Document of bibliographic reference 369106

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book/Monograph
Type of document
Dissertation
BibLvlCode
M
Title
The use of stable isotope analysis to reconstruct paleoenvironments and paleoclimate in the late Pleistocene (MIS 5) of the North Sea Basin
Abstract
Stable isotope analysis is a widely used method for reconstructing the paleoenvironment and -climate. Isotope composition of foraminiferal tests and mollusc shells are adequate proxies as their isotope uptake for shell carbonate formation is representative for the isotopic composition of ambient water. The oxygen and carbon isotope ratios can provide information about (changes in) paleotemperature and paleosalinity. For paleosalinity, a mixing line framework with freshwater and seawater endmembers can provide insights into the temporal variability of paleosalinity. Here we show that reconstructing paleoenvironment and paleoclimate in MIS5 of the North Sea Basin with stable isotopes is taxon dependent. We found that the isotopic composition of mollusc shells largely reflects temperature of ambient waters. Furthermore, we found that the isotopic composition of foraminifera shells of Ammonia beccarii is largely influenced by salinity. Reconstruction shows a shift during MIS5e in the Amersfoort Basin from polyhaline to euhaline conditions and back with an increasing impact of the Rhine River, and a three-stage temperature evolution during MIS5a in the southern North Sea. This study is anticipated to be a starting point and recommendation for further reconstruction of paleoenvironment and -climate of MIS5 in the North Sea Basin.
Bibliographic citation
Modderman, K. (2023). The use of stable isotope analysis to reconstruct paleoenvironments and paleoclimate in the late Pleistocene (MIS 5) of the North Sea Basin. MSc Thesis. Utrecht University: Utrecht. 43 pp.
Topic
Marine
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Koen Modderman

Document metadata

date created
2023-11-27
date modified
2023-11-27