Probing a Paleoclimate Model-Data Misfit in Arctic Alaska from the Cretaceous Greenhouse World

Abstract Joseph Chad Lollar, M.S. Department of Geology, June 2011 University of Kansas There has been a recent emphasis in climate change research on developing computer models that can simulate past and future climatic settings. These models have never been able to accurately recreate many known d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lollar, Joseph Chad
Other Authors: Ludvigson, Greg A., González, Luis A, Fowle, David A.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1808/8373
http://dissertations.umi.com/ku:11606
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Summary:Abstract Joseph Chad Lollar, M.S. Department of Geology, June 2011 University of Kansas There has been a recent emphasis in climate change research on developing computer models that can simulate past and future climatic settings. These models have never been able to accurately recreate many known details of the Earth System. In particular, the late 20th-century Arctic warming and the even more pronounced polar warming during past greenhouse periods in Earth History, such as the Cretaceous, are major climate model-data misfits. The difficulty in simulating the polar warmth phenomenon might be partly attributable to uncertainties concerning the role of the hydrologic cycle in the global climate system. This failing is also exacerbated by a dearth of empirical paleoclimatic data from the Polar Regions that would better constrain our understanding of the hydrologic cycle during these time periods. To address this problem and to better constrain the boundary conditions for climate models, this study focused on broadening the distribution of empirical oxygen isotopic data from high latitude locations of the mid-Cretaceous (Albian-Cenomanian) greenhouse world by measuring the carbon-oxygen isotopic compositions of seven pedogenic siderite paleosol horizons from the Nanushuk Formation in North Slope Alaska. Pedogenic siderite is used because it is common in the geologic record, and is widely used as a proxy for paleoprecipitation. Sedimentologic logging and petrographic analysis of samples from the Tunalik #1 (Haywood, 1983) and Wainwright #1 cores (Lepain and Decker, in press) suggests that these siderites developed in poorly drained, reducing soils that formed in coal-bearing delta plain facies. The isotopic data from horizons sampled display slightly varying ä18O values with more highly variable ä13C values, with a positive covariance. This positive covariance probably results from mixing between modified marine and meteoric pore fluids during the precipitation of the siderite. The ä18O values range from -9.57 / to ...