4.3 Article

Oxygen isotope analysis of diatom silica and authigenic calcite from Lake Pinarbasi, Turkey

Journal

JOURNAL OF PALEOLIMNOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 343-349

Publisher

KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL
DOI: 10.1023/A:1011169832093

Keywords

oxygen isotopes; diatom silica; calcite; Turkey; palaeoclimate

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There is increasing interest in the O-18/O-16 ratio of diatom silica, particularly for lakes where carbonates are absent. Here we compare the O-18/O-16 ratios preserved in diatom silica and authigenic calcite from an open, spring-fed, freshwater lake core from Turkey which spans marine oxygen isotope stage 3. The two sets of isotope data show contrasting trends in spite of their mutual dependence on the water O-18/O-16 ratio and lake-water temperature. The most likely explanation for this divergence is difference in seasonality of biological productivity mediated by the strongly continental climate of the Anatolian plateau. Diatom silica and authigenic calcite are precipitated from solutes in the lake-water at different times of the year. Diatom productivity follows a well-defined seasonal cycle, peaking first and most importantly in the spring and then in the autumn. The precipitation of calcite follows productivity by all forms of photosynthetic organisms that deplete CO2 but in most lakes this occurs during the summer months. The delta O-18(calcite) curve shows mean summer temperature maxima at ca. 30-35 and ca. 58 ka BP while the intervening data represent a period of relatively cool summers. The delta O-18(diatom) curve shows bipolar results (15-20 and 29-33 parts per thousand), which suggests that at least two discrete sources or processes contributed to the oxygen composition of the diatoms but probably involved a dilution mechanism to shift the isotopic values. The most likely source of depleted water is from snow entering the lake during the spring thaw. We infer that many authigenic calcite curves from regions with markedly seasonal climates may be temporally limited to a few summer months and that diatom silica provides complementary data on seasonally-specific water isotopic composition rather than a substitute for analyses based on carbonate.

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