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Controls on sodium incorporation in foraminiferal calcite
Mezger, E.M. (2019). Controls on sodium incorporation in foraminiferal calcite. Utrecht Studies in Earth Sciences, 182. PhD Thesis. Utrecht University: Utrecht. ISBN 9789062665365. 241 pp. https://hdl.handle.net/1874/380001
Deel van: Utrecht Studies in Earth Sciences. Instituut voor Aardwetenschappen Utrecht: Utrecht. ISSN 2211-4335
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| Abstract |
Ongoing climate change increasingly affects our planet and society. Whereas climate change as a consequence of anthropogenic CO2 input is generally accepted, its magnitude and long-term impacts are not fully quantified, nor are they understood. Investigating past climate change and role of the oceans therein provides valuable information on climate functioning. Sea water salinity, i.e. salt content, is an important, but challenging parameter to reconstruct in paleoceanography. Changes in salinity mostly reflect shifts in the hydrological cycle, and on longer (geological) timescales also the waxing and waning of continental ice sheets, sea ice formation and regional and global circulation of water masses. Together with temperature, salinity controls density of seawater, driving large scale ocean circulation thereby redistributing oxygen, heat and nutrients worldwide. Reconstructions are often based on the calcite shell remains of foraminifera, which are small organisms living in the sea. At higher salinities, foraminifera incorporate more sodium (Na) into their calcite shells, thereby providing a potential tool to reconstruct salinities. The accuracy of these reconstructions depends on the fundamental understanding of incorporation and preservation of Na in their shells. This thesis focuses on the development and validation of foraminiferal Na/Ca as a proxy for salinity. Existing calibrations for benthic species are complemented by those for planktonic foraminifera, as these are often used in paleoceanography to reconstruct surface water conditions. The relation between foraminiferal shell Na and salinity is investigated in the Red Sea, also testing the effect of transport through the water column and deposition at the sediment surface. Furthermore, the inter- and intra-specimen and species variability in incorporated sodium are studied, as well as the underlying mechanisms via inorganic calcite precipitation experiments. The applicability of this novel proxy is tested by applying it to an Arabian Sea sediment record, covering the last ~80 thousand years of change in a monsoon dominated ocean basin. |
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