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Lipid biomarker distributions in Oligocene and Miocene sediments from the Ross Sea region, Antarctica: implications for use of biomarker proxies in glacially-influenced settings

Lipid biomarker distributions in Oligocene and Miocene sediments from the Ross Sea region, Antarctica: implications for use of biomarker proxies in glacially-influenced settings
Lipid biomarker distributions in Oligocene and Miocene sediments from the Ross Sea region, Antarctica: implications for use of biomarker proxies in glacially-influenced settings
Biomarker-based climate proxies enable climate and environmental reconstructions for regions where other paleoclimatic approaches are unsuitable. The Antarctic Cenozoic record consists of widely varying lithologies, deposited in rapidly changing depositional settings, with large lateral variations. Previous sedimentological and microfossil studies indicate that the incorporation of reworked older material frequently occurs in these sediments, highlighting the need for an assessment of biomarker distribution across a range of depositional settings and ages to assess the role reworking may have on biomarker-based reconstructions. Here, we compare sedimentary facies with the distribution of n-alkanes and hopanoids within a terrestrial outcrop, two glaciomarine cores and a deep sea core, spanning the Late Oligocene to Miocene in the Ross Sea. Comparisons are also made with n-alkane distributions in Eocene glacial erratics and Mesozoic Beacon Supergroup sediments, which are both potential sources of reworked material. The dominant n-alkane chain length shifts from n-C29 to n-C27 between the Late Eocene and the Oligocene. This shift is likely due to changing plant community composition and the plastic response of n-alkanes to climate cooling. Samples from glaciofluvial environments onshore, and subglacial and ice-proximal environments offshore are more likely to display reworked n-alkane distributions, whereas, samples from lower-energy, lacustrine and ice-distal marine environments predominantly yield immature/contemporaneous n-alkanes. These findings emphasise that careful comparisons with sedimentological and paleontological indicators are essential when applying and interpreting n-alkane-based and other biomarker-based proxies in glacially-influenced settings.
Paleoclimate Antarctica -Alkanes Biomarkers Hopanoids Reworking
0031-0182
71-89
Duncan, Bella
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McKay, Robert
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Bendle, James
e506d1cd-4b05-4a83-9496-b71e0f873216
Naish, Timothy
8d054e2b-11d4-4d54-8554-3d9bb551de05
Inglis, Gordon N.
1651196d-916c-43cb-b5a0-9b3ecaf5d664
Moossen, Heiko
51ca5f42-77b0-491d-99cb-58437d58b15a
Levy, Richard
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Ventura, G. Todd
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Lewis, Adam
ec82fc57-cac5-4657-8cf8-29e3bef8cd64
Chamberlain, Beth
2bdf2322-3652-4c68-a4d8-583ee343975b
Walker, Carrie
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Duncan, Bella
eb5cd9b0-ba30-46fd-b4b8-da24e0ec93b3
McKay, Robert
11eaad44-da67-46e3-9b47-d9464a4ae0a1
Bendle, James
e506d1cd-4b05-4a83-9496-b71e0f873216
Naish, Timothy
8d054e2b-11d4-4d54-8554-3d9bb551de05
Inglis, Gordon N.
1651196d-916c-43cb-b5a0-9b3ecaf5d664
Moossen, Heiko
51ca5f42-77b0-491d-99cb-58437d58b15a
Levy, Richard
bf048fb8-4f59-4c95-b9d4-bef2454bb7c1
Ventura, G. Todd
34b52e8a-d825-4a88-bca9-56d442498198
Lewis, Adam
ec82fc57-cac5-4657-8cf8-29e3bef8cd64
Chamberlain, Beth
2bdf2322-3652-4c68-a4d8-583ee343975b
Walker, Carrie
05c36ad0-16e9-40f4-8b6f-c52d69b0e26f

Duncan, Bella, McKay, Robert, Bendle, James, Naish, Timothy, Inglis, Gordon N., Moossen, Heiko, Levy, Richard, Ventura, G. Todd, Lewis, Adam, Chamberlain, Beth and Walker, Carrie (2019) Lipid biomarker distributions in Oligocene and Miocene sediments from the Ross Sea region, Antarctica: implications for use of biomarker proxies in glacially-influenced settings. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 516, 71-89. (doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2018.11.028).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Biomarker-based climate proxies enable climate and environmental reconstructions for regions where other paleoclimatic approaches are unsuitable. The Antarctic Cenozoic record consists of widely varying lithologies, deposited in rapidly changing depositional settings, with large lateral variations. Previous sedimentological and microfossil studies indicate that the incorporation of reworked older material frequently occurs in these sediments, highlighting the need for an assessment of biomarker distribution across a range of depositional settings and ages to assess the role reworking may have on biomarker-based reconstructions. Here, we compare sedimentary facies with the distribution of n-alkanes and hopanoids within a terrestrial outcrop, two glaciomarine cores and a deep sea core, spanning the Late Oligocene to Miocene in the Ross Sea. Comparisons are also made with n-alkane distributions in Eocene glacial erratics and Mesozoic Beacon Supergroup sediments, which are both potential sources of reworked material. The dominant n-alkane chain length shifts from n-C29 to n-C27 between the Late Eocene and the Oligocene. This shift is likely due to changing plant community composition and the plastic response of n-alkanes to climate cooling. Samples from glaciofluvial environments onshore, and subglacial and ice-proximal environments offshore are more likely to display reworked n-alkane distributions, whereas, samples from lower-energy, lacustrine and ice-distal marine environments predominantly yield immature/contemporaneous n-alkanes. These findings emphasise that careful comparisons with sedimentological and paleontological indicators are essential when applying and interpreting n-alkane-based and other biomarker-based proxies in glacially-influenced settings.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 November 2018
Published date: 15 February 2019
Keywords: Paleoclimate Antarctica -Alkanes Biomarkers Hopanoids Reworking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 437526
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/437526
ISSN: 0031-0182
PURE UUID: 58c3bee7-2867-4e11-b309-93e021c9170b
ORCID for Gordon N. Inglis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0032-4668

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Date deposited: 04 Feb 2020 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Bella Duncan
Author: Robert McKay
Author: James Bendle
Author: Timothy Naish
Author: Heiko Moossen
Author: Richard Levy
Author: G. Todd Ventura
Author: Adam Lewis
Author: Beth Chamberlain
Author: Carrie Walker

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