A 250,000-Year Climatic Record from Great Basin Vein Calcite: Implications for Milankovitch Theory

A continuous record of oxygen-18 ($\delta ^{18}$O) variations in the continental hydrosphere during the middle-to-late Pleistocene has been obtained from a uranium-series dated calcitic vein in the southern Great Basin. The vein was deposited from ground water that moved through Devils Hole--an open...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 1988-12, Vol.242 (4883), p.1275-1280
Hauptverfasser: Winograd, Isaac J., Szabo, Barney J., Coplen, Tyler B., Riggs, Alan C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A continuous record of oxygen-18 ($\delta ^{18}$O) variations in the continental hydrosphere during the middle-to-late Pleistocene has been obtained from a uranium-series dated calcitic vein in the southern Great Basin. The vein was deposited from ground water that moved through Devils Hole--an open fault zone at Ash Meadows, Nevada--between 50 and 310 ka (thousand years ago). The configuration of the $\delta ^{18}$O versus time curve closely resembles the marine and Antarctic ice core (Vostok) $\delta ^{18}$O curves; however, the U-Th dates indicate that the last interglacial stage (marine oxygen isotope stage 5) began before 147 $\pm $ 3 ka, at least 17,000 years earlier than indicated by the marine $\delta ^{18}$O record and 7,000 years earlier than indicated by the less well dated Antarctic $\delta ^{18}$O record. This discrepancy and other differences in the timing of key climatic events suggest that the indirectly dated marine $\delta ^{18}$O chronology may need revision and that orbital forcing may not be the principal cause of the Pleistocene ice ages.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.242.4883.1275