Atmospheric oxygen 18 and sea-level changes
International audience Past isotopic composition of atmospheric oxygen (δ18Oatm) can be inferred from the analysis of air bubbles trapped in ice caps. The longest record covers the last 420 ka (thousand of years) at the Vostok site in East Antarctica. It shows a strong modulation by the precession a...
Published in: | Quaternary Science Reviews |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Other Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
HAL CCSD
2002
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hal.science/hal-02916219 https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-3791(01)00106-8 |
Summary: | International audience Past isotopic composition of atmospheric oxygen (δ18Oatm) can be inferred from the analysis of air bubbles trapped in ice caps. The longest record covers the last 420 ka (thousand of years) at the Vostok site in East Antarctica. It shows a strong modulation by the precession and striking similarities, but also noticeable differences, with the deep-sea core oxygen 18 record from which changes in the oxygen content of sea-water (δ18Osw) and in sea-level can be derived. Indeed, δ18Oatm is driven by complex fractionation processes occuring during respiration and photosynthesis. Both δ18Oatm and its difference with respect to δ18Osw (the Dole effect) are influenced by factors such as the ratio of oceanic and terrestrial productivities which may have significantly changed between different climates. Also, the response time of δ18Oatm to oceanic changes should be taken in consideration but this parameter itself depends on biospheric activity. We review the various aspects of the link between the δ18Oatm and the δ18Osw signals. We also examine the approach followed by Shackleton (Science (2000)) for deriving sea-level change from the δ18Oatm Vostok record, assuming that the phase between this record and insolation changes is constant and that the Dole effect is a fraction of the precessional component of the δ18Oatm signal. Glaciological constraints on the Vostok chronology and the complexity of the Dole effect show that those two assumptions are quite probably too simplistic. |
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