2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 19
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

AN EARLY-MID HOLOCENE PALEOTEMPERATURE RECORD FROM FLUID INCLUSION STUDY ON A STALAGMITE FROM JACKLAH JILL CAVE, VANCOUVER ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA


ZHANG, Ren, SCHWARCZ, Henry P. and FORD, Derek C., School of Geography and Earth Sciences, McMaster University, 1280 Main St. West, BSB-235, Hamilton, ON L8S 4K1, Canada, zhangr7@mcmaster.ca

We report a new carbonate speleothem fluid inclusion extraction method in which continuous helium flow during crushing allows the transfer of the liberated inclusion waters without isotopic fractionation. The new technique can analyze <0.2μl water, which may further reduce sample size and accordingly increase temporal resolution. Replication error of δD on identical aliquots is better than ±2‰, which is equivalent to an uncertainty of ±1oC in paleotemperature if there is no error in deuterium excess—an assumption usually considered to be valid for the Holocene. A 5000-year paleotemperature record was obtained on a 30cm tall calcite stalagmite that grew between 10.8-5.2 ka ago in Jacklah Jill Cave, Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. The validity of the paleotemperature record has been verified by excellent agreement between the reconstructed long-term T-δD correlation and the modern dδD/dT value derived from the GNIP database. Overall, the early Holocene was about 3-5 oC warmer than today, but there was a longer-lived cooling trend from ca. 9.0 to 7.5 ka ago, which was interrupted by a short-lived alpine glacier advance around 7.7 ka ago. The mid Holocene, characterized by gentle temperature fluctuations, had an average value of 7.1±1.2 oC, which is almost the same as today's value of 6.9 oC, suggesting regional climate had stabilized by then.