<sup>18</sup>O analyses of bulk lipids as novel paleoclimate tool in loess research – a pilot study
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Published:2022-04-13
Issue:1
Volume:71
Page:83-90
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ISSN:2199-9090
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Container-title:E&G Quaternary Science Journal
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language:en
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Short-container-title:E&G Quaternary Sci. J.
Author:
Labahn Jakob, Bittner LucasORCID, Hirschmann Philip, Roettig Christopher-Bastian, Burghardt Diana, Glaser Bruno, Marković Slobodan B., Zech Michael
Abstract
Abstract. The analysis of the stable oxygen isotopes 18O and
16O has revolutionized paleoclimate research since the middle of the
last century. Particularly, δ18O of ice cores from Greenland
and Antarctica is used as a paleotemperature proxy, and δ18O of deep-sea
sediments is used as a proxy for global ice volume. Important terrestrial
archives to which δ18O as a paleoclimate proxy is successfully
applied are speleothems, lake sediments, or tree rings. By contrast, δ18O applications to loess–paleosol sequences (LPSs) are scarce. Here
we present a first continuous δ18O record (n=50) for the LPS
Crvenka in Serbia, southeastern Europe, spanning the last glacial–interglacial cycle
(since 145 ka). From a methodological point of view, we took
advantage of a recently proposed paleoclimate/paleohydrological proxy based on
bulk δ18O analyses of plant-derived lipids. The Crvenka δ18Obulk lipid values range between −10.2 ‰
and +23.0 ‰ and are systematically more positive in
the interglacial and interstadial (paleo-)soils corresponding to marine
oxygen-isotope stage (MIS) 1, 3, and 5, compared to the loess layers (MIS 2,
4, and 6). Our Crvenka δ18Obulk lipid record provides no
evidence for the occurrence of interstadials and stadials comparable to the
Dansgaard–Oeschger events known from the Greenland δ18Oice core records. Concerning the interpretation of our Crvenka δ18Obulk lipid record, plant-derived lipids such as fatty acids
and alcohols are certainly strongly influenced by climatic factors such as
temperature (via δ18Oprecipitation) and relative air
humidity (via 18O enrichment of leaf water due to evapotranspiration).
However, pool effects in the form of non-water-correlated lipids such as
sterols or the input of root-derived lipids need to be considered, too.
Similarly, the input of soil-microbial lipids and oxygen exchange reactions
represent uncertainties challenging quantitative paleoclimate/paleohydrological
reconstructions based on δ18Obulk lipid analyses from LPSs.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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