4.4 Article

Intra-annual isotopic variation in Venericardia bivalves: Implications for early eocene temperature, seasonality, and salinity on the US Gulf Coast

Journal

JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH
Volume 74, Issue 1, Pages 7-19

Publisher

SEPM-SOC SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
DOI: 10.1306/052803740007

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Stable-isotope compositions were determined for 166 microsamples of aragonite from the bivalve Venericardia hatcheplata collected from the early Eocene Hatchetigbee Formation in southwestern Alabama. These were milled from two transects, one across the left valve hinge plate and one along the growth axis. Amplitude and spacing of about nine years of seasonal variation is very regular, with peaks and troughs occurring at equal intervals and reaching consistent compositions except for some attenuation in both parameters during the last three years of life. Assuming an ice-free world with an ocean delta(18)O value of about -1.0parts per thousand, and using the aragonite-water fractionation equation of Grossman and Ku (1986), isotope-derived paleotemperatures are somewhat warmer (similar to 31 degreesC) than temperatures presently recorded anywhere on the Earth's surface, and exhibit significantly greater seasonality (similar to 12 degreesC) than regions with the warmest mean temperatures. It is therefore likely that these very negative and extremely seasonal delta(18)O values reflect the influence of seasonal discharge of O-18-depleted river water into the Eocene Gulf of Mexico. Comparison of these data with (1) mean annual temperature versus seasonal temperature variation from modern climates, (2) isotopic compositions reported from coeval molluscs, and (3) isotopic compositions of global meteoric precipitation and United States rivers suggest that mean annual temperature along this portion of the Eocene Gulf coast was in fact about 26 degreesC, and varied seasonally from a winter low of about 25 degreesC to a summer high of 27 degreesC. Differences between these temperatures and those derived from direct conversion of oxygen isotope values reflect the influence of seasonal influx of fresh (delta(18)O value of similar to -4.7parts per thousand) water. During deposition of this portion of the Hatchetigbee Formation, ambient water delta(18)O values varied between winter values of about -1.0parts per thousand to less than -3.5parts per thousand during the summer. Freshwater discharge served to seasonally depress salinity to 10 to 16 ppt along this part of the Gulf coast. The early Eocene was perhaps the warmest time interval of the past 65 million years, primarily manifest as lower equator-to-pole temperature gradients. In this context, an Eocene mean annual temperature of - 26 degreesC is not much higher than modern surface water temperatures of about 24 degreesC at 29degrees30'N, immediately off the modern Alabama coast. Seasonal temperature variation of - 2 to 3 degreesC about a mean of 26 degreesC, however, is significantly lower than that off coastal Alabama (19 to 30 degreesC), and occurs only along modern equatorial coasts at latitudes less than 19degrees. This implies that early Eocene tropical conditions extended well beyond modern latitudinal limits.

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