
Grain size control on Sr‐Nd isotope provenance studies and impact on paleoclimate reconstructions: An example from deep‐sea sediments offshore NW Africa
Author(s) -
Meyer Inka,
Davies Gareth R.,
Stuut JanBerend W.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2010gc003355
Subject(s) - geology , terrigenous sediment , provenance , paleoclimatology , weathering , monsoon , sedimentary rock , sediment , aeolian processes , geochemistry , oceanography , climate change , geomorphology
Five sediment cores from offshore NW Africa were analyzed for strontium and neodymium isotope ratios to reconstruct temporal variations in continental weathering regimes. Sediments were taken from three time slices with well‐known and distinctive environmental conditions: present‐day (dry and warm), ∼6 ka (wet and warm), and ∼12 ka (dry and cold). Terrigenous sediment samples were split into two size fractions to distinguish between the two dominant transport mechanisms offshore NW Africa: fluvial (0–10 μ m) and aeolian (10–40 μ m). Sr isotope data record evidence of marked grain size control with higher isotopic ratios in the fine fraction. In contrast, ɛ Nd values are largely unaffected by grain size. Minor variability in Nd isotope data at each sampling site indicates near constant sources of terrigenous matter over the last ∼12 ka. Variations in Sr isotope ratios are interpreted to reflect major changes in the evaporation‐precipitation balance. We suggest that the Sr‐Nd isotope data record a latitudinal shift of the northern limit of the African rainbelt and associated wind systems causing changes in the humidity and rate of chemical weathering over NW Africa. While hyperarid conditions prevailed ∼12 ka, more humid conditions and intensified monsoonal rainfall at ∼6 ka resulted in greater breakdown of easily weathered K‐bearing phases and increased 87 Sr/ 86 Sr in the detritus. In late Holocene times the monsoonal circulation diminished resulting in a return to arid conditions. Our results clearly show that it is of vital importance in paleoenvironmental studies to carry out isotopic analyses on individual sediment fractions that were carried to the studied deposition site by distinct sediment transport mechanisms. If isotopic analyses are carried out on bulk sediments, the observed variability in isotopic values most likely represents changes in the particle size and mixing proportions of the sediment subpopulations.