Title of article :
Effect of mineralogy, salinity, and temperature on Li/Ca and Li isotope composition of calcium carbonate
Author/Authors :
Marriott، نويسنده , , Caedmon S. and Henderson، نويسنده , , Gideon M. and Crompton، نويسنده , , Rebecca and Staubwasser، نويسنده , , Michael and Shaw، نويسنده , , Sam، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Li/Ca and Li isotope ratios in marine and freshwater calcium carbonates are potential tracers of past environmental variables such as weathering intensity and temperature. To make use of their potential requires full understanding of the fractionation of Li/Ca and 7Li/6Li during growth of calcium carbonate. This study improves such understanding with two sets of new measurements: on inorganic calcites and aragonites precipitated over a range of salinity and on the test of benthic foraminifera formed at a range of temperatures.
in inorganic calcite increases by a factor of four as salinity increases from 10‰ to 50‰. Inorganic aragonite demonstrates no significant change in Li/Ca over the same salinity range. The difference in behaviour is probably due to the incorporation mechanism of Li. Substitution of Li+ in the Ca2+ site in aragonite makes growth-solution Li/Ca the key variable, while interstitial incorporation of Li+ in calcite means that the growth-solution Li concentration is more important. Compared to the growth solution, 7Li/6Li is ≈3‰ lower in calcite and ≈11‰ lower in aragonite, with no relationship to salinity for either mineral. Similar isotope fractionation to these inorganic experiments are observed for biogenically produced calcite (foraminifera) and aragonite (corals). This suggests little biological control during Li incorporation into biogenic calcium carbonates. The difference in fractionation between calcite and aragonite is consistent with an equilibrium isotope fractionation reflecting different incorporation mechanisms for Li into the two minerals.
amples of the benthic foraminifera Uvigerina, precipitated over a temperature range of 14 °C, have Li/Ca ranging from 18.5 to 13.1 μmol/mol. The ratio is inversely related to temperature with a sensitivity of 2.5±0.8% per °C. This sensitivity is similar to that observed in a previous study of foraminiferal Li/Ca, but about half that observed during inorganic calcite growth. The large variability in both Li/Ca and temperature sensitivity exhibited between various foraminifera species suggests an additional control on calcite Li/Ca apart from those of salinity and temperature observed in this study.
Keywords :
lithium isotopes , Carbonate minerals , Trace elements , Foraminifera
Journal title :
Chemical Geology
Journal title :
Chemical Geology