Paper No. 51
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:00 PM
DEVELOPING HIGH PRECISION TIME SERIES OF ISOTOPIC RECORDS ON SPELEOTHEMS FROM EASTERN TENNESSEE
Speleothem-based records of paleo-environmental changes have been developed in many karst regions around the globe. However, no such records exist from Tennessee ’s world-renown cave systems. Eastern Tennessee probably has the highest cave density in North America . The climatic fluctuations in the region would reflect cyclic glacial advances and retreats. Recently, we started to process speleothems from Morril's Cave (aka Worley's Cave), eastern Tennessee . Twenty five speleothem samples were collected from the cave. The chronology of 16 samples was determined by U-Th dates. Preliminary uranium-series ages demonstrated that these speleothem samples probably continuously grew during ~400 ka to ~340 ka and ~230 ka to ~50 ka. Stable isotopic analyses were done with a sampling interval of 0.5 mm on one speleothem spanning continuously from ~400 ka to ~340 ka. The isotopic record is consistent with marine and ice core records, but also featured with prominent millennial-scale variations. The primary objective of this research project is to assemble a calibrated, highly-resolved composite record of decadal- to centennial-scale climate change from the mid-latitudes of eastern North America that extends across the last six interglacial/glacial cycles.