The Gibraltar Archive: a half million year reference record of rainfall isotopes in the western Mediterranean

Lead Research Organisation: Royal Holloway University of London
Department Name: Earth Sciences

Abstract

The Gibraltar reference record will be an important contribution to the study of the Earth's past climates, an intrinsically difficult topic because information about past conditions must be deduced from indirect evidence. We shall use speleothems from caves in Gibraltar, mainly calcite stalagmites and flowstones built up as precipitates from dripping water. Their chemical composition reflects climate, and each specimen provides a layered record which may cover any period from a few decades to tens of thousands of years. To construct a longer record multiple specimens must be accurately dated, so that overlaps can be put together to form a continuous sequence. Dating relies on the radioactive decay of traces of uranium to its daughter thorium over the time since the specimen was formed. For each speleothem we shall date the oldest and youngest layers and several in between, identifying any time gaps and constructing an age model which will correlate it with other specimens. We have already assembled an archive of 24 speleothems but require 200 more dates to form them into a full composite record. Our first aim is to obtain these dates.

Our second aim is to chemically analyse every layer and interpret the results in terms of changing climates in Gibraltar over the last half-million years. Mineral chemistry thus stands proxy for the true climate. This raises two issues - which chemical variables are signals of climate, and what aspects of climate are reflected by each one? We shall measure d18O and d13C - the ratios of different types of atoms in the elements oxygen and carbon - and the concentrations of Mg, Sr, Ba, Y and P. These are all known to be partially controlled by climate, but each is also influenced by local factors such as water flow through soil and rock, or CO2 levels in cave air. Our previous work in Gibraltar separated the local and climatic influences by monitoring the modern environment for 10 years. We found that d18O in each year's deposit tracked the d18O in rainwater. However the speleothems we shall now analyse formed under different climatic conditions from today, so we must deduce the influences of climate from the shifting relations among the chemical variables during each specimen's growth, using chemical principles plus the insights from cave monitoring. On ice age time-scales temperature affects d18O as much as rainfall, and to allow for this we shall use independent records of sea surface temperature, making the assumption that cave temperatures tracked the surrounding sea. In this way we shall isolate the signal of changing d18O in rainfall from the complex chemistry of our speleothems.

Stepping up in scale from Gibraltar and its caves, rainfall d18O varies across Europe, the Mediterranean and Middle East in a pattern reflecting atmospheric circulation and the transport of rain-bearing air. Gibraltar stands between the Mediterranean and Atlantic, the former being the source of winter rain from North Africa to central Asia and the latter the main moisture source for Europe. By comparing our d18O record with existing cave records in Israel, we shall reconstruct the uptake of Mediterranean water vapour through climatic shifts on all timescales from decades up to ice ages. Also of interest are millennial-scale shifts that occurred repeatedly during the last ice age and are recorded in cores through the Greenland ice sheet as episodes of higher d18O. They show up in Gibraltar speleothems, allowing us to infer changes in circulation from the gradients of d18O up the Atlantic.

Finally, we intend the Gibraltar archive to be a yard-stick for comparison with all paleoenvironmental and paleoceanographic data in the region. It will provide a high-resolution account of climate changes on land, at the junction of two oceans, and support an emerging framework of long records that in future may feed into computer modelling experiments that will deepen our understanding of ice age climates.

Planned Impact

Our project contributes to the scientific community's strategy to understand large-scale climate change and to make predictions of its impacts on human well-being in the future. Here we propose to construct a new precisely dated reference record of stable isotope climate proxies in calcite stalagmites from Gibraltar covering the past half-million years. These data will form part of an emerging framework of long palaeoclimate records that will support new insights into the complex and dynamic controls on precipitation across Europe under the full range of climates across Ice Age cycles. Ice ages, what we can expect, 'how soon' etc are intrinsically fascinating subjects for the wider public. The outputs of our work are ideally suited to graphical display and are popular topics for talks to schools and interest groups. The time scales that we work on allow modern climate change to be portrayed in a far wider perspective, allowing a much clearer appreciation of the true significance of the various projections of temperature, CO2 etc relative to known changes in the past. The impact of all this is all the greater since speleothem from south Iberia seem to preserve a clear and relatively unambiguous terrestrial record of the impact of the effects of rapid warming in arctic regions on the atmospheric circulation and rainfall patterns across Western Europe. This is ultimately related to ice sheet instability and changes in circulation in the North Atlantic, which again are topics that the wider public relate to, and all from a record taken from what to many is an unfamiliar environment. All of this creates a fascinating story that can be conveyed via outreach and the media, a clear example of how publicly funded research on seemingly arcane topics have deep relevance to society.

It can be said that improved knowledge of the precise timing of environmental change and its impact on regional climate will be of major value to oceanographers, global climate modelers, and also economists and development experts considering policy issues on water resources, flood defence, landslides and other natural hazards, agriculture and urban development, and there are several outcomes from this project that will contribute to knowledge about the drivers and timing of rapid climate change. These results may not influence policy makers in the short term but will certainly input into the array of key information available to advisors and policy makers. One of the specific objectives of this work is to explore how our reference record can test and refine climate models and allow a more direct comparison between the observed isotopic gradients (from speleothems and fluid inclusions) and the modelled isotopic gradients. The overarching impact of this project is that it will contribute to improved coherence of model outputs used by IPCC to assess confidence in scientific results.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Construction of a precisely dated master record of rainfall isotopes for the western Mediterranean

Gibraltar, located at the gateway between the Atlantic and the Mediterranean marks a climatologically important position at the southern limit of Atlantic storm tracks. We have made an excellent start with high resolution dating of the isotope records of Gibraltar rainfall which mirror the rapid shifts in polar temperature (Dansgaard-Oescher events) recording the Greenland Ice core record. We now have near-continuous new multi-proxy record spanning the modern day to 250 ka. The record is anchored to a chronology based on over 150 high precision U-Th age determinations and the stable oxygen and carbon isotope records sampled by micromilling provide decadal to sub-decadal time resolution. Records from the recent past and cave monitoring clearly show that d13C and d18O in modern speleothem calcite are controlled by seasonal within-cave processes dependant on external temperature and water balance. The older Gibraltar record shows variations in d13C and d18O on timescales from multi-decadal to multi-millennial and provides a precise reference record to correlate with other proxy records. We can demonstrate remarkable correspondence with the timing of change in Greenland temperature for much of the last glacial period. However, we note that periods in which the rates of change of Gibraltar water isotopes and Greenland temperature are more complex and provide evidence of other regional climatic influences. Trace elements provide evidence for other aspects of environmental change such as aridity, vegetation activity, and colloidal transport processes from the soil into the cave system. Work is in progress to construct a final stacked record, and in congestion with interpretative frames derived from monitoring and comparison with other precisely dated records, reconstruct atmospheric circulation patterns across glacial cycles and the the effects of ice sheet instability.


Progress towards robust interpretative frameworks based on monitoring for palaeoclimate reconstruction

Our study is directed at understanding the meteorological controls affecting the cave environment in the modern system and identifying which of these are relevant to interpretation of proxy records over longer timescales. For example, we have used data for cave air CO2 measured measured simultaneously at 2h intervals at eleven cave locations over 5 years and these detailed records reveal lateral and vertical spatial patterns of cave air pCO2 over six seasonal cycles. The most striking properties of the CO2 records are 1) annual seasonality in cave air pCO2 showing an antiphase relationship between caves in NSM and RS, and 2) that the high pCO2 seasons (November to April in NSM and April to November in RS) are disrupted by frequent and large fluctuations in pCO2 which occur on hour-day timescales. With respect to palaeoclimate reconstructions, we observe that the first order controls on carbon cycling in karst are 1) the processes that regenerate and maintain the ground air reservoir (soil organic matter production rates and downwash by rainwater recharge), and 2) the range in seasonal mean daily temperatures which creates buoyancy-driven CO2 advection throughout the unsaturated zone. We also see rapid fluctuations in cave air pCO2 during the high pCO2 (incoming ground air) season which may also accumulatively control proxy capture during calcite deposition. These are caused by changes in the ground air-atmosphere mixing ratio linked to synoptic-scale patterns of 1) diurnal temperature range and 2) ambient wind conditions. Rapid changes in the balance between ventilation and ground air advection occur when the when rock core temperature is bracketed by the diurnal range on cool summer days or warm winter days. These conditions are often associated with Atlantic frontal systems. Longer periods of persistently weaker seasonality would also impact on the net seasonal pCO2 and decadal patterns in the speleothem d13C record. A secondary but important systematic control by wind direction on cave air pCO2 is also observed, but this is often overridden by fluctuations in daily temperature. Should seasonal temperatures become more stable, the d13C record may include a component of variation related to the local wind-field.

We have now compiled eight-years monitoring of groundwater chemistry and isotopes to aid reconstruction of d18O in past precipitation from well-dated speleothems. We measured stable isotopes in cave waters from nine sites and conducted artificial tracer tests. Seepage waters have a very narrow compositional range which indicate temporal mixing of rains that entered the sub-surface at different times. Comparison of exceptional variations in rainfall with subsequent seepage samples reveals a component of seepage that has been stored for at least one year. The artificial tracers indicated marked spatial mixing as water flowed from the surface to the caves. Tracers from single points on the surface formed overlapping plumes of dyed water that could be detected across 200 m horizontally. The tracer results confirm the temporal mixing and indicate residence times that are less than the three month monitoring period but exceed the initial breakthrough times of days to weeks after injection. Combined with the one-year storage time indicated by stable isotopes, the tracer results imply that the full residence time distribution for water in the unsaturated zone must range from a few days to over one year. These results imply that in the cooler climates of the Last Glacial evaporation would have been less than today and the isotopic composition of seepage may have been closer to the annual average of rainfall. Samples from speleothems often span several years even in highly-resolved records, with the implication that in cool climates the calcite d18O will reflect the average for rainfall over this time interval.

A key conclusion is whilst monitoring refines palaeoclimate reconstructions this deeper knowledge also shows that interpretive frameworks may need to be adapted for application to different palaeoclimatic regimes.
Exploitation Route Climate reconstructions will be made available to other researchers via publicly accessible databases in due course.
Sectors Environment,Other

 
Description Our work on cave monitoring has led to understanding the importance of natural ventilation on the cave environment. Gibraltar tunnels are being increasingly used for commercial purposes which involve air conditioning outputting heat into the tunnels and caves. We are working closely with the Dept Environment to advise on monitoring the impact on natural cave systems.
First Year Of Impact 2016
Sector Environment
 
Description Talk to local interest group 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Third sector organisations
Results and Impact 60 members of the Mole Valley Geological society attanted my talk on "Climate instability and atmospheric circulation during the last glacial period: evidence from stalagmite archives" We had a lively discussion and was invited to give a talk to the Farnham local group in 2020
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019