日本地球惑星科学連合2024年大会

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[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 B (地球生命科学) » B-PT 古生物学・古生態学

[B-PT02] バイオミネラリゼーションと古環境プロキシー

2024年5月30日(木) 15:30 〜 17:00 301B (幕張メッセ国際会議場)

コンビーナ:豊福 高志(国立研究開発法人海洋研究開発機構)、Heinz Petra廣瀬 孝太郎(兵庫県立大学 自然・環境科学研究所)、de Nooijer Jan de Nooijer(Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research)、Chairperson:Petra Heinz廣瀬 孝太郎(兵庫県立大学 自然・環境科学研究所)、豊福 高志(国立研究開発法人海洋研究開発機構)、Lennart Jan de Nooijer(Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research)



15:45 〜 16:00

[BPT02-07] Nonthermal controls and seasonal biases in paleo-temperature proxies

*久保田 好美1奥野 淳一2矢野 恵佑3神山 翼4Sze Ling Ho5 (1.国立科学博物館、2.国立極地研究所 、3.統計数理研究所、4.お茶の水女子大学理学部情報科学科 、5.国立台湾大学)

キーワード:古水温プロキシ、アルケノン、Mg/Ca

The magnesium/calcium ratio (Mg/Ca) of planktonic foraminiferal shells and the unsaturation index of alkenone, an organic compound produced by haptophyte algae, have been widely used as seawater paleo-temperature indicators in paleoceanographic research. As various planktonic foraminifera species inhabit a wide range of water columns in the ocean, it is possible to reconstruct paleo-temperature at a greater variety of water depths and seasons/months if the characteristics of each species can be effectively utilized. Although these possibilities[SLH1] are recognized among paleoceanographic researchers, progress has been slow in exploring and realizing these possibilities. A previous study pointed out that the use of the Mg/Ca proxy has declined sharply, with ~50% fewer publications using planktonic foraminiferal Mg/Ca since 2011, caused by reliability issues of the Mg/Ca palaeothermometry. Several studies demonstrated that Mg/Ca depends on salinity and pH apart from water temperature. However, the reason why the use of Mg/Ca decreased is not only due to reliability issues but also because researchers cannot obtain realistic paleo-temperatures as expected. Mg/Ca is often published with the oxygen isotope ratio (δ18O). Still, there are many cases where data from the two proxies are inconsistent, especially for subsurface to middle-depth dwelling species.
Another potential bias of paleo-temperature proxies is the seasonal production of proxy carriers, an issue typically known as seasonality. However, the paleo-temperature proxy's seasonality has not yet been fully understood. Therefore, in this study, we compare the published paleo-temperature data for the late Holocene and instrumental data and discuss the seasonality of Mg/Ca and alkenone-based paleo-temperatures at selected 48 sites between 56ºS and 57ºN. Furthermore, we will examine the influence of seasonality on paleowater temperature reconstruction on the glacial-interglacial scale. In this presentation, we focus more on Mg/Ca but try to gain comprehensive insight into potential biases in the paleo-temperature proxies.