Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Climate reconstruction from paired oxygen-isotope analyses of chironomid larval head capsules and endogenic carbonate (Hawes Water, UK) - Potential and problems

Lombino, Alex; Atkinson, Tim; Brooks, Stephen J.; Gröcke, Darren R.; Holmes, Jonathan; Jones, Vivienne J.; Marshall, Jim D.; Nierop, Klaas G.J.; Thomas, Zoë

Climate reconstruction from paired oxygen-isotope analyses of chironomid larval head capsules and endogenic carbonate (Hawes Water, UK) - Potential and problems Thumbnail


Authors

Alex Lombino

Tim Atkinson

Stephen J. Brooks

Jonathan Holmes

Vivienne J. Jones

Jim D. Marshall

Klaas G.J. Nierop

Zoë Thomas



Abstract

Temperature and the oxygen isotopic composition (δ18O) of meteoric water are both important palaeoclimatic variables, but separating their influences on proxies such as the δ18O of lake carbonates is often problematic. The large temperature variations that are known to have occurred in the northern mid-latitudes during the Late Glacial make this interval an excellent test for a novel approach that combines oxygen-isotope analyses of chironomid larval head capsules with co-occurring endogenic carbonate. We apply this approach to a Late Glacial lake sediment sequence from Hawes Water (NW England). Oxygen-isotope values in chironomid head capsules show marked variations during the Late Glacial that are similar to the oxygen isotope record from endogenic carbonate. However, summer temperature reconstructions based on the paired isotope values and fractionation between chironomids and calcite yield values between −20 and −4 °C, which are unrealistic and far lower than reconstructions based on chironomid assemblages at the same site. The composition of a limited number of samples of fossil chironomid larval head capsules determined using Pyrolysis gas-chromatography mass spectrometry indicates the presence of aliphatic geopolymers, suggesting that diagenetic alteration of the head capsules has systematically biased the isotope-derived temperature estimates. However, a similar trend in the isotope records of the two sources suggests that a palaeoclimate signal is still preserved.

Citation

Lombino, A., Atkinson, T., Brooks, S. J., Gröcke, D. R., Holmes, J., Jones, V. J., …Thomas, Z. (2021). Climate reconstruction from paired oxygen-isotope analyses of chironomid larval head capsules and endogenic carbonate (Hawes Water, UK) - Potential and problems. Quaternary Science Reviews, 270, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.107160

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 21, 2021
Online Publication Date Sep 2, 2021
Publication Date Oct 15, 2021
Deposit Date Dec 17, 2021
Publicly Available Date Sep 2, 2022
Journal Quaternary Science Reviews
Print ISSN 0277-3791
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 270
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.107160

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations