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Brachiopod shells are the most widely used geological archive for the reconstruction of the temperature and the oxygen isotope composition of Phanerozoic seawater. However, it is not conclusive whether brachiopods precipitate their shells in thermodynamic equilibrium. In this study, we investigated the potential impact of kinetic controls on the isotope composition of modern brachiopods by measuring the oxygen and clumped isotope compositions of their shells. Our results show that clumped and oxygen isotope compositions depart from thermodynamic equilibrium due to growth rate-induced kinetic effects. These departures are in line with incomplete hydration and hydroxylation of dissolved CO2. These findings imply that the determination of taxon-specific growth rates alongside clumped and bulk oxygen isotope analyses is essential to ensure accurate estimates of past ocean temperatures and seawater oxygen isotope compositions from brachiopods.
Abstract: Subaqueous carbonates from the Devils Hole caves (southwestern USA) provide a continuous Holocene to Pleistocene North American paleoclimate record. The accuracy of this record relies on two assumptions: That carbonates precipitated close to isotope equilibrium and that groundwater temperature did not change significantly in the last 570 thousand years. Here, we investigate these assumptions using dual clumped isotope thermometry. This method relies on simultaneous analyses of carbonate ∆47 and ∆48 values and provides information on the existence and extent of kinetic isotope fractionation. Our results confirm the hypothesis that calcite precipitation occurred close to oxygen and clumped isotope equilibrium during the last half million years in Devils Hole. In addition, we provide evidence that aquifer temperatures varied by less than ±1°C during this interval. Thus, the Devils Hole calcite δ18O time series exclusively represents changes in groundwater δ18O values. Plain Language Summary: The oxygen isotope composition of cave carbonates records changes in Earth's climate. However, the reliability of such records depends on how stable the carbonate precipitation environment was. Here, we use a novel method called dual clumped isotope thermometry that can provide simultaneous information on a carbonate's growth temperature and whether any additional fractionation processes affected its oxygen and clumped isotope signatures. Specifically, we investigated the Devils Hole caves, which provide a reference oxygen isotope time series for North America. We find that groundwater temperature did not change significantly in the last half-million years. Variations in the oxygen isotope composition of the deposited carbonates solely reflect variations in the oxygen isotope composition of the groundwater.
During my PhD, I was applying the clumped isotope technique to modern brachiopods and fossil belemnites, and I conducted methodological work. Carbonate clumped isotope thermometry is a tool to reconstruct carbonate precipitation temperatures. In contrast to oxygen isotope thermometry, i.e., the δ18O-thermometer, the carbonate clumped isotope thermometer does not require an estimate for the oxygen isotope composition of the seawater, as it considers the fractionation of isotopes exclusively amongst carbonate isotopologues. The ∆47 value of a carbonate expresses the abundance of the 13C–18O bond bearing carbonate isotopologue, within the carbonate, relative to its random distribution. In thermodynamic equilibrium, the ∆47 value of a given carbonate is solely a function of the carbonate precipitation temperature. However, kinetic isotope fractionations, i.e., vital effects, driven by diffusion, pH or incomplete oxygen isotope exchange between water and dissolved inorganic carbonate species can cause the carbonate to be precipitated with isotopic compositions that are offset from those predicted for thermodynamic equilibrium.
Brachiopods serve as important geochemical archives of past climate conditions. To investigate the nature and significance of kinetic controls on brachiopod shell δ18O and ∆47 values, in collaboration with the BASE-LiNE Earth ITN, I analysed the bulk and clumped isotope compositions of eighteen modern brachiopod shells, collected from different geographic locations and water depths that cover a substantial range of growth temperatures. Growth temperatures and seawater δ18O values for each brachiopod were independently determined. Most of the analysed brachiopods exhibit combined offsets from clumped and oxygen isotope equilibrium, and there is a significant negative correlation between the offset values. The observed correlation slope between offset ∆47 and offset δ18O point to the importance of kinetic effects associated with Knudsen diffusion and incomplete hydration and hydroxylation of CO2 (aq), occurring during biomineralisation. The correlations between the growth rates of the analysed brachiopods and both the offset ∆47 and the offset δ18O values provide further arguments for the presence of kinetic effects. In conclusion, the oxygen and clumped isotope composition of modern brachiopod shells are affected by growth rate-induced kinetic effects that hinder their use for palaeoceanography.
Surface temperature is a fundamental parameter of Earth’s climate. Its evolution through time is commonly reconstructed using the oxygen isotope and the clumped isotope compositions of carbonate archives. However, reaction kinetics involved in the precipitation of carbonates can introduce inaccuracies in the derived temperatures. Here, we show that dual clumped isotope analyses, i.e., simultaneous ∆47 and ∆48 measurements on the single carbonate phase, can identify the origin and quantify the extent of these kinetic biases. Our results verify theoretical predictions and evidence that the isotopic disequilibrium commonly observed in speleothems and scleractinian coral skeletons is inherited from the dissolved inorganic carbon pool of their parent solutions. Further, we show that dual clumped isotope thermometry can achieve reliable palaeotemperature reconstructions, devoid of kinetic bias. Analysis of a belemnite rostrum implies that it precipitated near isotopic equilibrium and confirms the warmer-than-present temperatures during the Early Cretaceous at southern high latitudes.