstract not availableJ. Daura, M. Sanz, R. Julià, D. García-Fernández, J.J. Fornós, M. Vaquero, E. Allué, J.M. López-García, H.A. Blain, J.E. Ortiz, T. Torres, R.M. Albert, À. Rodríguez-Cintas, A. Sánchez-Marco, E. Cerdeño, A.R. Skinner, Y. Asmeron, V.J. Polyak, M. Garcés, L.J. Arnold, M. Demuro, A.W.G. Pike, I. Euba, R.F. Rodríguez, A.S. Yagüe, L. Villaescusa, S. Gómeza, A. Rubio, t, M. Pedro, J.M. Fullola, J. Zilhã

    Origin of abundant moonmilk deposits in a subsurface granitic environment

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    22 páginas.-- 6 figuras.-- 115 referencias.-- Additional Supporting Information may be found in the online version of this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sed.12431Subsurface granitic environments are scarce and poorly investigated. A multi‐disciplinary approach was used to characterize the abundant moonmilk deposits and associated microbial communities coating the granite walls of the 16th Century Paranhos spring water tunnel in Porto city (north‐west Portugal). It is possible that this study is the first record of moonmilk in an urban subsurface granitic environment. The morphology and texture, mineralogical composition, stable isotope composition and microbial diversity of moonmilk deposits have been studied to infer the processes of moonmilk formation. These whitish secondary mineral deposits are composed of very fine needle‐fibre calcite crystals with different morphologies and density. Calcified filaments of fungal hyphae or bacteria were distinguished by field emission scanning electron microscopy. Stable isotope analysis revealed a meteoric origin of the needle‐fibre calcite, with an important contribution of atmospheric CO2, soil respiration and urn:x-wiley:00370746:media:sed12431:sed12431-math-0001 from weathering of Ca‐bearing minerals. The DNA‐based analyses revealed the presence of micro‐organisms related to urban contamination, including Actinobacteria, mainly represented by Pseudonocardia hispaniensis, Thaumarchaeota and Ascomycota, dominated by Cladosporium. This microbial composition is consistent with groundwater pollution and contamination sources of the overlying urban area, including garages, petrol stations and wastewater pipeline leakage, showing that the Paranhos tunnel is greatly perturbed by anthropogenic activities. Whether the identified micro‐organisms are involved in the formation of the needle‐fibre calcite or not is difficult to demonstrate, but this study evidenced both abiotic and biogenic genesis for the calcite moonmilk in this subsurface granitic environment.The authors acknowledge the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (MINEICO, project CGL2011-2569) and the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology, FCT (UID/GEO/04035/2013, UID/ECI/04028/2013, PEst-OE/CTE/UI0098/2011) and the LABCARGA| ISEP re-equipment program (IPP-ISEP|PAD’2007/ 08) for financial support. AZM thanks MINEICO for the ‘Juan de la Cierva – Incorporación’ postdoctoral contract (IJCI-2014-20443). PMMS thanks the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation for his contract associated with the ‘Research Programme in Technologies for the Assessment and Conservation of Cultural Heritage’ (TCP CSD2007-0005Peer reviewe

    Drought-Induced Civil Conflict Among the Ancient Maya

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    The influence of climate change on civil conflict and societal instability in the premodern world is a subject of much debate, in part because of the limited temporal or disciplinary scope of case studies. We present a transdisciplinary case study that combines archeological, historical, and paleoclimate datasets to explore the dynamic, shifting relationships among climate change, civil conflict, and political collapse at Mayapan, the largest Postclassic Maya capital of the Yucatán Peninsula in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries CE. Multiple data sources indicate that civil conflict increased significantly and generalized linear modeling correlates strife in the city with drought conditions between 1400 and 1450 cal. CE. We argue that prolonged drought escalated rival factional tensions, but subsequent adaptations reveal regional-scale resiliency, ensuring that Maya political and economic structures endured until European contact in the early sixteenth century CE

    Cova del Rinoceront (Castelldefels, Barcelona): a terrestrial record for the Last Interglacial period (MIS 5) in the Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula

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    The Cova del Rinoceront, a site in NE Iberia, contains a thick sedimentary fill preserving a faunal archive from the penultimate glacial and the last interglacial periods. Layers I to III have been dated to between 74 and 147 ka, coinciding with MIS 5a to 5e, a period poorly represented in the Mediterranean terrestrial record. The results from Cova del Rinoceront are of broader interest for the reconstruction of ecological dynamics during warm stages and the understanding of the evolution and geographical variation of several taxa. The palaeoecological evidence suggests a landscape dominated by mixed wooded vegetation with mild climatic conditions, slightly more humid than today. Several vertebrate taxa, including Haploidoceros mediterraneus, Stephanorhinus hundsheimensis and Glis glis, are documented for the first time in the early Upper Pleistocene of Europe, showing that these species persisted across the region for longer than previously thought. In addition, the recovery of a small lithic assemblage indicates human presence in the surroundings of the site. The 11 m-thick stratigraphic section also provides an ideal setting in which to compare several geochronological methods. U–Th dating of the flowstones that cap the deposit, of speleothems formed along the cave walls, and of speleothems buried by the deposit at different elevations provides minimum and maximum ages of 74 and 175 ka, respectively, for the accumulation. The ages obtained by luminescence, electron spin resonance (ESR), amino acid racemisation (AAR), palaeomagnetism and U-series dating of bone are in good agreement with each other and are stratigraphically consistent. This well-dated faunal succession presents a unique opportunity to assess changes in the Pleistocene fauna of the Mediterranean coast over an interval of more than 100 k
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