4.7 Article

Neodymium isotopes and concentrations in aragonitic scleractinian cold-water coral skeletons - Modern calibration and evaluation of palaeo-applications

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 453, Issue -, Pages 146-168

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2017.01.022

Keywords

Neodymium isotopes; Rare earth elements; Cold-water corals; Seawater; Sediments; Drake Passage

Funding

  1. Grantham Institute of Climate Change and the Environment
  2. Marie Curie Reintegration grant [IRG 230828]
  3. Leverhulme Trust [RPG-398]
  4. NERC [NE/N001141/1]
  5. USGS-WHOI Co-operative agreement
  6. NSF-ANT [0636787, 80295700]
  7. European Research Council
  8. Leverhulme Trust
  9. Marie Curie Reintegration grant
  10. NOAA/UCAR Climate and Global Change Postdoctoral Fellowship
  11. Marie Curie International Outgoing fellowship [IOF 236962]
  12. NERC [NE/F016751/1, NE/N001141/1, NE/J021636/1, NE/N003861/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  13. Natural Environment Research Council [smru10001, NE/F016751/1, NE/N001141/1, NE/J021636/1, NE/N003861/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Cold-water corals (CWCs) are unique archives of mid-depth ocean chemistry and have been used successfully to reconstruct the neodymium(Nd) isotopic composition of seawater from a number of species. High and variable Nd concentrations in fossil corals however pose the question as to how Nd is incorporated into their skeletons. We here present new results on modern specimens of Desmophyllum dianthus, Balanophyllia malouinensis, and Flabellum curvatum, collected from the Drake Passage, and Madrepora oculata, collected from the North Atlantic. All modern individuals were either collected alive or uranium-series dated to be <500 years old for comparison with local surface sediments and seawater profiles. Modern coral Nd isotopic compositions generally agree with ambient seawater values, which in turn are consistent with previously published seawater analyses, supporting small vertical and lateral Nd isotope gradients in modern Drake Passage waters. Two Balanophyllia malouinensis specimens collected live however deviate by up to 0.6 epsilon units from ambient seawater. We therefore recommend that this species should be treated with caution for the reconstruction of past seawater Nd isotopic compositions. Seventy fossil Drake Passage CWCs were furthermore analysed for their Nd concentrations, revealing a large range from 7.3 to 964.5 ng/g. Samples of the species D. dianthus and Caryophyllia spp. show minor covariation of Nd with Th-232 content, utilised to monitor contaminant phases in cleaned coral aragonite. Strong covariations between Nd and Th concentrations are however observed in the species B. malouinensis and G. antarctica. In order to better constrain the source and nature of Nd in the cleaned aragonitic skeletons, a subset of sixteen corals was investigated for its rare earth element (REE) content, as well as major and trace element geochemistry. Our new data provide supporting evidence that the applied cleaning protocol efficiently removes contaminant lithogenic and ferromanganese oxyhydroxide phases. Mass balance calculations and seawater-like REE patterns rule out lithogenic and ferromanganese oxyhydroxide phases as a major contributor to elevated Nd concentrations in coral aragonite. Based on mass balance considerations, geochemical evidence, and previously published independent work by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, we suggest authigenic phosphate phases as a significant carrier of skeletal Nd. Such a carrier phase could explain sporadic appearance of high Nd concentrations in corals and would be coupled with seawater-derived Nd isotopic compositions, lending further confidence to the application of Nd isotopes as a water mass proxy in CWCs. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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