3 resultados para MFI
em Publishing Network for Geoscientific
Resumo:
Mg/Ca in planktonic foraminifers carries two main signals: calcification temperature and postdepositional test dissolution. Shell dissolution thus distorts water temperature reconstructions made with Mg/Ca in foraminifers. This problem could be resolved by quantifying the impact of carbonate dissolution on Mg/Ca with an independent, temperature-insensitive deep-sea calcite dissolution proxy, such as the Globorotalia menardii fragmentation index (MFI). To test the validity of this approach, we measured Mg/Ca in the tests of several planktonic foraminifers and MFI in core tops collected over a wide geographic region of the tropical Pacific and covering a wide range of deep-sea calcite dissolution and seawater temperature. We confirm that Mg/Ca from different species have different susceptibility to temperature and dissolution. Mg/Ca in surface-dwelling Globigerina bulloides is controlled by calcification temperature and is largely unaffected by carbonate dissolution estimated from MFI. In contrast, Mg/Ca in deeper dwelling G. menardii is minimally sensitive to temperature and dominantly affected by dissolution. Mg/Ca in Neogloboquadrina dutertrei and Pulleniatina obliquiloculata are significantly affected by both temperature and dissolution, and MFI can be effectively used to correct temperature estimates from these species for calcite dissolution. Additional variables besides temperature and dissolution appear to control Mg/Ca in Globorotalia tumida, and their identification is a prerequisite for interpreting elemental shell composition in this species. Combining down-core measurements of Mg/Ca in multiple foraminifer species with MFI provides a powerful tool for reconstructing past changes in the upper water column temperature structure in the tropical Pacific.
Resumo:
Finding the ideal deep-sea CaCO3 dissolution proxy is essential for quantifying the role of the marine carbonate system in regulating atmospheric pCO2 over millennia. We explore the potential of using the Globorotalia menardii fragmentation index (MFI) and size-normalized foraminifer shell weight (SNSW) as complementary indicators of deep-sea CaCO3 dissolution. MFI has strong correlations with bottom water [CO3]2-, modeled estimates of percent CaCO3 dissolved, and Mg/Ca in Pulleniatina obliquiloculata in core top samples along a depth transect on the Ontong Java Plateau (OJP) where surface ocean temperature variation is minimal. SNSW of P. obliquiloculata and Neogloboquadrina dutertrei have weak correlations with MFI-based percent dissolved, Mg/Ca in P. obliquiloculata shells and bottom water [CO3]2- on the OJP. In core top samples from the eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP), SNSW of P. obliquiloculata has moderate to strong correlations with both MFI-based percent CaCO3 dissolved estimates and surface ocean environmental parameters. SNSW of N. dutertrei shells shows a latitudinal distribution in the EEP and a moderately strong correlation with MFI-based percent dissolved estimates when samples from the equatorial part of the region are excluded. Our results suggest that there may potentially be multiple genotypes of N. dutertrei in the EEP which may be reflected in their shell weight. MFI-based percent CaCO3 dissolved estimates have no quantifiable relationship with any surface ocean environmental parameter in the EEP. Thus MFI acts as a reliable quantitative CaCO3 dissolution proxy insensitive to environmental biases within calcification waters of foraminifers.
Resumo:
Accurately quantifying deep-sea calcite dissolution is crucial for understanding the role of the marine carbonate system in regulating atmospheric pCO2 over millennia. We compare a foraminifer-fragmentation-based calcite dissolution proxy (Globorotalia menardii fragmentation index (MFI)) to Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, and Mg/Sr in several species of deep dwelling planktonic foraminifers. We conducted microfossil and geochemical analyses on the same core top samples taken at different depths on the Ontong Java Plateau to maximize the dissolution signal and minimize the temperature overprint on our data. We also compare elemental ratios from planktonic foraminifer tests to modern bottom water [CO3]2- undersaturation and model-derived estimates of percent calcite dissolved in deep-sea sediments. We find clear linear decreases in Mg/Ca or Mg/Sr in G. menardii and Pulleniatina obliquiloculata with increasing (1) bottom water [CO3]2- undersaturation, (2) percent calcite dissolved in sediments calculated with biogeochemical modeling, (3) MFI, and (4) percent calcite dissolved derived from MFI. These findings lend further support to MFI as a calcite dissolution proxy for deep-sea sediments. In contrast, we find no significant correlation between Sr/Ca and independent dissolution indicators. Our results suggest that Mg/Ca and Mg/Sr from deep dwelling foraminifers could potentially be used as calcite dissolution proxies in combination with independent water temperature estimates. Likewise, establishing the relationship between MFI and dissolution-induced changes in the Mg/Ca of surface-dwelling foraminifers could provide a tool to correct Mg/Ca-derived sea surface temperature reconstructions for calcite dissolution.