Journal article
Increased fluvial runoff terminated inorganic aragonite precipitation on the Northwest Shelf of Australia during the early Holocene
M Hallenberger, L Reuning, SJ Gallagher, S Back, T Ishiwa, BA Christensen, K Bogus
Scientific Reports | NATURE PORTFOLIO | Published : 2019
Abstract
Inorganic precipitation of aragonite is a common process within tropical carbonate environments. Across the Northwest Shelf of Australia (NWS) such precipitates were abundant in the late Pleistocene, whereas present-day sedimentation is dominated by calcitic bioclasts. This study presents sedimentological and geochemical analyses of core data retrieved from the upper 13 meters of IODP Site U1461 that provide a high-resolution sedimentary record of the last ~15 thousand years. Sediments that formed from 15 to 10.1 ka BP are aragonitic and characterised by small needles (<5 µm) and ooids. XRF elemental proxy data indicate that these sediments developed under arid conditions in which high marin..
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Grants
Awarded by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was performed on samples collected during IODP Expedition 356 (Indonesian Throughflow) and was supported by a grant of the German Science foundation (DFG, RE 2697/4-1). Funding was provided by the Australian IODP office and the ARC Basin Genesis Hub (IH130200012) to S.G. Janet Rethemeyer (University of Cologne) is thanked for generating <SUP>14</SUP>C age data and Uwe Wollenberg and Philipp Binger (RWTH Aachen University) for the support in creating XRD and thin-section data. EasyCompany is gratefully acknowledged for providing the EasyCore software under an Academic User License Agreement.