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  4. A Reassessment of of the geochemical and isotopic fidelity of biogenic carbonates
 
conference paper not in proceedings

A Reassessment of of the geochemical and isotopic fidelity of biogenic carbonates

Adams, Arthur  
•
Baumgarnter, L.
•
Vennemann, Tarek Axel  
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2019
American Geophysical Union

Oxygen isotope compositions of calcite foraminifera tests are considered to be a robust palaeotemperature proxy at earth-surface conditions, where diffusion is slow. Recrystallization of tests during diagenesis may be optically identified and is often the basis for excluding such samples from paleotemperature calculations e.g. “glassy” vs. “frosty” foraminifera. However, biogenic and abiogenic calcite can isotopically reequilibrate and recrystallize in calcite-saturated fluids, even at low temperatures (<100 °C) with no visible indicators of changes in the texture of the tests (Bernard et al. 2017). Such a process challenges the premise that textural discrimination is sufficient to determine the suitability of calcite for paleothermometry. To determine the rates and extent of this process, abiogenic and biogenic (foraminiferal) calcites were analyzed for their stable isotope compositions before and after low temperature (<100 °C) exposure to calcite-saturated solutions (Ωcalcite = 1) of known isotopic composition (−12 to 1000‰VSMOW) in autoclaves. Experiments took place over different periods, from days to months. Two stages of exchange are identified: (1) rapid exchange during the first days followed by (2) a gradually slowing exchange reaction as the experiment progresses. If the exchange rate during the slowing phase is extrapolated, after ~40 Myr >10 mol.% of a calcite’s oxygen could exchange with oxygen from the surrounding pore fluids. The calculated temperature from the resulting reequilibrated calcite could change by as much as 4 °C depending on the pore-fluid isotopic composition, compared to the original precipitation temperature. These results compel a reconsideration of the reliability of many calcitic paleoclimate proxies even in the absence of any evidence for recrystallization. Calcite precipitated at low temperatures, e.g. benthic foraminifera, are particularly vulnerable to this process, which may, in part, explain their anomalously-high apparent equilibration temperatures during the Paleocene–Eocene.

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Type
conference paper not in proceedings
Author(s)
Adams, Arthur  
Baumgarnter, L.
Vennemann, Tarek Axel  
Daval, D.
Bernard, Sylvain  
Cisneros Lazaro, Deyanira Graciela  
Baronnet, Alain
Grauby, Olivier
Guo, Jinming  
Stolarski, Jaroslav
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Date Issued

2019

URL
https://agu.confex.com/agu/fm19/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/602196
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LGB  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
American Geophysical Union

San Fransisco, USA

December 9-14

Available on Infoscience
March 17, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/167315
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