The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy

In order to make predictions regarding future climate change it is necessary to understand past climatic conditions. Yet how can past climates, which cannot be measured directly, be reconstructed? Evidence from environmental sources which can give indirect evidence of the climate of the past provide...

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Main Authors: Sweet, Elizabeth, Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/20721/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.32932
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spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:20721 2023-05-15T13:39:47+02:00 The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy Sweet, Elizabeth Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter 2009 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/20721/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.32932 unknown Sweet, E. and Wolf-Gladrow, D. orcid:0000-0001-9531-8668 (2009) The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy , AWI PhD Conference. . hdl:10013/epic.32932 EPIC3AWI PhD Conference. Conference notRev 2009 ftawi 2021-12-24T15:33:30Z In order to make predictions regarding future climate change it is necessary to understand past climatic conditions. Yet how can past climates, which cannot be measured directly, be reconstructed? Evidence from environmental sources which can give indirect evidence of the climate of the past provide "proxy" data. This proxy evidence can then be calibrated and used to estimate climatic conditions beyond the instrumental record. Thus it is possible to separate anthropogenic influences from the normal climatic variation. Therefore it is essential that the proxies used are reliable. The low values and great of the C isotopic composition of particulate organic carbon (δ13Corg) in the Southern Ocean have long been a puzzle and an impediment to using δ13Corg as a paleoceanographic proxy. To ascertain the exact cause(s) of the anomalously low and variable Southern Ocean δ13Corg, we analyzed a suite of POC samples collected from the chlorophyll maximum during transects of the Antarctic sector of the Southern Ocean during GEOTRACES cruise "Zero and Drake" (ANTXXIV/3). Results suggest that strongly depleted δ13Corg values are a general feature of Antarctic phytoplankton, but that variability in δ13Corg may be largely driven by the abundance of the diatom, F. kerguelensis, which tends to have relatively less depleted δ13Corg values. Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Southern Ocean Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description In order to make predictions regarding future climate change it is necessary to understand past climatic conditions. Yet how can past climates, which cannot be measured directly, be reconstructed? Evidence from environmental sources which can give indirect evidence of the climate of the past provide "proxy" data. This proxy evidence can then be calibrated and used to estimate climatic conditions beyond the instrumental record. Thus it is possible to separate anthropogenic influences from the normal climatic variation. Therefore it is essential that the proxies used are reliable. The low values and great of the C isotopic composition of particulate organic carbon (δ13Corg) in the Southern Ocean have long been a puzzle and an impediment to using δ13Corg as a paleoceanographic proxy. To ascertain the exact cause(s) of the anomalously low and variable Southern Ocean δ13Corg, we analyzed a suite of POC samples collected from the chlorophyll maximum during transects of the Antarctic sector of the Southern Ocean during GEOTRACES cruise "Zero and Drake" (ANTXXIV/3). Results suggest that strongly depleted δ13Corg values are a general feature of Antarctic phytoplankton, but that variability in δ13Corg may be largely driven by the abundance of the diatom, F. kerguelensis, which tends to have relatively less depleted δ13Corg values.
format Conference Object
author Sweet, Elizabeth
Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter
spellingShingle Sweet, Elizabeth
Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter
The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy
author_facet Sweet, Elizabeth
Wolf-Gladrow, Dieter
author_sort Sweet, Elizabeth
title The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy
title_short The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy
title_full The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy
title_fullStr The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy
title_full_unstemmed The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy
title_sort importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13c as a paleo proxy
publishDate 2009
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/20721/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.32932
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
op_source EPIC3AWI PhD Conference.
op_relation Sweet, E. and Wolf-Gladrow, D. orcid:0000-0001-9531-8668 (2009) The importance and problems concerning the reliability of δ13C as a paleo proxy , AWI PhD Conference. . hdl:10013/epic.32932
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