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Berg, Sonja; Leng, Melanie J; Kendrick, Christopher P; Cremer, Holger; Wagner, Bernd (2013): Bulk sediment and diatom silica carbon isotope composition from Antarctic coastal marine sediments [dataset publication series]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.861418, Supplement to: Berg, S et al. (2013): Bulk Sediment and Diatom Silica Carbon Isotope Composition from Coastal Marine Sediments off East Antarctica. Silicon, 5(1), 19-34, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12633-012-9113-3

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Abstract:
Organic carbon occluded in diatom silica is assumed to be protected from degradation in the sediment. d13C from diatom carbon (d13C(diatom)) therefore potentially provides a signal of conditions during diatom growth. However, there have been few studies based on d13C(diatom). Numerous variables can influence d13C of organic matter in the marine environment (e.g., salinity, light, nutrient and CO2 availability). Here we compare d13C(diatom) and d13C(TOC) from three sediment records from individual marine inlets (Rauer Group, East Antarctica) to (i) investigate deviations between d13C(diatom) and d13C(TOC), to (ii) identify biological and environmental controls on d13C(diatom) and d13C(TOC), and to (iii) discuss d13C(diatom) as a proxy for environmental and climate reconstructions. The records show individual d13C(diatom) and d13C(TOC) characteristics, which indicates that d13C is not primarily controlled by regional climate or atmospheric CO2 concentration. Since the inlets vary in water depths offsets in d13C are probably related to differences in water column stratification and mixing, which influences redistribution of nutrients and carbon within each inlet. In our dataset changes in d13C(diatom) and d13C(TOC) could not unequivocally be ascribed to changes in diatom species composition, either because the variation in d13C(diatom) between the observed species is too small or because other environmental controls are more dominant. Records from the Southern Ocean show depleted d13C(diatom) values (1-4 per mil) during glacial times compared to the Holocene. Although climate variability throughout the Holocene is low compared to glacial/interglacial variability, we find variability in d13C(diatom), which is in the same order of magnitude. d13C of organic matter produced in the costal marine environment seems to be much more sensitive to environmental changes than open ocean sites and d13C is of strongly local nature.
Coverage:
Median Latitude: -68.820492 * Median Longitude: 77.862344 * South-bound Latitude: -68.833067 * West-bound Longitude: 77.771550 * North-bound Latitude: -68.802360 * East-bound Longitude: 77.926233
Date/Time Start: 2007-03-08T00:00:00 * Date/Time End: 2007-03-15T00:00:00
Size:
3 datasets

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