학술논문

Exploring the Deuterium Excess of Cretaceous Arctic Paleoprecipitation Using Stable Isotope Composition of Clay Minerals from the Prince Creek Formation (Maastrichtian) in Northern Alaska
Document Type
article
Source
Geosciences, Vol 13, Iss 9, p 273 (2023)
Subject
Cretaceous
hydrogen and oxygen isotopes
paleoprecipitation
pedogenic phyllosilicates
Geology
QE1-996.5
Language
English
ISSN
2076-3263
Abstract
We report estimated stable isotope compositions of Artic paleoprecipitation using phyllosilicates sampled from three paleosols and two bentonites in the Prince Creek Formation (Maastrichtian) in northern Alaska. Previous studies reported a deuterium excess in estimates of Arctic paleoprecipitation from the Late Cretaceous by combining hydrogen and oxygen proxy sources, including pedogenic minerals, dinosaurian tooth enamel phosphates, pedogenic siderites, and n-alkane biomarkers. The new dataset produced in this study removes uncertainty on possible explanations (photosynthetic and transpiration) of the deuterium excess by producing stable hydrogen and oxygen isotopic signatures from the same source material. The δD of the phyllosilicates range from −171‰ to −72‰ VSMOW and δ18O ranges from 5.0 to 11.8‰ VSMOW. By assuming a MAT of 6.3 °C and calculating uniquely derived fractionation equations for each phyllosilicate, we report estimated isotopic composition of Late Cretaceous paleoprecipitation with an average δD value of −133‰ VSMOW, corresponding to an average δ18O value of −20.3‰ VSMOW. The estimates of Late Cretaceous paleoprecipitation do not intersect the Global Meteoric Water Line and reveal a reported deuterium excess ranging from 7 to 46 per mil. These results confirm the presence of a deuterium excess in Late Cretaceous Arctic paleoprecipitation and provide new insight to assessing possible explanations for this phenomenon.