Paleoclimate and Hydrology of Bermuda from the Last Interglacial to Today Using Oxygen and Clumped Isotope Geochemistry

The Last Interglacial (LIG), also known as Marine Isotope Stage 5e (MIS 5e), was an interval with climate as warm or slightly warmer than today. Global mean sea surface temperatures were reconstructed to be ~2°C warmer than present, accompanied by a ~6-9m increase in the sea level. At the regional s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zhang, Jade
Other Authors: Petersen, Sierra Victoria, Gronewold, Andrew, Levin, Naomi, Lohmann, Kyger C
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/177845
https://doi.org/10.7302/8302
Description
Summary:The Last Interglacial (LIG), also known as Marine Isotope Stage 5e (MIS 5e), was an interval with climate as warm or slightly warmer than today. Global mean sea surface temperatures were reconstructed to be ~2°C warmer than present, accompanied by a ~6-9m increase in the sea level. At the regional scale, this warming was non-uniform. The North Atlantic/Greenland/Iceland/Nordic Seas were reconstructed to be warmer than today, whereas the Central Atlantic/Caribbean Seas were reconstructed to be cooler than modern. Situated at the boundary between these two regions, Bermuda can provide a unique record of Last Interglacial climate. In this dissertation, I conduct and optimize isotopic analyses of modern waters and fossil invertebrates from Bermuda to reconstruct modern hydrology and Last Interglacial climate, respectively. First, I determine the most accurate approach for estimating seasonality by comparing multiple isotopic sampling techniques. Validation of these techniques in the modern, where true seasonality and annual mean temperatures are known, improves our ability to accurately apply these methods toward paleoseasonality reconstruction. This study showed high resolution paleoseasonality reconstruction of temperature and δ18Ow is possible with multiple isotopic sampling techniques, especially when a sampling and analysis framework is chosen that balances resolution and growth rate, a finding which can be extrapolated to other species and time periods. Second, I evaluate modern variability in salinity and the oxygen isotopic composition of water (δ18Ow) across various types of modern water samples collected from Bermuda. Well water samples tapping Bermuda’s main freshwater aquifer show the aquifer has changed shape over recent decades and demonstrate linear mixing of seawater and freshwater underground. Seawater samples from the South Shore show variability in δ18Ow on the order of ~2.4‰ on monthly timescales and up to 1.4‰ on hourly timescales. We propose that this significantly greater variability in δ18Ow ...