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Adaptation of a flow-through leaching procedure for Mg/Ca paleothermometry

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Title Adaptation of a flow-through leaching procedure for Mg/Ca paleothermometry
Names Benway, H. M. (creator)
Haley, Brian A. (creator)
Klinkhammer, Gary P. (creator)
Mix, Alan C. (creator)
Date Issued 2003-02-08 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract Mg/Ca ratios in planktonic foraminifera reflect calcification temperatures and are thus useful for sea
surface temperature (SST) reconstructions. Despite the obvious utility of this paleoceanographic tracer,
problems of dissolution, gametogenic calcification, and contaminant phases have thus far limited
confidence in Mg/Ca-based reconstructions. Here we show strong evidence of Mg heterogeneity in
foraminiferal calcite by sequentially measuring the composition of different forms of calcite (ontogenetic,
gametogenic, diagenetic) in the same shells, while monitoring and removing contaminant phases. A new
flow-through method combines chromatographic technology and inductively coupled plasma mass
spectrometry (ICP-MS) in a series of cleaning and dissolution reactions monitored continuously with time-resolved
analysis (TRA). This combination of slow, controlled dissolution and TRA provides a complete
elemental description of contaminant phases and sorts the cleaned calcium carbonate based on dissolution
sensitivity. Examination of partially dissolved shells with electron microscopy suggests that the flow-through
method simulates the natural dissolution sequence and effectively separates the different calcite
domains within a single foraminiferal shell. Heterogeneity of Mg/Ca in foraminiferal calcite is clearly
demonstrated in flow-through analysis. Foraminiferal shells have initially high Mg levels that decrease
steadily throughout dissolution. Later dissolution yields lower Mg/Ca, which is likely due to a combination
of subsurface calcification and biomineralization effects. Mg/Ca ratios from the most dissolution-sensitive
(high-Mg) portions of surface-dwelling species in core tops are used to calculate calcification temperatures.
A comparison of late Holocene core top data with World Ocean Atlas SST data indicates that the flow-through
method does yield viable SST estimates. Furthermore, a depth transect in the eastern tropical
Pacific suggests that this approach provides the opportunity to extract initial calcification temperatures
despite partial dissolution of foraminiferal shells.
Genre Article
Topic Mg/Ca
Identifier Benway, H. M., B. A. Haley, G. P. Klinkhammer, and A. C. Mix, Adaptation of a flow-through leaching procedure for Mg/Ca paleothermometry, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 4(2), 8403, 2003.

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