North Flinders Reef (Coral Sea, Australia) Porites sp. corals as a candidate Global boundary Stratotype Section and Point for the Anthropocene series

Author:

Zinke Jens1ORCID,Cantin Neal E2,DeLong Kristine L3ORCID,Palmer Kylie3,Boom Arnoud1,Hajdas Irka4ORCID,Duprey Nicolas5,Martínez-García Alfredo5,Rose Neil L6,Roberts Sarah L6,Yang Handong6,Roberts Lucy R6,Cundy Andrew B7,Gaca Pawel7,Milton James Andy7,Frank Grace2,Cox Adam1,Sampson Sue1,Tyrrell Genevieve1,Agg Molly1,Turner Simon D6

Affiliation:

1. University of Leicester, UK

2. Australian Institute of Marine Science, Australia

3. Louisiana State University, USA

4. ETH Zurich, Laboratory of Ion Beam Physics, Switzerland

5. Max Planck Institute for Chemistry (Otto Hahn Institute), Germany

6. University College London, London

7. University of Southampton, UK

Abstract

Corals are unique in the suite of proposed Anthropocene Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) archives, as living organisms that produce aragonite exoskeletons preserved in the geological record that contain highly accurate and precise (<±1 year) internal chronologies. The GSSP candidate site North Flinders Reef in the Coral Sea (Australia) is an offshore oceanic reef, and therefore less vulnerable to local human influences than those closer to the coast. Here, we present geochemical records from two Porites sp. corals sampled at an annual to pluri-annual (i.e. 3–5 years) resolution that shows clear global and regional human impacts. Atmospheric nuclear bomb testing by-products (14C,239+240Pu) show a clear increase in the Flinders Reef corals coincident with well-dated nuclear testing operations. By contrast, the radionuclides 241Am and 137Cs are present at low or undetectable levels, as are spheroidal carbonaceous fly-ash particles. Coral δ13C shows centennial variability likely influenced by growth effects in the 18th century and with a progression to lower values starting in 1880 CE and accelerating post-1970 CE. The latter may be related to the Suess effect resulting from 13C-depleted fossil fuel burning. Coral δ15N decreased between 1710 and 1954 CE with a reversal post-1954 CE. Coral temperature proxies indicate prominent centennial variability with equally warm conditions in the 18th and end of 20th century. However, the exact mechanisms responsible for the mid-20th century changes in these parameters need to be scrutinised in further detail. Plain Language summary: This work proposes a candidate natural archive for the official marker of the Anthropocene that geologists will use to mark this important interval in time. Our candidate is a live coral from North Flinders Reef in the Coral Sea (Australia), located 150 km east of the Great Barrier Reef, a location that is remote from direct local human influences. Corals are a unique archive of tropical ocean change because they incorporate the geochemical signature from seawater into their limestone skeleton during their long life-spans. Here we investigated a number of geochemical markers in yearly growth layers of the corals to define several markers for the Anthropocene based on changes in temperature, water chemistry, chemicals from pollution and fertilisers, radioactive products from nuclear bomb testing, and by-products from burning fossil fuels. We have detected clear human influences in several of these markers.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Australian Research Council

Royal Society Wolfson Foundation

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Haus der Kulturen der Welt Berlin

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Geology,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference64 articles.

1. Beaman RJ (2010) Project 3DGBR: A high-resolution depth model or the Great Barrier Reef and Coral Sea. Marine and Tropical Sciences Research Facility (MTSRF) DoEE (2018): Australia’s Network of Marine Parks Geoscience Australia (2005): Australian Bathymetry and Topography.

2. The Great Barrier Reef: The Chronological Record from a New Borehole

3. The isotopic signature of fallout plutonium in the North Pacific

4. Interdecadal climate variability in the Coral Sea since 1708 A.D.

5. Surviving Coral Bleaching Events: Porites Growth Anomalies on the Great Barrier Reef

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