Late Cenozoic reconstructions of precipitation isotopes and climate in continental Alaska and Yukon

This thesis presents late Cenozoic reconstructions of hydrogen isotope ratios in mean annual precipitation (dDMAP) from fossil plant waxes (n-C28 alkanoic acids) and hydrated volcanic glass shards in tephra that are archived in sediments in south-east Alaska and central Yukon. The leaf wax dDMAP est...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Otiniano, Gerard Alexander
Other Authors: Porter, Trevor J, Geography
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/91728
Description
Summary:This thesis presents late Cenozoic reconstructions of hydrogen isotope ratios in mean annual precipitation (dDMAP) from fossil plant waxes (n-C28 alkanoic acids) and hydrated volcanic glass shards in tephra that are archived in sediments in south-east Alaska and central Yukon. The leaf wax dDMAP estimates, spanning 6.2 to 2.8 Ma, are negative compared to modern which is unexpected for a warmer-than-modern climate as indicated by other proxies. Tephra-dDMAP estimates spanning 6.7 to 0.025 Ma are consistent with North Pacific sea surface temperatures, documenting low dDMAP values during the latest Miocene, peak values during high pCO2 warm intervals (~5 and 3 Ma), and transition to the lowest values on record in the Late Pleistocene. The difference in trends between the two dDMAP reconstructions most likely owes to an inappropriate net-fractionation assumption associated with the leaf wax proxy which remains one of the largest uncertainties in fossil leaf wax derived paleoclimate reconstructions. M.Sc.