Estimating bioturbation from replicated small-sample radiocarbon ages.
Abstract
Marine sedimentary records are a key archive when reconstructing past
climate; however, mixing at the seabed (bioturbation) can strongly
influence climate records, especially when sedimentation rates are low.
By commingling the climate signal from different time periods,
bioturbation both smooths climate records, by damping fast climate
variations, and creates noise when measurements are made on samples
containing small numbers of individual proxy carriers, such as
foraminifera. Bioturbation also influences radiocarbon-based age-depth
models, as sample ages may not represent the true ages of the sediment
layers from which they were picked. While these effects were first
described several decades ago, the advent of ultra-small-sample 14C
dating now allows samples containing very small numbers of foraminifera
to be measured, thus enabling us to directly measure the
age-heterogeneity of sediment for the first time. Here, we use
radiocarbon dates measured on replicated samples of 3-30 foraminifera to
estimate age-heterogeneity for five marine sediment cores with
sedimentation rates ranging from 2-30 cm / kyr. From their
age-heterogeneities and sedimentation rates we infer mixing depths of
10-20 cm for our core sites. Our results show that when accounting for
age-heterogeneity, the true error of radiocarbon dating can be several
times larger than the reported measurement. We present estimates of this
uncertainty as a function of sedimentation rate and the number of
individuals per radiocarbon date. A better understanding of this
uncertainty will help us to optimise radiocarbon measurements, construct
age models with appropriate uncertainties and better interpret marine
paleo records.