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  • Palaeoclimatic records from...
    Andrews, J.E.

    Earth-science reviews, 03/2006, Letnik: 75, Številka: 1
    Journal Article

    It has been known for some time that viable palaeoclimatic information should be recorded in groundwater-fed riverine tufas, particularly barrage, paludal or spring-line deposits. Stable isotope variation in active tufa-depositing systems is well understood. Variability in δ 18O is driven mainly by changes in water temperature and the δ 18O value of the recharging water. Variability in δ 13C reflects principally the relative contribution of isotopically light CO 2 from soil organic matter, and isotopically heavier carbon derived from the dissolution of the aquifer limestone, modulated by equilibration of the aquifer, spring and stream water with atmospheric CO 2 (degassing) and by in-aquifer or in-stream calcite precipitation. In fast-flowing riverine systems the effects of evaporation and in-stream biological activity are negligible. Disequilibrium isotope effects away from actively degassing springs are probably very small, although this can be difficult to demonstrate, especially for δ 13C. Highly resolved sub-sampling of annual layers in active/sub-recent and Holocene tufas show conclusively that seasonal records of temperature ( δ 18O) and relative recharge intensity ( δ 13C) are recorded. At decadal-scale sampling resolution tufa deposits record (mostly) variation in δ 18O of meteoric recharge, which depending on locality may reflect source or amount effects (particularly continentality), or temperature change. In Holocene tufas from NW Europe, centennial-scale climatic cooling, culminating in a sharp 8.2 ka minimum is recorded. At one site a detailed δ 13C record suggests progressive dryness accompanying coldness at 8.2 ka. Although cementation of void space, micritization and aggrading neomorphism all occur in sub-recent and older tufas, there is no unequivocal evidence that diagenesis is either pervasive or that it seriously changes depositional stable isotope values. As tufa deposits accumulate rapidly, where annually laminated they offer an excellent opportunity to study seasonality in Quaternary palaeoclimates. Tufa stable isotope records should be considered complementary to the longer-term palaeoclimatic data provided by speleothems, particularly as these terrestrial carbonates are often closely associated geographically.