Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium

Paleoclimate proxy records are needed to better understand the behavior of various components of Earth’s complex climate system across major climate transitions of the past. Such records can also provide benchmarks to test climate models and interpret the evolution of climate forcing, feedbacks, and...

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Main Author: Mette, Madelyn
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Iowa State University Digital Repository 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16287
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7294&context=etd
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spelling ftiowastateuniv:oai:lib.dr.iastate.edu:etd-7294 2023-05-15T15:22:33+02:00 Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium Mette, Madelyn 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16287 https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7294&context=etd en eng Iowa State University Digital Repository https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16287 https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7294&context=etd Graduate Theses and Dissertations Climate Paleontology text 2017 ftiowastateuniv 2018-11-26T01:42:52Z Paleoclimate proxy records are needed to better understand the behavior of various components of Earth’s complex climate system across major climate transitions of the past. Such records can also provide benchmarks to test climate models and interpret the evolution of climate forcing, feedbacks, and interactions in the past, present, and future. Development of high-resolution, high-latitude records of climate change such as those presented in this dissertation, provide insight to highly sensitive regions where very few lengthy instrumental records exist. This dissertation presents shell growth and geochemical records from the long-lived marine bivalve, Arctica islandica, from northern Norway to investigate major North Atlantic marine climate of the past millennium. A 112-year Master Shell Growth Chronology and oxygen isotope time series were tested against instrumental climate indices (including the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, the North Atlantic Oscillation, and Atlantic meridional overturning circulation) and local to regional sea surface temperature records. Shell growth rate and oxygen isotopic composition were found to reflect regional sea surface temperatures across a broad swath of the North Atlantic in a pattern mimicking the path of the North Atlantic Current, suggesting a causal mechanism for coherence between marine variability in northern Norway and North Atlantic climate, namely, the influence of the North Atlantic Current in the Barents Sea. Statistically robust relationships were found between the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and the shell-based MultiproxyAMO Index over the instrumental record, suggesting lengthy shell-based records from northern Norway may skillfully reconstruct AMO variability of the past. Spectral analysis of a 455-year Master Shell Growth Chronology constructed by crossdating dead-collected material with the modern chronology revealed significant periodicity in the ~60 year band, reminiscent of that of Atlantic multidecadal variability. Spectral analysis of oxygen isotope ratios from the Little Ice Age, Late Little Ice Age, and Modern periods also suggest multidecadal periodicity, suggesting that multidecadal oscillations in Atlantic sea surface temperatures have persisted for at least the past five centuries. A statistically significant decrease in δ18Oshell of 0.25‰ since the Little Ice Age suggests warming or strengthening of the North Atlantic Current into the Modern climate period. Additionally, this thesis presents an investigation of variability in replicated oxygen isotope measurements and the potential for the influence of sampling imprecision. Our findings suggest that natural proxy variability combined with analytical uncertainty, and not human-related sampling error, are the primary contributors to larger than expected variability among replicated measurements. This work has important implications for previously published isotope records from biogenic archives and provides a template for estimating isotopic variability on an individual case basis. Text Arctica islandica Barents Sea north atlantic current North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Northern Norway Digital Repository @ Iowa State University Barents Sea Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Repository @ Iowa State University
op_collection_id ftiowastateuniv
language English
topic Climate
Paleontology
spellingShingle Climate
Paleontology
Mette, Madelyn
Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
topic_facet Climate
Paleontology
description Paleoclimate proxy records are needed to better understand the behavior of various components of Earth’s complex climate system across major climate transitions of the past. Such records can also provide benchmarks to test climate models and interpret the evolution of climate forcing, feedbacks, and interactions in the past, present, and future. Development of high-resolution, high-latitude records of climate change such as those presented in this dissertation, provide insight to highly sensitive regions where very few lengthy instrumental records exist. This dissertation presents shell growth and geochemical records from the long-lived marine bivalve, Arctica islandica, from northern Norway to investigate major North Atlantic marine climate of the past millennium. A 112-year Master Shell Growth Chronology and oxygen isotope time series were tested against instrumental climate indices (including the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, the North Atlantic Oscillation, and Atlantic meridional overturning circulation) and local to regional sea surface temperature records. Shell growth rate and oxygen isotopic composition were found to reflect regional sea surface temperatures across a broad swath of the North Atlantic in a pattern mimicking the path of the North Atlantic Current, suggesting a causal mechanism for coherence between marine variability in northern Norway and North Atlantic climate, namely, the influence of the North Atlantic Current in the Barents Sea. Statistically robust relationships were found between the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and the shell-based MultiproxyAMO Index over the instrumental record, suggesting lengthy shell-based records from northern Norway may skillfully reconstruct AMO variability of the past. Spectral analysis of a 455-year Master Shell Growth Chronology constructed by crossdating dead-collected material with the modern chronology revealed significant periodicity in the ~60 year band, reminiscent of that of Atlantic multidecadal variability. Spectral analysis of oxygen isotope ratios from the Little Ice Age, Late Little Ice Age, and Modern periods also suggest multidecadal periodicity, suggesting that multidecadal oscillations in Atlantic sea surface temperatures have persisted for at least the past five centuries. A statistically significant decrease in δ18Oshell of 0.25‰ since the Little Ice Age suggests warming or strengthening of the North Atlantic Current into the Modern climate period. Additionally, this thesis presents an investigation of variability in replicated oxygen isotope measurements and the potential for the influence of sampling imprecision. Our findings suggest that natural proxy variability combined with analytical uncertainty, and not human-related sampling error, are the primary contributors to larger than expected variability among replicated measurements. This work has important implications for previously published isotope records from biogenic archives and provides a template for estimating isotopic variability on an individual case basis.
format Text
author Mette, Madelyn
author_facet Mette, Madelyn
author_sort Mette, Madelyn
title Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
title_short Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
title_full Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
title_fullStr Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
title_full_unstemmed Arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern Norway as North Atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
title_sort arctica islandica shell growth and geochemical records from northern norway as north atlantic marine climate proxies for the last millennium
publisher Iowa State University Digital Repository
publishDate 2017
url https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16287
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7294&context=etd
geographic Barents Sea
Norway
geographic_facet Barents Sea
Norway
genre Arctica islandica
Barents Sea
north atlantic current
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Northern Norway
genre_facet Arctica islandica
Barents Sea
north atlantic current
North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
Northern Norway
op_source Graduate Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16287
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7294&context=etd
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