Journal
PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Volume 266, Issue 1-2, Pages 112-118Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2008.03.018
Keywords
Mediterranean Sea; sapropels; paleoproductivity; nitrogen isotopes; carbon isotopes; nitrogen fixation
Funding
- National Science Foundation
- IPOD countries
- Petroleum Research Fund
- American Chemical Society
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Comparison of the total nitrogen and organic carbon isotopic compositions of sediment sequences from the Tyrrhenian and Levantine Basins that contain three same-age sapropels reveals evidence of both similarities and differences in mid-Pleistocene sapropel-forming conditions in the western and eastern Mediterranean Sea. Total delta(15)N values systematically decrease at both locations from 5 parts per thousand in background sediments to -1 parts per thousand in the sapropels. The lower delta(15)N values signify that nitrogen fixation was important to the increased marine productivity implied by the higher organic carbon concentrations, which is consistent with widespread salinity stratification of surface waters when sapropels accumulated. Organic delta(13)C Values systematically increase from -25%. in the background sediments to -22%. in the sapropels at the Tyrrhenian site, which confirms that increased marine productivity accompanied sapropel deposition. In contrast, delta(13)C values decrease in the sapropel layers in the Levantine Basin even though organic carbon concentrations are higher in these sapropels. The different types of delta(13)C excursions associated with increased organic matter production at the two locations indicates a difference in the dissolved carbon pool from a combination of greater fluvial delivery of continental carbon and stronger recycling of organic matter in the Levantine Sea than in the Tyrrhenian Sea. This difference implies that the shifts to wetter climate during times of sapropel deposition were stronger in the eastern than in the western Mediterranean. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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