Late pleistocene variability of the carbon isotopic composition of organic matyer in the eastern mediterranean: monitor of changes in carbon sources and atmospheric CO$_2$ concentrations

International audience The organic carbon isotopic record of the sapropels (S1 and S3-S10) and intercalated marl oozes has been determined in a 12-m piston core from the eastern Mediterranean. The $\delta^{13}$ Corganic values are systematically lighter (mean = -21.0 + 8.2 %) in all sapropels and he...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Paleoceanography
Main Authors: Fontugne, M., R, Calvert, S., E
Other Authors: Centre des Faibles Radioactivités, Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), University of British Columbia (UBC)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-03544140
https://hal.science/hal-03544140/document
https://hal.science/hal-03544140/file/Paleoceanography%20-%20February%201992%20-%20Fontugne%20-%20Late%20Pleistocene%20Variability%20of%20the%20Carbon%20Isotopic%20Composition%20of%20Organic.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1029/91PA02674
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Summary:International audience The organic carbon isotopic record of the sapropels (S1 and S3-S10) and intercalated marl oozes has been determined in a 12-m piston core from the eastern Mediterranean. The $\delta^{13}$ Corganic values are systematically lighter (mean = -21.0 + 8.2 %) in all sapropels and heavier (mean = -18.8 + 10.7 %) in the marl oozes. These differences are not due to variable marine and terrestrial organic matter mixtures because all values are heavier than modem plankton in the Mediterranean, there is no relationship between the C$_{organic}$/N ratios and the isotopic values, and published information on the abundance and distribution of organic biomarkers shows that terrestrial material constitutes a minor fraction of the total organic matter. Temperature effects on isotope fractionation are also discounted because the change in $\delta^{13}$C$_{organic}$ values between glacial and interglacial horizons is in the opposite sense. Diagenesis, which can produce relatively small changes in the carbon isotopic composition of sedimentary organic matter under certain circumstances, is unlikely to have caused the observed differences because this mechanism would cause an enrichment in $^{12}$C, implying that all values were even heavier originally, and there is no secular trend in the $\delta^{13}$C$_{organic}$ record. The observed differences in $\delta^{13}$C$_{organic}$ between the two lithologies are probably produced by changes in the isotopic composition and the concentration of dissolved CO$_2$. First, freshwater flooding during the formation of the sapropels caused the isotopic composition of the dissolved inorganic carbon in the surface waters of the Mediterranean to become lighter because of the $^{13}$C deficiency infresh waters. Hence photosynthesis would have produced isotopically lighter organic material. Second, changes in aanospheric pCO$_2$ between glacial and interglacial periods, as shown by the Vostok ice core, caused marked changes in the concentration of free dissolved CO$_2$ in the ...