87 research outputs found
Northeastern Caribbean Rainfall Variability Linked to Solar and Volcanic Forcing
We present a 500-year precipitation-sensitive record based on co-varying speleothem delta 18O values and Mg/Ca ratios from Larga cave in Puerto Rico. This multi-proxy record shows that the evolution of rainfall in the northeastern Caribbean was characterized by alternating centennial dry and wet phases corresponding to reduced versus enhanced convective activity. These phases occurred synchronous with relatively cool and warm tropical Atlantic sea-surface temperatures (SSTs), respectively. While the observed pattern suggests a close link of northeastern Caribbean rainfall to the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability, a regional comparison reveals intermittent regional heterogeneity especially on decadal timescales, which may be related to a superimposing influence of the Pacific and Atlantic basins. Furthermore, the speleothem-based hydroclimate reconstruction indicates a significant volcanic impact during the past two centuries, and further reveals a potential solar signal in the preceding three centuries. We posit that the forcing likely shifted from solar to volcanic during the eighteenth century in being an important source of multidecadal to centennial Caribbean rainfall variability. The link between convective rainfall and natural forcing may be explained through a modulation of SST variations in the tropical Atlantic and Pacific oceans.Climate change is expected to affect rainfall throughout the Caribbean and Central America, where over 200 million people are heavily dependent upon rain as their main source of freshwater. We have looked at how the amount of rainfall in the Caribbean has changed through time, and possible reasons for these changes, to inform predictions of future rainfall patterns for the region. Cave mineral deposits, also known as speleothems, can be used to assess the amount of regional rainfall in the past by looking at their slight changes over time in the mineral's chemical composition. We created a record of Caribbean rainfall spanning the last five centuries using a speleothem from Puerto Rico. Our results indicate that rainfall changes since the sixteenth century were strongly influenced by changes in temperatures of the surface waters of the Atlantic Ocean. We further found that changes in the sun's brightness and volcanic eruptions may alter Atlantic Ocean sea-surface temperature, which in turn affect the overall changes in Caribbean rainfall patterns.Speleothem-based Puerto Rican rainfall reconstruction shows prominent multidecadal-to-centennial variability during the past five centuries Puerto Rican rainfall fluctuations are linked to solar variations before the eighteenth century and volcanic forcing thereafter Caribbean Sea-surface temperature anomalies as part of the Atlantic Multidecadal Variability emerge as robust precursor of rainfall amount
Exceptional Record of Mid-Pleistocene Vertebrates Helps Differentiate Climatic from Anthropogenic Ecosystem Perturbations
Mid-Pleistocene vertebrates in North America are scarce but important for recognizing the ecological effects of climatic change in the absence of humans. We report on a uniquely rich mid-Pleistocene vertebrate sequence from Porcupine Cave, Colorado, which records at least 127 species and the earliest appearances of 30 mammals and birds. By analyzing \u3e20,000 mammal fossils in relation to modern species and independent climatic proxies, we determined how mammal communities reacted to presumed glacial-interglacial transitions between 1,000,000 and 600,000 years ago. We conclude that climatic warming primarily affected mammals of lower trophic and size categories, in contrast to documented human impacts on higher trophic and size categories historically. Despite changes in species composition and minor changes in small-mammal species richness evident at times of climatic change, overall structural stability of mammal communities persisted \u3e600,000 years before human impacts
Partitioning of Mg, Sr, Ba and U into a subaqueous calcite speleothem
The trace-element geochemistry of speleothems is becoming increasingly used for reconstructing palaeoclimate, with a particular emphasis on elements whose concentrations vary according to hydrological conditions at the cave site (e.g. Mg, Sr, Ba and U). An important step in interpreting trace-element abundances is understanding the underlying processes of their incorporation. This includes quantifying the fractionation between the solution and speleothem carbonate via partition coefficients (where the partitioning (D) of element X (DX) is the molar ratio [X/Ca] in the calcite divided by the molar ratio [X/Ca] in the parent water) and evaluating the degree of spatial variability across time-constant speleothem layers. Previous studies of how these elements are incorporated into speleothems have focused primarily on stalagmites and their source waters in natural cave settings, or have used synthetic solutions under cave-analogue laboratory conditions to produce similar dripstones. However, dripstones are not the only speleothem types capable of yielding useful palaeoclimate information. In this study, we investigate the incorporation of Mg, Sr, Ba and U into a subaqueous calcite speleothem (CD3) growing in a natural cave pool in Italy. Pool-water measurements extending back 15 years reveal a remarkably stable geochemical environment owing to the deep cave setting, enabling the calculation of precise solution [X/Ca]. We determine the trace element variability of ‘modern’ subaqueous calcite from a drill core taken through CD3 to derive DMg, DSr, DBa and DU then compare these with published cave, cave-analogue and seawater-analogue studies. The DMg for CD3 is anomalously high (0.042 ± 0.002) compared to previous estimates at similar temperatures (∼8 °C). The DSr (0.100 ± 0.007) is similar to previously reported values, but data from this study as well as those from Tremaine and Froelich (2013) and Day and Henderson (2013) suggest that [Na/Sr] might play an important role in Sr incorporation through the potential for Na to outcompete Sr for calcite non-lattice sites. DBa in CD3 (0.086 ± 0.008) is similar to values derived by Day and Henderson (2013) under cave-analogue conditions, whilst DU (0.013 ± 0.002) is almost an order of magnitude lower, possibly due to the unusually slow speleothem growth rates (<1 μm a−1), which could expose the crystal surfaces to leaching of uranyl carbonate. Finally, laser-ablation ICP-MS analysis of the upper 7 μm of CD3, regarded as ‘modern’ for the purposes of this study, reveals considerable heterogeneity, particularly for Sr, Ba and U, which is potentially indicative of compositional zoning. This reinforces the need to conduct 2D mapping and/or multiple laser passes to capture the range of time-equivalent elemental variations prior to palaeoclimate interpretation
Stretching the envelope of past surface environments : Neoproterozoic glacial lakes from Svalbard.
The oxygen isotope composition of terrestrial sulfate is affected measurably by many Earth- surface processes. During the Neoproterozoic, severe " snowball" glaciations would have had an extreme impact on the biosphere and the atmosphere. Here, we report that sulfate extracted from carbonate lenses within a Neoproterozoic glacial diamictite suite from Svalbard, with an age of similar to 635 million years ago, falls well outside the currently known natural range of triple oxygen isotope compositions and indicates that the atmosphere had either an exceptionally high atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration or an utterly unfamiliar oxygen cycle during deposition of the diamictites
Evaluation of bulk carbonate delta C-13 data from Triassic hemipelagites and the initial composition of carbonate mud
Bulk carbonate samples of hemipelagic limestone\u2013marl alternations from the
Middle and Upper Triassic of Italy are analysed for their isotopic
compositions. Middle Triassic samples are representative of the Livinallongo
Formation of the Dolomites, while Upper Triassic hemipelagites were sampled
in the Pignola 2 section, within the Calcari con Selce Formation of the
Southern Apennines in Southern Italy. Triassic hemipelagites occur either as
nodular limestones with chert nodules or as plane-bedded limestone\u2013marl
alternations which are locally silicified. In the Middle Triassic Livinallongo
Formation, diagenetic alteration primarily affected the stable isotopic
composition of sediment surrounding carbonate nodules, whereas the latter
show almost pristine compositions. Diagenesis lowered the carbon and oxygen
isotope values of bulk carbonate and introduced a strong correlation between
d13C and d18O values. In the Middle Triassic successions of the Dolomites,
bulk carbonate of nodular limestone facies is most commonly unaltered,
whereas carbonate of the plane-bedded facies is uniformly affected by
diagenetic alteration. In contrast to carbonate nodules, plane-bedded facies
often show compaction features. Although both types of pelagic carbonate
rocks show very similar petrographic characteristics, scanning electron
microscopy studies reveal that nodular limestone consists of micrite (< 5 lm
in diameter), whereas samples of the plane-bedded facies are composed of
calcite crystals ca 10 lm in size showing pitted, polished surfaces. These
observations suggest that nodular and plane-bedded facies underwent
different diagenetic pathways determined by the prevailing mineralogy of
the precursor sediment, i.e. probably high-Mg calcite in the nodular facies and
aragonite in the case of the plane-bedded facies. Similar to Middle Triassic
nodular facies, Upper Triassic nodular limestones of the Lagonegro Basin are
also characterized by uncorrelated d13C and d18O values and exhibit small, less
than 5 lm size, crystals. The alternation of calcitic and aragonitic precursors in
the Middle Triassic of the Dolomites is thought to mirror rapid changes in the
type of carbonate production of adjacent platforms. Bioturbation and
dissolution of metastable carbonate grains played a key role during early
lithification of nodular limestone beds, whereby early stabilization recorded
the carbon isotopic composition of sea water. The bulk carbonate d13C values
of Middle and Upper Triassic hemipelagites from Italy agree with those of
Tethyan low-Mg calcite shells of articulate brachiopods, confirming that
Triassic hemipelagites retained the primary carbon isotopic composition of the
bottom sea water. A trend of increasing d13C from the Late Anisian to the Early Carnian, partly seen in the data set presented here, is also recognized in
successions from tropical palaeolatitudes elsewhere. The carbon isotopic
composition of Middle and Upper Triassic nodular hemipelagic limestones
can thus be used for chemostratigraphic correlation and palaeoenvironmental
studies
Speleothem record attests to stable environmental conditions during Neanderthal–modern human turnover in southern Italy
The causes of Neanderthal–modern human (MH) turnover are ambiguous. While potential biocultural interactions between the two groups are still little known, it is clear that Neanderthals in southern Europe disappeared about 42 thousand years ago (ka) after cohabitation for ~3,000 years with MH. Among a plethora of hypotheses on Neanderthal extinction, rapid climate changes during the Middle to Upper Palaeolithic transition (MUPT) are regarded as a primary factor. Here we show evidence for stable climatic and environmental conditions during the MUPT in a region (Apulia) where Neanderthals and MH coexisted. We base our findings on a rare glacial stalagmite deposited between ~106 and ~27 ka, providing the first continuous western Mediterranean speleothem palaeoclimate archive for this period. The uninterrupted growth of the stalagmite attests to the constant availability of rainfall and vegetated soils, while its δ13C–δ18O palaeoclimate proxies demonstrate that Apulia was not affected by dramatic climate oscillations during the MUPT. Our results imply that, because climate did not play a key role in the disappearance of Neanderthals in this area, Neanderthal–MH turnover must be approached from a perspective that takes into account climatic and environmental conditions favourable for both species
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