Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria

The origin and environmental dependencies of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch, common in speleothems from other cave sites, are examined in detail. Petrographic observations and chemical analyses (including isotopes) of stalagmites and modern calcite were combined with multi-annual cave moni...

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Main Authors: Boch, Ronny, Spötl, Christoph, Frisia, Silvia
Other Authors: The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Science & Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1066432
id ftunivnewcastnsw:uon:18114
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia)
op_collection_id ftunivnewcastnsw
language English
topic annual lamination
calcite fabric
cave monitoring
seasonality
speleothem
stable isotopes
spellingShingle annual lamination
calcite fabric
cave monitoring
seasonality
speleothem
stable isotopes
Boch, Ronny
Spötl, Christoph
Frisia, Silvia
Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria
topic_facet annual lamination
calcite fabric
cave monitoring
seasonality
speleothem
stable isotopes
description The origin and environmental dependencies of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch, common in speleothems from other cave sites, are examined in detail. Petrographic observations and chemical analyses (including isotopes) of stalagmites and modern calcite were combined with multi-annual cave monitoring. All investigated stalagmites are composed of low-Mg calcite and show white, porous laminae and typically thinner, translucent dense laminae. The binary lamination pattern results from changes in the calcite fabric: white, porous laminae are characterized by a high porosity and abundant fluid inclusions and also by enhanced vertical growth and thinning towards the flanks. Translucent, dense laminae exhibit a compact fabric and constant thickness of individual growth layers. U-Th dating supports an annual origin of the lamination and the seasonally changing intensity of cave ventilation provides a robust explanation for the observed relationships between lamination, stable C isotopic compositions and trace elements (Mg, Sr and Ba). The seasonally variable air exchange, driven by temperature contrasts between the cave interior and outside atmosphere, modulates the rate and amount of CO₂ degassing from the drip water and affects the hydrochemistry and consequently the fabric of the precipitating calcite. Although cave air composition and drip rate are both major variables in controlling CO₂ degassing from the drip water, the seasonally changing ventilation in Katerloch exerts the primary control and the results suggest a secondary (amplifying/attenuating) influence of the drip rate. Drip rate, however, might be the controlling parameter for lamina development at cave sites experiencing only small seasonal cave air exchange. Importantly, the seasonally variable composition of drip water does not reflect the seasonal cycle of processes in the soil zone, but results from exchange with the cave atmosphere. The alternating porous and dense calcite fabric is the expression of a variable degree of lateral coalescence of smaller crystallites forming large columnar crystals. The white, porous laminae represent partial coalescence and form during the warm season: low calcite δ 13 C values are linked to low δ 13 C values of cave air and drip water during that time. This observation corresponds to times of reduced cave ventilation, high pCO₂ of cave air, low drip water pH, lower calcite supersaturation and typically high drip rates. In contrast, the translucent, dense laminae represent more or less complete lateral coalescence (inclusion-free) during the cold season (high calcite, drip water and cave air δ 13 C values), i.e. times of enhanced cave ventilation, low cave air pCO₂, increased drip water pH, relatively high calcite supersaturation and typically low drip rates. In essence, the relative development of the two lamina types reflects changes in the seasonality of external air temperature and precipitation, with a strong control of the winter air temperature on the intensity of cave-air exchange. Thick translucent, dense laminae are favoured by long, cold and wet winters and such conditions may be related closely to the North Atlantic Oscillation mode (weak westerlies) and enhanced Mediterranean cyclone activity during the cold season. Studies of speleothem lamination can thus help to better understand (and quantify) the role of seasonality changes, for example, during rapid climate events.
author2 The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Science & Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Sciences
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Boch, Ronny
Spötl, Christoph
Frisia, Silvia
author_facet Boch, Ronny
Spötl, Christoph
Frisia, Silvia
author_sort Boch, Ronny
title Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria
title_short Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria
title_full Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria
title_fullStr Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria
title_full_unstemmed Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria
title_sort origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from katerloch cave, austria
publisher Wiley-Blackwell Publishing
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1066432
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation Sedimentology Vol. 58, Issue 2, p. 508-531
10.1111/j.1365-3091.2010.01173.x
_version_ 1766137367277600768
spelling ftunivnewcastnsw:uon:18114 2023-05-15T17:37:26+02:00 Origin and palaeoenvironmental significance of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch Cave, Austria Boch, Ronny Spötl, Christoph Frisia, Silvia The University of Newcastle. Faculty of Science & Information Technology, School of Environmental and Life Sciences 2011 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1066432 eng eng Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Sedimentology Vol. 58, Issue 2, p. 508-531 10.1111/j.1365-3091.2010.01173.x annual lamination calcite fabric cave monitoring seasonality speleothem stable isotopes journal article 2011 ftunivnewcastnsw 2018-07-27T00:45:49Z The origin and environmental dependencies of lamination in stalagmites from Katerloch, common in speleothems from other cave sites, are examined in detail. Petrographic observations and chemical analyses (including isotopes) of stalagmites and modern calcite were combined with multi-annual cave monitoring. All investigated stalagmites are composed of low-Mg calcite and show white, porous laminae and typically thinner, translucent dense laminae. The binary lamination pattern results from changes in the calcite fabric: white, porous laminae are characterized by a high porosity and abundant fluid inclusions and also by enhanced vertical growth and thinning towards the flanks. Translucent, dense laminae exhibit a compact fabric and constant thickness of individual growth layers. U-Th dating supports an annual origin of the lamination and the seasonally changing intensity of cave ventilation provides a robust explanation for the observed relationships between lamination, stable C isotopic compositions and trace elements (Mg, Sr and Ba). The seasonally variable air exchange, driven by temperature contrasts between the cave interior and outside atmosphere, modulates the rate and amount of CO₂ degassing from the drip water and affects the hydrochemistry and consequently the fabric of the precipitating calcite. Although cave air composition and drip rate are both major variables in controlling CO₂ degassing from the drip water, the seasonally changing ventilation in Katerloch exerts the primary control and the results suggest a secondary (amplifying/attenuating) influence of the drip rate. Drip rate, however, might be the controlling parameter for lamina development at cave sites experiencing only small seasonal cave air exchange. Importantly, the seasonally variable composition of drip water does not reflect the seasonal cycle of processes in the soil zone, but results from exchange with the cave atmosphere. The alternating porous and dense calcite fabric is the expression of a variable degree of lateral coalescence of smaller crystallites forming large columnar crystals. The white, porous laminae represent partial coalescence and form during the warm season: low calcite δ 13 C values are linked to low δ 13 C values of cave air and drip water during that time. This observation corresponds to times of reduced cave ventilation, high pCO₂ of cave air, low drip water pH, lower calcite supersaturation and typically high drip rates. In contrast, the translucent, dense laminae represent more or less complete lateral coalescence (inclusion-free) during the cold season (high calcite, drip water and cave air δ 13 C values), i.e. times of enhanced cave ventilation, low cave air pCO₂, increased drip water pH, relatively high calcite supersaturation and typically low drip rates. In essence, the relative development of the two lamina types reflects changes in the seasonality of external air temperature and precipitation, with a strong control of the winter air temperature on the intensity of cave-air exchange. Thick translucent, dense laminae are favoured by long, cold and wet winters and such conditions may be related closely to the North Atlantic Oscillation mode (weak westerlies) and enhanced Mediterranean cyclone activity during the cold season. Studies of speleothem lamination can thus help to better understand (and quantify) the role of seasonality changes, for example, during rapid climate events. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation NOVA: The University of Newcastle Research Online (Australia)