Age and origin of leaf wax <i>n</i>-alkanes in fluvial sediment–paleosol sequences and implications for paleoenvironmental reconstructions
-
Published:2020-04-28
Issue:4
Volume:24
Page:2105-2120
-
ISSN:1607-7938
-
Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Bliedtner Marcel, von Suchodoletz Hans, Schäfer Imke, Welte Caroline, Salazar Gary, Szidat SönkeORCID, Haas Mischa, Dubois NathalieORCID, Zech Roland
Abstract
Abstract. Leaf wax n-alkanes are increasingly used for quantitative paleoenvironmental reconstructions. However, this is complicated in sediment archives with associated hydrological catchments since the stored
n-alkanes can have different ages and origins. 14C dating of the n-alkanes yields independent age information for these proxies, allowing their correct paleoenvironmental interpretation. This also holds true for fluvial sediment–paleosol sequences (FSPSs) that integrate two different n-alkane signals: (i) a catchment signal in fluvial sediments and (ii) an on-site signal from local biomass that increasingly dominates (paleo)soils with time. Therefore, the age and origin of n-alkanes in FSPSs are complex: in fluvial sediment layers they can be pre-aged and reworked when originating from eroded catchment soils or from organic-rich sediment rocks in the catchment. In (paleo)soils, besides an inherited contribution from the catchment, they were formed on-site by local biomass during pedogenesis. Depending on the different relative contributions from these sources, the n-alkane signal from an FSPS shows variable age offsets between its formation and final deposition. During this study, we applied compound-class 14C dating to n-alkanes from an FSPS along the upper Alazani in eastern Georgia. Our results show that preheating the n-alkanes with 120 ∘C for 8 h before 14C dating effectively removed the shorter chains (<C25) that partly originate from n-alkanes from Jurassic black clay shales in the upper catchment. The remaining petrogenic contributions on the longer chains (≥C25) were corrected for by using a constant correction factor that was based on the n-alkane concentrations in a black clay shale sample from the upper catchment. Due to different degrees of pre-aging and reworking, the corrected leaf wax n-alkane ages still indicate relatively large age offsets between n-alkane formation and deposition: while intensively developed (paleo)soils showed no age offsets due to a dominance of leaf wax n-alkanes produced on-site, less intensively developed paleosols showed
much larger age offsets due to larger proportions of inherited leaf wax
n-alkanes from the fluvial parent material. Accordingly, age offsets in nonpedogenic
fluvial sediments were largest and strongly increased after
∼4 ka cal BP. The leaf wax n-alkane homolog distribution
from intensively developed (paleo)soils indicates a local dominance of
grasses and herbs throughout the Holocene, which was most likely caused by
anthropogenic activity. The leaf wax n-alkanes from fluvial sediments show a dominance of deciduous trees and shrubs as well as grasses and herbs in different parts of the catchment between ∼8 and ∼5.6 ka cal BP. Since no older deciduous tree- or shrub-derived n-alkanes were dated, this seems to confirm a delayed regional postglacial reforestation of parts of the catchment compared with western and central Europe.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
Reference54 articles.
1. Adamia, S., Alania, V., Chabukiani, A., Chichua, G., Enukidze, O., and
Sadradze, N.: Evolution of the Late Cenozoic basins of Georgia (SW Caucasus): A review, Geol. Soc. Lond. Spec. Publ., 340, 239–259, https://doi.org/10.1144/SP340.11, 2010. 2. Akhundov, T.: South Caucasus in the Neolithic and early Bronze Age: The
question of epochs and periods, in: A view from the highlands: Archaeological studies in honour of Charles Burney, edited by: Sagona, A., Ancient Near Eastern studies Supplement, 12, Peeters, Herent, 421–436, 2004. 3. Blair, N. E. and Aller, R. C.: The fate of terrestrial organic carbon in the
marine environment, Annu. Rev. Mar. Sci., 4, 401–423,
https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-marine-120709-142717, 2012. 4. Bliedtner, M., Zech, R., Kühn, P., Schneider, B., Zielhofer, C., and
von Suchodoletz, H.: The potential of leaf wax biomarkers from fluvial
soil-sediment sequences for paleovegetation reconstructions – Upper Alazani
River, central southern Greater Caucasus (Georgia), Quaternary Sci. Rev., 196, 62–79, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2018.07.029, 2018a. 5. Bliedtner, M., Schäfer, I. K., Zech, R., and von Suchodoletz, H.: Leaf
wax n-alkanes in modern plants and topsoils from eastern Georgia (Caucasus)
– implications for reconstructing regional paleovegetation, Biogeosciences,
15, 3927–3936, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-15-3927-2018, 2018b.
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|