Not logged in
PANGAEA.
Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

Feakins, Sarah J (2013): (Table 1) Isotopic composition of organic compinents of DSDP Hole 24-231 [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.811734, Supplement to: Feakins, SJ (2013): Pollen-corrected leaf wax D/H reconstructions of northeast African hydrological changes during the late Miocene. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 374, 62-71, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.01.004

Always quote citation above when using data! You can download the citation in several formats below.

RIS CitationBibTeX CitationShow MapGoogle Earth

Abstract:
Plant leaf wax hydrogen isotope (dDwax) reconstructions are increasingly being used to reconstruct hydrological change. This approach is based upon the assumption that variations in hydroclimatic variables, and in particular, the isotopic composition of precipitation (dDP), dominate dDwax. However modern calibration studies suggest that offsets between plant types may bias the dDwax hydrological proxy at times of vegetation change. In this study, I pair leaf wax analyses with published pollen data to quantify this effect and construct the first vegetation-corrected hydrogen isotopic evidence for precipitation (dDcorrP). In marine sediments from Deep Sea Drilling Program Site 231 in the Gulf of Aden spanning 11.4-3.8 Ma (late Miocene and earliest Pliocene), I find 77 per mil swings in dDwax that correspond to pollen evidence for substantial vegetation change. Similarities between dDP and dDcorrP imply that the hydrological tracer is qualitatively robust to vegetation change. However, computed vegetation corrections can be as large as 31 per mil indicating substantial quantitative uncertainty in the raw hydrological proxy. The resulting dDcorrP values quantify hydrological change and allow us to identify times considerably wetter than modern at 11.09, 7.26, 5.71 and 3.89 Ma. More generally, this novel interpretative framework builds the foundations of improved quantitative paleohydrological reconstructions with the dDwax proxy, in contexts where vegetation change may bias the plant-based proxy. The vegetation corrected paleoprecipitation reconstruction dDcorrP, represents the best available estimate as proof-of-concept, for an approach that I hope will be refined and more broadly applied.
Project(s):
Coverage:
Latitude: 11.890200 * Longitude: 48.245200
Date/Time Start: 1972-05-04T00:00:00 * Date/Time End: 1972-05-04T00:00:00
Minimum DEPTH, sediment/rock: 183.450 m * Maximum DEPTH, sediment/rock: 561.960 m
Event(s):
24-231 * Latitude: 11.890200 * Longitude: 48.245200 * Date/Time: 1972-05-04T00:00:00 * Elevation: -2152.0 m * Penetration: 584 m * Recovery: 425.8 m * Location: Indian Ocean/Gulf of Aden/BASIN * Campaign: Leg24 * Basis: Glomar Challenger * Method/Device: Drilling/drill rig (DRILL) * Comment: 64 cores; 583.7 m cored; 0 m drilled; 72.9 % recovery
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
1Sample code/labelSample labelFeakins, Sarah JDSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation
2DEPTH, sediment/rockDepth sedmGeocode – mbsf
3AGEAgeka BPGeocode
4Carbon, organic, totalTOC%Feakins, Sarah J
5δ13C, organic carbonδ13C Corg‰ PDBFeakins, Sarah J
6n-Alkanoic acid C28, δDC28 Alk Acid δD‰ SMOWFeakins, Sarah J
7n-Alkanoic acid C28, δ2H, standard deviationC28 Alk Acid δ2H std dev±Feakins, Sarah J
8ReplicatesRepl#Feakins, Sarah J
9n-Alkanoic acid C30, δDC30 Alk Acid δD‰ SMOWFeakins, Sarah J
10n-Alkanoic acid C30, δ2H, standard deviationC30 Alk Acid δ2H std dev±Feakins, Sarah J
11ReplicatesRepl#Feakins, Sarah J
12n-Alkanoic acid C28, δ13CC28 Alk Acid δ13C‰ PDBFeakins, Sarah J
13n-Alkanoic acid C28, δ13C, standard deviationC28 Alk Acid δ13C std dev±Feakins, Sarah J
14ReplicatesRepl#Feakins, Sarah J
15n-Alkanoic acid C30, δ13CC30 Alk Acid δ13C‰ PDBFeakins, Sarah J
16n-Alkanoic acid C30, δ13C, standard deviationC30 Alk Acid δ13C std dev±Feakins, Sarah J
17ReplicatesRepl#Feakins, Sarah J
Size:
299 data points

Download Data

Download dataset as tab-delimited text — use the following character encoding:

View dataset as HTML