Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4699246 | Chemical Geology | 2012 | 9 Pages |
We introduce a method to analyze element ratios and isotope ratios in mineral overgrowths. This general technique can quantify environmental controls on proxy behavior for a range of cultured biominerals and can also measure compositional effects during seeded mineral growth. Using a media enriched in multiple stable isotopes, the method requires neither the mass nor the composition of the initial seed or skeleton to be known and involves only bulk isotope measurements. By harnessing the stability and sensitivity of bulk analysis the new approach promises high precision measurements for a range of elements and isotopes. This list includes trace species and select non-traditional stable isotopes, systems where sensitivity and external reproducibility currently limit alternative approaches like secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and laser ablation mass spectrometry. Since the method separates isotopically labeled growth from unlabeled material, well-choreographed spikes can resolve the compositional effects of different events through time. Among other applications, this feature could be used to separate the impact of day and night on biomineral composition in organisms with photosymbionts.
► New method to analyze element ratios and isotope ratios in mineral overgrowths ► Multiple enriched stable isotopes are used to unmix new growth from initial material. ► Method harnesses precision and sensitivity of bulk isotope ratio analysis ► Method allows new modalities, can isolate the impact of different events through time.