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Salinity of the Eocene Arctic Ocean from oxygen isotope analysis of fish bone carbonate
Author(s) -
Waddell Lindsey M.,
Moore Theodore C.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2007pa001451
Subject(s) - geology , carbonate , arctic , oceanography , salinity , paleogene , paleontology , sediment , coring , isotopes of oxygen , geochemistry , drilling , cretaceous , chemistry , mechanical engineering , engineering , organic chemistry
Stable isotope analysis was performed on the structural carbonate of fish bone apatite from early and early middle Eocene samples (∼55 to ∼45 Ma) recently recovered from the Lomonosov Ridge by Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 302 (the Arctic Coring Expedition). The δ 18 O values of the Eocene samples ranged from −6.84‰ to −2.96‰ Vienna Peedee belemnite, with a mean value of −4.89‰, compared to 2.77‰ for a Miocene sample in the overlying section. An average salinity of 21 to 25‰ was calculated for the Eocene Arctic, compared to 35‰ for the Miocene, with lower salinities during the Paleocene Eocene thermal maximum, the Azolla event at ∼48.7 Ma, and a third previously unidentified event at ∼47.6 Ma. At the Azolla event, where the organic carbon content of the sediment reaches a maximum, a positive δ 13 C excursion was observed, indicating unusually high productivity in the surface waters.

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