A calibrated climate record from Gibraltar speleothem: the instrumental era, the Holocene and the last interglacial

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Earth Sciences

Abstract

Speleothems (stalagmites and flowstones) are carbonate minerals deposited from dripping water in caves. They represent rich archives of past rainfall and climate change. Speleothem growth layers can be dated at very high precision and the ratio of oxygen isotopes (d18O) in particular can be related to climatic conditions such as sources of moisture, temperature and amount of rainfall above each cave. These oxygen isotope records give much insight into climate change but interpretation still tends to rest on simple assumptions without detailed understanding of which features of local climate the speleothem responds to, and whether the recording is biased or altered during the process of speleothem growth. Unlocking the real climatic information needs understanding of the full system of climate - vegetation - groundwater - cave - speleothem. Thus climate reconstruction from speleothem records depends on two critical steps. The first is close monitoring of the cave environment to identify speleothem sites which record rainwater d18O with good fidelity, and the second is formulating a 'calibration' relating d18O to other aspects of climate. We aim to accomplish both steps and develop a 'fully-calibrated' climate record from Gibraltar covering parts of the last 200,000 years. Our recent work in New St Michaels Cave, located high up in the Rock of Gibraltar, focused on the first step - understanding the climate recording process by monitoring the part of the system between the soil and the speleothem, using comprehensive measurements and novel instruments. Working closely with the Gibraltar Caving Group we tracked monthly and seasonal variations in chemistry and oxygen isotopes in cave drips and soil water, plus the movement and composition of cave air, temperatures, soil and vegetation changes, and related these to amounts of rainfall and its daily isotopic composition. From all this we can deduce the causes of the seasonal isotopic and chemical cycles we have found in a recently deposited stalagmite, and relate relevant parts of the seasonal signal to the isotopic composition of rainfall during the winter months. A key result is that there are specific conditions when speleothems record climate most accurately, and if these are met the isotopic composition of rainfall can be reconstructed. In our new work we shall examine the second step - how the modern part of Gibraltar's historic climate record can be used to derive a calibrated 'transfer function' relating d18O to climate. We intend to test this calibration using stalagmite formed before 1962, when isotope records for rainfall began, by comparing the d18O in speleothem with the value calculated from statistical analysis of the historic climate back to 1792. Furthermore, because Gibraltar has been slowly uplifted by geological forces, caves have been elevated as speleothem grew. We shall investigate how this has affected the d18O-climate 'transfer function' and how the calibration from modern records may have to be adapted for application in more ancient times. To achieve this last objective we must compare the microclimate, air and water chemistry of low and high level caves to understand the controls on speleothem isotopes at different altitude. We shall then date and analyse stalagmites formed since the last interglacial for their isotope ratios, trace elements and water trapped within the mineral, which directly fingerprints ancient cave water. This should allow us to reconstruct the average tracks of rain-bearing systems in the Atlantic. Our overall objective is to produce a well-dated, calibrated record that will be a yardstick for past climates in the western Mediterranean, and can be compared directly with computer climate models. Gibraltar's caves have very high potential for providing a record from a 'natural laboratory' environment running back from modern times to possibly one million years ago.

Publications

10 25 50
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Lombino A (2012) d(18) O analysis of organic compounds: problems with pyrolysis in molybdenum-lined reactors. in Rapid communications in mass spectrometry : RCM

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Mattey D (2013) Methane in underground air in Gibraltar karst in Earth and Planetary Science Letters

 
Description We have established that the microclimate of Gibraltar caves varies on a seasonal basis according to the difference in temperature and density between external air and the air underground. This difference causes a circulation of air underground, both in the caves themselves and the former military tunnels, and also in the permeable fractures and fissures of the Rock of Gibraltar. In winter, air enters the lower slopes of the Rock and rises underground, to exit through caves and fissures in the upper slopes. In summer the flow reverses. This regime of flow is especially pronounced in Gibraltar but will occur wherever topographic hills and valleys are underlain by rocks that are fractured and permeable to air. We have demonstrated that an important consequence in Gibraltar is that this circulation causes the decomposition of atmospheric methane and its oxidation to carbon dioxide during the underground journey made by the air. This is also likely to be a world-wide phenomenon and may be an important process that limits the lifetime of methane gas (which has a strong 'greenhouse' effect) in the atmosphere.
Exploitation Route Other findings from this project include a provisional record of the stable isotope composition of cave deposits (stalagmites and flowstones) in Gibraltar caves during the last glacial-interglacial climate cycle. We are now working towards more precise dating of this record and a full interpretation of it in terms of the former circulation of the atmosphere and the stable isotope composition of rainfall in the western Mediterranean during large climatic changes.
Sectors Education,Environment,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description Calpe Conference on Palaeo-environment and the record from Gibraltar Caves, 2013. Calpe conferences are open to the public and designed to bring together members of the public with experts in the topic. Advice to Gibraltar Natural History and Ornithology Society (GONHS) and Gibraltar Cave Science Unit on the microclimatology of caves and tunnels and the potential impacts of changes of use for Gibraltar's former military tunnel system in the Rock. (Ongoing) Presentations to academic conferences on speleothem palaeoclimatology in Melbourne, Australia (2014), Texas (2017).
First Year Of Impact 2016
Sector Education,Environment,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections,Other
Impact Types Cultural,Policy & public services

 
Description Collaboration with RHUL 
Organisation Royal Holloway, University of London
Department Department of Earth Sciences
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This award is a part of a collaborative research grant from NERC. The overall PI is Professor Dave Mattey at RHUL. The award to UCL is for UCL's costs in the project. Reference should be made to Prof Mattey's Researchfish report for fuller details of outcomes.
Collaborator Contribution Prof Mattey is the overall PI of the project.
Impact See entries for Impacts under individual grant reports.