Rationale: CO is the main driver of many chemical processes in cave environments. Understanding CO fluxes in a given cave system through monitoring campaigns has become a standard procedure in a wide variety of fields such as paleoclimatology or show cave management. However, conventional methods lack the resolution of isotopic data to capture many transient processes occurring in caves.

Methods: A novel approach using isotope ratio infrared spectrometry (IRIS) to monitor cave air pCO , δ C and δ O values in situ was tested and compared with conventional monitoring methods (handheld pCO meter and discrete cave air samples for conventional isotope ratio mass spectrometry). This also involved the development of a field-deployable experimental setup to operate the equipment in rough cave environments.

Results: Comparison between data obtained by means of a Thermo Fisher Scientific Delta Ray IRIS instrument shows overall good agreement with conventional monitoring methods in terms of pCO and δ C values. In addition, IRIS allows the δ O values of cave air CO to be measured.

Conclusions: IRIS allows identification and tracking of processes at various timescales ranging from transient visitor impact on the cave atmosphere to seasonal trends in cave ventilation. However, the need for an uninterrupted power supply (110/220 V AC) and the relatively large dimensions of the equipment (698 × 1092 × 704 mm, 80 kg) limit the number of caves where deployment of the instrument is feasible. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/rcm.7859DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cave air
16
cave
10
isotope ratio
8
pco values
8
conventional monitoring
8
monitoring methods
8
iris allows
8
high-resolution isotopic
4
monitoring
4
isotopic monitoring
4

Similar Publications

Guilin is a world-famous karst area characterized by a high concentration of Ca in its groundwater. The disintegration of red clay plays a key role in the collapse of soil caves. In order to study the disintegration mechanisms of unsaturated red clay in Ca solution, disintegration tests were conducted using a self-made disintegration apparatus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate warming detected in caves of the European Alps.

Sci Rep

November 2024

Institute of Geology, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 52f, Innsbruck, 6020, Austria.

Cave air temperatures in four caves in the European Alps show statistically significant warming trends of about 0.2 °C per decade over the last two decades (2000-2020). These trends are about half as large as those observed outside and are characterized by a remarkable spatial and temporal consistency.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The island of Sri Lanka was part of the South Asian mainland for the majority of the past 115,000 years, and connected most recently during the Last Glacial Maximum via the now submerged Palk Strait. The degree to which rising sea levels shaped past human adaptations from the Pleistocene and into the mid to late Holocene in Sri Lanka has remained unclear, in part because the earliest reliable records of human occupation come from the island's interior, where cave sites have revealed occupation of tropical forest ecosystems extending back to 48 thousand years (ka). The island's earliest known open-air sites are all much younger in date, with ages beginning at 15 ka and extending across the Holocene.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two new species of the genus from southwestern Guizhou Province, China, are described. These are Wu, Luo, Xiao & Zhou, and Lan, Liu, Zhou & Zhou, from Maoying Town, Ziyun County, Guizhou Province, China. Wu, Luo, Xiao & Zhou, is distinguished from other hypogean species of the genus by having a combination of the following characteristics: body naked, scaleless, pigmented markings on surface of body, except ventral; eyes reduced, diameter 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pleistocene archaeology and environments of the Free State, South Africa.

Azania

August 2024

Geochronology and Geology Programme, Spanish National Research Centre for Human Evolution (CENIEH), Paseo Sierra de Atapuerca 3, 09002 Burgos, Spain.

Pleistocene climate variability is often seen as a major cause of much of the evidence observed in the archaeological and palaeontological record of Africa. While continent-wide climate systems play an important role when testing pan-African human evolutionary processes, a more focused perspective centred on specific ecosystems at a regional level allows a detailed assessment of the different spatiotemporal scales of the proxies used to reconstruct past environments and the ways humans adapted to their change over time. Recent research in the arid interior of South Africa has provided insights into the availability of freshwater in the open landscape, which is a fundamental factor for human survival and the spatiotemporal distribution of which may have had a major influence on adaptive strategies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!