Abstract
This study presents subdaily resolved chemical records through fossil mollusk shell calcite. Trace element profiles resolve periodic variability across ~40-μm-thin daily growth laminae in a Campanian Torreites sanchezi rudist bivalve. These high-resolution records are combined with seasonally resolved stable isotope and trace element records that allow shell-chemical variability to be discussed on both seasonal and daily scale. A combination of layer counting, spectral analysis of chemical cyclicity and chemical layer counting shows that the rudist precipitated 372 daily laminae per year, demonstrating that length of day has increased since the Late Cretaceous, as predicted by astronomical models. This new approach to determine the length of a solar day in geologic history through multiproxy chemical records at subdaily resolution yields considerably more control on the uncertainty of this estimate. Daily chemical variability exceeds seasonal variability in our records, and cannot be explained by diurnal temperature changes. Instead, we postulate that rudist shell chemistry is driven on a daily scale by changes in light intensity. These results together with those of stable isotope analyses provide strong evidence that Torreites rudists had photosymbionts. Bivalve shell calcite generally preserves well. Therefore, this study paves the way for daily-scale reconstructions of paleoenvironment and sunlight intensity on geologic time scales from bivalve shells, potentially allowing researchers to bridge the gap between climate and weather reconstructions. Such reconstructions improve shell chronologies, document environmental change in warm ecosystems, and widen our understanding of the magnitude of short-term changes during greenhouse climates.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e2019PA003723 |
Number of pages | 21 |
Journal | Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology |
Volume | 35 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Feb 2020 |
Externally published | Yes |
Funding
The authors would like to thank Peter Skelton and two anonymous reviewers for their helpful suggestions for improving this manuscript, as well as Ellen Thomas for additional comments and for guiding the review process as editor. We thank J. Jagt and the Natuurhistorisch Museum Maastricht for loan of the Torreites sanchezi shell (NHMM 2014 052). D. Verstraeten and B. Lippens (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) are thanked for technical and analytical assistance. We thank J. Vellekoop (KU Leuven) and D. de Vleeschouwer (MARUM, Bremen) for their advice on writing. Funding for this research was provided by Research Foundation Flanders (FWO, IWT700, FWOTM782, and G017217N), the FWO Hercules Foundation (HERC9, HERC24, and HERC1309), and VUB Strategic Research to P.C. A&MS-UGent acknowledges Teledyne Cetac Technologies for financial and logistic support.
Keywords
- bivalve
- Cretaceous
- paleoenvironment
- sclerochronology
- stable isotope ratios
- trace element