Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9462971 Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 2005 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
A modern catfish was caught near Pine Island Sound and the otoliths (lapilli) removed. Archaeological otoliths from the 2nd/3rd century AD, falling within the Roman Optimum (RO), and the 13th/14th century AD, falling within the Little Ice Age (LIA), were obtained from the Florida Museum's collections. Oxygen isotope compositions were converted to temperature using published temperature equations and assuming + 1‰ for Gulf water. Isotopic compositions for the modern otolith range from −3.55‰ to + 0.29‰, the LIA otolith ranges from −3.92‰ to + 0.52‰, and the RO otolith ranges from −1.80‰ to + 0.84‰. All three otoliths record winter temperature (∼ 20 °C) similar to modern conditions. Calculated summer temperatures for the modern and LIA otoliths (∼ 40 °C) are overestimated and reflect the combined influence of temperature and salinity when catfish inhabit brackish estuarine waters during their reproductive season. In contrast, summer temperature estimates for the RO otolith are similar to modern conditions indicating estuarine water during the summer was close to + 1‰. This result suggests that seasonal rainfall patterns during the time period represented by the RO otolith were different than today, such that the summer wet season was not prevalent.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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