AI Article Synopsis

  • Reconstructing ancient hydrological conditions, like those in the Eocene period, helps compare real data with modern climate models.
  • Using fresh water dynamics from marginal seas, researchers analyze barium and strontium levels in river waters to track historical changes in river runoff.
  • The study reveals that barium to calcium and strontium isotopes in fossil bivalve shells can effectively indicate riverine input variations, showing steady fresh water influx in western Europe during the Eocene with significant regional differences.

Article Abstract

Reconstructing hydrological conditions of past warm periods, such as the Eocene 'hot house' provides empirical data to compare to state of the art climate models. However, reconstructing these changes in deep time is challenging, for example, given the complex interplay between evapotranspiration, precipitation and runoff. As a proxy for past changes in these hydrological systems, the dynamics of fresh water input into marginal seas can be used to identify the spatiotemporal distribution of riverine runoff. Elemental barium (Ba) and radiogenic strontium (Sr) are, depending on the amount of runoff and the background geology of the catchment area, typically enriched in river waters in comparison to seawater and can thus be utilized to determine changes in riverine fresh water discharge. Here, we use barium to calcium ratios (Ba/Ca) and radiogenic strontium isotopes (Sr/Sr) measured in fossil bivalve shells to reconstruct patterns of fresh water input into the paleo North Sea during the early to middle Eocene. Our reconstruction shows the potential of Ba/Ca and Sr/Sr to serve as proxies for riverine runoff and highlights the spatiotemporal complexity of Eocene hydrological conditions in western Europe. In particular, our results enable changes in riverine input along geological to perennial time scales for different coastal regions to be determined, revealing a steady influx of fresh water, but with distinct spatiotemporal differences.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11579471PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79779-0DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

fresh water
16
changes riverine
12
riverine input
8
north sea
8
bivalve shells
8
hydrological conditions
8
water input
8
riverine runoff
8
radiogenic strontium
8
riverine
5

Similar Publications

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!