Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1045837 | Quaternary Research | 2011 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The isotopic composition of land snail shells was analyzed to investigate environmental changes in the eastern Canary Islands (28-29°N) over the last ~ 50 ka. Shell δ13C values range from â8.9â° to 3.8â°. At various times during the glacial interval (~ 15 to ~ 50 ka), moving average shell δ13C values were 3â° higher than today, suggesting a larger proportion of C4 plants at those periods. Shell δ18O values range from â1.9â° to 4.5â°, with moving average δ18O values exhibiting a noisy but long-term increase from 0.1â° at ~ 50 ka to 1.6-1.8â° during the LGM (~ 15-22 ka). Subsequently, the moving average δ18O values range from 0.0â° at ~ 12 ka to 0.9â° at present. Calculations using a published snail flux balance model for δ18O, constrained by regional temperatures and ocean δ18O values, suggest that relative humidity at the times of snail activity fluctuated but exhibited a long-term decline over the last ~ 50 ka, eventually resulting in the current semiarid conditions of the eastern Canary Islands (consistent with the aridification process in the nearby Sahara). Thus, low-latitude oceanic island land snail shells may be isotopic archives of glacial to interglacial and tropical/subtropical environmental change.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Yurena Yanes, Crayton J. Yapp, Miguel Ibáñez, MarÃa R. Alonso, Julio De-la-Nuez, MarÃa L. Quesada, Carolina Castillo, Antonio Delgado,