Brachiopod delta 18 Oxygen values do reflect ambient sea-water: Lacepede Shelf, southern Australia.

Although commonly used as proxies for attributes of ancient ocean waters, the δ18O values of brachiopods from modern seas are little studied. To evaluate the utility of brachiopods as recorders of regional oceanography, modern shells from the Lacepede Shelf (25 000 km2) of southern Australia were an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: James, N., Bone, Y., Kyser, T.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: GEOLOGICAL SOC AMERICA 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2440/13724
https://doi.org/10.1130/0091-7613(1997)025<0551:BOVDRA>2.3.CO;2
Description
Summary:Although commonly used as proxies for attributes of ancient ocean waters, the δ18O values of brachiopods from modern seas are little studied. To evaluate the utility of brachiopods as recorders of regional oceanography, modern shells from the Lacepede Shelf (25 000 km2) of southern Australia were analyzed for δ18O, and the results were compared to the values of ambient seawater. Southern Ocean waters cover this area of extensive cool-water carbonate deposition, but there are distinct sectors of seasonal upwelling and lesser fluvial outflow. δ18O values of brachiopods across the environmental spectrum from 40 to 300 m water depth are in general isotopic equilibrium with surrounding seawater. Nevertheless, δ18O values from individual sample sites vary as much as 0.60‰. The area of cold-water upwelling in particular is clearly delimited by a group of high ‰18O values. The range of values across this one shelf, on the order of 2.57‰, is similar to the range of values postulated on the basis of similar results for secular changes in many ancient oceans.