Vanadium in foraminiferal calcite: Evaluation of a method to determine paleo-seawater vanadium concentrations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

Abstract-We assess the potential of using foraminiferal calcite as a paleoceanographic indicator of seawater V concentrations. Laboratory culture experiments show that living benthic and planktonic foraminifera incorporate V into their test in direct proportion to seawater concentrations. Distributi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David W. Hastings, Steven R. Emerson, Jonathan Erez, Bruce K. Nelson
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.539.6240
http://www.eckerd.edu/academics/marinescience/files/hastings/Hastings_GCA_96.pdf
Description
Summary:Abstract-We assess the potential of using foraminiferal calcite as a paleoceanographic indicator of seawater V concentrations. Laboratory culture experiments show that living benthic and planktonic foraminifera incorporate V into their test in direct proportion to seawater concentrations. Distribution coefficients relative to the culture solution are D = 2.1 X 10m3 and 2.8 X 10m3 for G. calida and A. lobifera, respectively. We use a cleaning procedure that effectively removes most V-rich contaminant phases from foraminiferal calcite preserved in the fossil record including organic matter and Mn-Fe oxyhydroxides. MnC03 overgrowths cannot be eliminated. Since V is conservative in the ocean, forami-niferal calcite recently accreted and found in surface sediment samples should have the same V content if this tracer accurately reflects seawater concentrations. V/Ca values for the same species of foraminifera are constant for core-top samples collected above the foraminiferal lysocline in different ocean basins. The mean distribution coefficients relative to seawater are D = 5.8 (21.0) X 10m3, 10.3 (50.7) x 10m3 and 32 (22.5) X low3 for G. sacculifer, G. tumida, and C. wuellerstorji, respectively. These differences suggest that V incorporation is species dependent. Core-top analyses along two submarine rises in the Equatorial Atlantic and Pacific oceans indicate significant dissolution effects. With increasing depth of deposition, and thus more extensive partial dissolution of the test, V/Ca decreases by a factor of three