Stable carbon and oxygen isotope record of foraminifera from DSDP Hole 30-289


Autoria(s): Shackleton, Nicholas J
Cobertura

LATITUDE: -0.498700 * LONGITUDE: 158.511500 * DATE/TIME START: 1973-05-31T00:00:00 * DATE/TIME END: 1973-05-31T00:00:00

Data(s)

28/05/1982

Resumo

Sediments accumulate on the sea floor far from land with rates of a few millimetres to a few centimetres per thousand years. Sediments have been accumulating under broadly similar conditions, subject to similar controls, for the past 10 8 years and more. In principle we should be able to study the distribution of climatic variance with frequencies over the range 10**-3 to 10**-7 cycles per year with comparative ease. In fact, nearly all our data are heavily weighted towards the youngest part of the geological record. We study frequencies higher than 10**-4 cycles per year in the special case of a Pleistocene interglacial (the present one), and frequencies in the range 10**-4 to 10**-5 cycles per year in the special case of an ice-age. Although these may be of more direct interest to mankind than earlier periods, it may well be that we will understand the causes of climatic variability better if we can examine their operation over a longer time scale and under different boundary conditions. Rather than review the available data, I have collected some new data to show the feasibility of gathering a data base for examining climatic variability without this usual bias toward the recent. The most widely applicable tool for extracting climatic information from deep-sea sediments is oxygen isotope analysis of calcium carbonate microfossils. It is generally possible to select from the sediment both specimens of benthonic Foraminifera (that is, those that lived in ocean deep water at the sediment-water interface) and specimens of planktonic Foraminifera (that is, those that lived and formed their shells near the ocean surface, and fell to the sediment after death). Thus one is able to monitor conditions at the surface and at depth at simultaneous moments in the geological past. The necessity to analyse calcareous microfossils restricts investigation to calcareous sediments, but even with this restriction in sediment type there are many factors governing the rate of sediment accumulation. On a global scale, sediment accumulates so as to balance the input to the oceans from continental erosion. Even when averaged globally, long-term accumulation rates have varied by almost a factor of ten (Davies et al., 1977, doi:10.1126/science.197.4298.53). At the regional scale, surface productivity and deep-water physical and chemical conditions also affect the sediment accumulation rate. Since all these are susceptible to variation and may well vary in response to climatic change as well as other factors, it is extremely hazardous to attempt to express any climatic variable as a function of time on the basis of measurements originally made as a function of depth in sediment. Although time has been used as a basis for plotting Figs. i-8, these should be regarded as freehand sketches of climatic history rather than as time-series plots.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.738434

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.738434

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Shackleton, Nicholas J (1982): The deep-sea sediment record of climate variability. Progress in Oceanography, 11(2), 199-218, doi:10.1016/0079-6611(82)90008-8

Palavras-Chave #30-289; adjusted values: measured value+0.15per mil; adjusted values: measured value+0.50per mil; adjusted values: measured value+0.64per mil; adjusted values: measured value-0.10per mil; benthic mean; C. havanensis d13C; C. havanensis d18O; Cibicidoides havanensis, d13C; Cibicidoides havanensis, d18O; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Foram bent d13C; Foram bent d18O; Foraminifera, benthic d13C; Foraminifera, benthic d18O; G. altispira d13C; G. altispira d18O; G. subglobosa d13C; G. subglobosa d18O; Globigerina altispira, d13C; Globigerina altispira, d18O; Globocassidulina subglobosa, d13C; Globocassidulina subglobosa, d18O; Glomar Challenger; Gyroidina sp., d13C; Gyroidina sp., d18O; Gyroidina sp. d13C; Gyroidina sp. d18O; Isotope ratio mass spectrometry; Label; Leg30; ODP sample designation; P. gigas d13C; P. gigas d18O; Planulina gigas, d13C; Planulina gigas, d18O; S. abyssorum d13C; S. abyssorum d18O; Sample code/label; South Pacific/PLATEAU; Stilostomella abyssorum, d13C; Stilostomella abyssorum, d18O
Tipo

Dataset