Oxygen isotope ratios in fossil wood cellulose: Isotopic composition of Eocene- to Holocene-aged cellulose

被引:44
作者
Richter, S. L. [1 ]
Johnson, A. H. [1 ]
Dranoff, M. M. [1 ]
LePage, B. A. [2 ]
Williams, C. J. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Penn, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] URS Corp, Ft Washington, PA 19034 USA
[3] Franklin & Marshall Coll, Dept Earth & Environm, Lancaster, PA 17604 USA
基金
美国安德鲁·梅隆基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.gca.2008.01.031
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
We measured the delta(18)O of cellulose (delta(18)O(cel)) extracted from fossil wood collected at 9 sites in the northern and southern emispheres as a potential source of information about precipitation delta(18)O (delta(18)O(ppt)) in the past and paleotemperatures. The samples had been buried in fluvial sediments for periods of time ranging from ca. 45 million to 250 years. At the oldest localities (high latitude, Eocene- through Pliocene-age sites in Canada and Russia), mean annual temperature (MAT) estimates derived from the modern relationship between MAT and delta(18)O(cel) are 6-16 degrees C lower than the MAT estimates derived from other biological proxies. Estimates of Pleistocene and Holocene mean annual temperatures are close to the modern values at those sites. These results are consistent with other recent findings that the MAT/delta(18)O(ppt) relationship across North America was not constant throughout the Cenozoic. Paleo-delta(18)O(ppt) estimates derived from fossil cellulose and the modern North American relationship between delta(18)O(cel) and delta(18)O(ppt) are within the current annual range of delta(18)O(ppt) values at all locations. The middle Eocene delta(18)O(ppt) we determined from arctic cellulose samples (-21.9 parts per thousand) is consistent with river water delta(18)O determined in two other studies (-19.1 parts per thousand to -22 parts per thousand). These findings provide some evidence that a precipitation delta(18)O signal may be retained in wood cellulose during millions of years of burial, and that latitudinal patterns in delta(18)O(ppt) may not have changed much during the past 45 Ma. These interpretations depend, of course, on the assumption that the isotopic composition of the cellulose has not changed during burial, an assumption for which it is difficult to gather direct evidence. XRD analysis shows that the crystalline form of the fossil cellulose we used to estimate paleoprecipitation delta(18)O and paleo-MAT is the same as that of modern cellulose, and that the samples are free of quartz and iron oxide contaminants that result in negative errors in measured delta(18)O(cel). (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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页码:2744 / 2753
页数:10
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