Fantle, Matthew S. (2010): Evaluating the Ca isotope proxy

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 130
DSDP 17
DSDP 22
DSDP 48
DSDP 73
DSDP 90
DSDP 17 167
DSDP 22 214
DSDP 48 400
DSDP 73 522
DSDP 90 590
ODP 130 807
Identifier:
2010-059202
georefid

10.2475/03.2010.03
doi

Creator:
Fantle, Matthew S.
Pennsylvania State University, Geosciences Department, University Park, PA, United States
author

Identification:
Evaluating the Ca isotope proxy
2010
American Journal of Science
Yale University, Kline Geology Laboratory, New Haven, CT, United States
310
3
194-230
The use of Ca isotopes as a proxy for mass flux imbalances in the Ca cycle is evaluated critically. A compiled Ca isotope record for the last 45 Ma, derived from bulk nannofossil ooze and with a temporal resolution of approximately 0.5 Ma, and an interpretation of the record are presented in the context of the global Ca cycle. This analysis, which assumes that nannofossil ooze records isotopic variations in seawater, indicates a dynamic Ca cycle in the Cenozoic. Such dynamic behavior has serious implications for the C cycle and suggests feedbacks between the Ca and C cycles to stabilize, or buffer, the oceanic carbon reservoir. Alternative applications of the Ca isotope proxy are investigated, using numerical models to determine the extent to which Ca isotopes are sensitive to other aspects of the Ca cycle; the results of the simulations are applied to specific cases in the Cenozoic. The simulations illustrate how variations in the global fractionation factor between calcium carbonate and seawater can produce trends similar to those observed when comparing previously published Ca isotopic compositions of marine barite to the nannofossil ooze record. The large drop in the delta (super 44) Ca value of bulk nannofossil ooze near the Eocene-Oligocene boundary can be reconciled in two ways, either as a substantial increase in weathering relative to sedimentation or as an indicator of changing depositional mode within the ocean. Though the preferred interpretation is not clear at present, it is evident that Ca isotopes stand to be a unique proxy for Ca cycling once the isotope systematics are elucidated.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:75.0000
West:-176.4930East: 170.0000
South:-40.0000

Stratigraphy; Isotope geochemistry; algae; alkaline earth metals; Angola Basin; Atlantic Ocean; bioclastic sedimentation; Ca-44; calcium; carbonate sediments; Cenozoic; clastic sediments; Coccolithophoraceae; data bases; data processing; Deep Sea Drilling Project; digital simulation; DSDP Site 167; DSDP Site 214; DSDP Site 400; DSDP Site 522; DSDP Site 590; East Pacific; Eocene; Equatorial Pacific; geochemical cycle; geochemistry; global; Indian Ocean; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IPOD; isotopes; Leg 130; Leg 17; Leg 22; Leg 48; Leg 73; Leg 90; Lord Howe Rise; marine sediments; metals; microfossils; Monte Carlo analysis; nannofossils; Ninetyeast Ridge; North Atlantic; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Northwest Pacific; numerical models; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 807; Oligocene; Ontong Java Plateau; ooze; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; Paleogene; Plantae; Quaternary; sedimentation; sediments; South Atlantic; South Pacific; Southwest Pacific; statistical analysis; STELLA; Tertiary; West Pacific; stable isotopes;

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