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COVER LETTER
Iliana Aguilar
ISTerre
UMR 5275 CNRS – Université Savoie Mont Blanc
73376 Le Bourget du Lac CEDEX, France
iliana.aguilar-ramos@univ-savoie.fr
Dear Editor,
Refering to your decision letter from October 1st 2015, we would like to submit a revised
version of our previous manuscript “Calculation of the reservoir age from organic and
carbonate fractions of sediments in the gulf of Cariaco (Caribbean Sea)” for publication
in Quaternary Geochronology.
First of all, we would like to thank you and the reviewer for their constructive comments.
Through them we have improved the article and clarified some aspects. Briefly, we have
carefully considered all Reviewer comments and modified the pertinent sections taking into
account the strict space requirements of the journal.
Please find below the response to each of the individual comments made by the Reviewer.
Any associated modification will be indicated with the expression "Modified in the text» with
the reference line in the annotated manuscript.
The writing and grammar changes were not specified in this letter but were systematically
incorporated in the annotated version. A colleague, fluent English speaker/writer, has
contributed to the corrected version of this manuscript.
We have indicated the all changes in the annotated version of the revised manuscript in
red.Minor modifications were made in Figures 1, 5 and Figure 6
*********************
*Detailed Response to Reviewers
REVISION
Iliana Aguilar
ISTerre
UMR 5275 CNRS – Université Savoie Mont Blanc
73376 Le Bourget du Lac CEDEX, France
iliana.aguilar-ramos@univ-savoie.fr
Dear Editor,
The writing and grammar changes were not specified in this letter but were systematically
incorporated in the annotated version. A colleague, fluent English speaker/writer, has
contributed to the corrected version of this manuscript.
We have indicated all the changes in the annotated version of the revised manuscript in
red. Minor modifications were made in Figures 7 and 8 and in the table 1 and 2 in relation to
ΔR error calculation suggested by the reviewer (see below).
*********************
Reviewer Comments:
1- I have made a few comments on the pdf that need to be addressed but these are
minor. The authors have not made any attempt to improve the quality of the grammar. I
realize that this is difficult but there is the possibility that some statements could be
misinterpreted.
I did refer the authors to the paper by Russell et al that explains why simply using a
standard error does not reflect the potential variability in deltaR values within a system.
They have misunderstood my meaning and simply explained how they calculated the
standard error. I suggest again that they use the standard error for predicted values as
the measure of the uncertainty in the deltaR values.
The ΔR error was recalculated in order to represent an approach more realistic of the
variability inherent in ΔR, according to the methodology proposed by Russell et al. 2011,
using the equation for the standard error for predicted values:
Standard error = Δ
This was explained in the document (line 389-392, page 20), the values required for the
calculation are shown in the table 2 and are corrected in Figure 7 and 8.
*Manuscript
Click here to view linked References
4 Iliana Aguilara,b , Pierre Sabatierc, Christian Becka, Franck Audemardb, Christian Crouzeta,
7 iliana.aguilar-ramos@univ-savoie.fr
8 (a) CNRS ISTerre, Université Savoie Mont Blanc, 73376 Le Bourget du Lac, France.
10 (c) CNRS EDYTEM, Université Savoie Mont Blanc, 73376 Le Bourget du Lac, France.
12 Caracas, Venezuela.
14 Venezuela.
15
14
16 ABSTRACT. A set of 24 AMS C measurements were performed on different sediment
17 fractions from short gravity cores taken the Gulf of Cariaco (Northeastern Venezuela), in
18 order to construct a detailed sedimentary archive for the last centuries. There, a local reservoir
19 effect was expected because of: i) strong upwelling from the neighbouring Cariaco Trough
20 and anoxia, ii) specific geomorphological setting related to active fault with seepages and
21 diapirism. Measurements was thus performed on different components: sediment bulk organic
22 fraction (SBOF), pteropods shells (surface water), bivalve shells (bottom), and plant
23 fragments. Based on comparisons of the different results, we discuss different age corrections
24 and calibrations, which lead us to consider a localized reservoir correction (ΔR) negligible for
25 bivalve and pteropod shells, showing no reservoir age for carbonate and no water
1
26 stratification. At the difference, a local 633 ± 64 yr ΔR appears recorded in the organic
27 fraction of sedimentation and its origin is primary related to the upwelling mechanism.
28
14
29 Keywords: late Holocene, Reservoir effect, C dating AMS, Gulf of Cariaco, LOI, ROCK-
30 EVAL Pyrolysis.
31
32 1. INTRODUCTION
33
34 The difference between radiocarbon ages of organisms belonging to the terrestrial biosphere
35 and their contemporary marine equivalents was defined by Stuiver and Polach (1977) as
36 “reservoir age". For aquatic (marine, lacustrine or mixed) organisms, if considering organic
37 matter (OM) coming from photosynthesis, the amount of fixed 14C depends, on one hand, on
14
38 its atmospheric production rate (changing with cosmic flux), and, on the other hand, on C
14
39 activity within incorporated dissolved CO2 in the seawater. At its turns, this C content
40 depends on CO2 residence time within the emphasized water mass, and to hard water effect
14
41 related C-free inorganic carbon originating from sub-aerial dissolution of old carbonate
42 rocks (Spennemann and Head, 1998; Sabatier et al., 2010). The delay between dissolution and
45 When the age difference between a marine sample and its atmospheric “stratigraphic”
14
46 equivalent is linked to marine C variations in response to CO2 exchanges between the
47 atmosphere and the ocean, this effect may be corrected subtracting a variable R t derived from
14
48 modelled ocean average (Reimer et al., 2013) from the conventional marine C age.
49 However, several studies have suggested the possibility of significant deviations in regional
50 marine reservoir signature from this average value (Folk and Ward, 1957; Goodfriend and
51 Flessa, 1997; Siani et al., 2001; Reimer and McCormac, 2002; Southon et al., 2002; Sabatier
2
52 et al., 2010). This ΔR value represents the exchange conditions of radiocarbon between the
53 atmosphere and a specific reservoir, and can be quantified by the difference between the
54 regional marine and the global marine 14C age (Stuiver and Braziunas, 1993).
55 For conventional ages derived from particulate (bulk) organic fraction from gulfs and
56 estuaries sediments, the corrections of overestimated ages due to this effect is not evident, and
57 can be linked to: i) possible mixing of reworked fluvial and marine organic matter (Ingram
58 and Southon, 1996; Goodfriend and Flessa, 1997), ii) hard water effect (Spennemann and
59 Head, 1998), iii) upwelling process (Stuiver and Braziunas, 1993), iv) carbon sequestration in
60 sediments and carbonate from the methanogenesis (Aharon and Gupta, 1994; Luff and
61 Wallmann, 2003; Orphan et al., 2004; Naehr et al., 2007; Paull et al., 2007).
62
63 In the case of the Gulf of Cariaco, no local reservoir effect had been previously reported,
64 neither in sediment bulk organic fraction (SBOF) nor in carbonate shells. We here present a
65 set of 24 radiocarbon dates taken from two cores collected from the deepest part of the gulf,
66 under anoxic conditions. We aimed to establish an accurate chronology for the last centuries,
67 in order to detect traces of historical earthquakes and tsunami (Aguilar et al., 2015).
68
69 2. STUDY SITE
70
71 The Gulf of Cariaco - an appendix of the Cariaco Basin (or Cariaco Trough) - is an E-W
74 (Figure 1).
3
75
76 Figure 1. Geomorphological setting and location of short gravity cores. Main active trace of the El Pilar fault
77 following Audemard et al. (2000) and Audemard et al. (2007), simplified bathymetry from Caraballo (1982a).
78 Lithology and shaded-relief map of the watershed modified from Hackley et al. (2005). Numbers in white circles
79 indicate the main Southern drainage. Insert: geodynamic setting of the Cariaco Trough.
80
81 3. GEOLOGICAL SETTING
82
83 The Cariaco Basin is a pull apart which relays the San Sebastian Fault (West) and the El Pilar
84 Fault (East). The Gulf of Cariaco is directly built upon the later one (Figure 1). More
85 precisely, the El Pilar dextral strike slip fault (EPF) is represented by the VE-13b segment,
86 whose submarine morphologic expression has about 50 km through the Gulf (Audemard et
87 al., 2007). The bottom of the gulf is characterized by two singularities (Figure 1):
88 - along the south coast: the Guaracayal depression (GD). It is associated to the
89 submarine transtensive relay of the active trace of the El Pilar fault and it is defined as a pull-
4
90 apart basin by Audemard et al. (2007). It has a 90 m maximum depth and represents about
92 - to the west, near the gulf mouth, the Salazar Sill (SS) represents the connection path
93 between the gulf and the deep Cariaco Basin (Caribbean Sea). The link between the Salazar
94 Sill (isobaths -50 to -40 m) and the Cariaco Basin is represented by a NE-SW trending
96 The lithological framework of the Gulf of Cariaco’s catchment area is divided into two
97 contrasting areas: to the north, the Araya Range formed mainly by Paleozoic to Cretaceous
98 metamorphic rocks; to the south, the sedimentary rocks of the Eastern Interior Range.
99 The Araya Peninsula separates the gulf from the Caribbean Sea, at its turn, it can be divided
100 into three zones: 1) its western tip with dominant recent alluvial and costal deposits:
101 limestones, marls and marines conglomerates, sandstones and shales, these lithologies
102 representing 10% the watershed; 2) the central zone formed principally by metamorphic
104 rocks (where the carbonate fraction represents 20% of the unit); 3) the eastern zone dominated
105 by quartz-micaceous-chloritic schists and sandy shales, shales and conglomeratic sands.
106 On the southern side, the Eastern Interior Range is represented by quartzitic sands and shales,
108
110
111 In addition to the above mentioned lithological contrasts, there is also a clear difference in the
112 hydrographic network. Along the northern coast the Gulf’s tributaries are short with
113 intermittent flooding (Febres-Ortega, 1974; Caraballo, 1982b; Márquez et al., 2005; Quintero
114 et al., 2005). Due to low precipitations on the Araya Peninsula, theses rivers have a minor
5
115 influence within the whole hydrological input into the Gulf of Cariaco (Márquez et al., 2011).
116 On the southern coast, six short tributaries are considered as principal sources of runoff
117 waters, from west to east: the Tunantal (1), Guaracayal (2), Marigüitar (3), Tarabacoa (4),
118 Cachamaure (5) and Cariaco (6) rivers (Márquez et al., 2005). This coast shows a scarped
119 morphology controlled by arid conditions (Figure 1), where the evaporation exceeds largely
121 The hydrographic conditions in the Gulf of Cariaco are strongly influenced by the process of
122 water circulation and exchange with the Caribbean Sea. Waters flowing into the gulf from a
123 sub-surface layer of the Cariaco Basin charged of organic detritus have been observed (Okuda
124 and Benitez-Alvarez, 1974; Okuda et al., 1974), so part of the particulate organic matter here
126 The cyclical pattern of circulation into the Gulf of Cariaco is controlled by the trade-winds
127 and a thermal stratification of isohaline waters. The seasonality is follows the Inter-Tropical
128 Convergence Zone (ITCZ) migration (Figure 2A) along northern Venezuela. Thus, two
129 markedly different regimes characterize the hydrodynamic of oceanic water coming to the
130 gulf: 1) a weak upwelling period between July and December, where weak winds regime is
131 not favourable for the water mass movement (Figure 2B above) and 2) a strong upwelling
132 period during the rest of the year related to stronger trade-wind intensities that drive the
134 The weak upwelling period (Figure 2B, above) named “stagnation” by Okuda et al. (1978) is
135 characterized by the stabilization of the water body under 50 m, while a horizontal mixing
136 process dominates in superficial water. This gulf mass water stratification into two units is
137 induced by the development of a distinct thermocline between 40-50 m depth, acting as a
138 barrier for the vertical water exchange process (Richards, 1960). The water at depths greater
139 than 60 m remains isolated, which leads to the formation of anoxic conditions.
6
140
141 Figure 2. Seasonal variation of upwelling related to the ITCZ. A) Location of the Gulf of Cariaco relative to the
142 ITCZ and the trade-winds position adapted from Poore et al. (2004) (Global relief model from Amante and
143 Eakins, 2009; Goni et al., 2009), B) Dynamic of the subsurface currents and the thermal balance into the gulf
144 during the period of strong and weak upwelling (following Gade, 1961; Okuda, 1981; Okuda, 1982); C) Relative
146
147 During periods of strong upwelling or renewal (Figure 2B, bottom), the thermocline is
148 relatively weak; sub-surface nutrient-rich waters from the Cariaco Basin penetrate into the
149 gulf displacing the coldest and densest bottom waters towards the east, where they emerge
150 increasing the outflow of superficial waters and thus the nutrients availability in the first few
151 meters of the water column (Okuda, 1982). The vertical range of this upwelling process was
152 limited by Griffiths and Simpson (1967) to the first 50 m and by Caraballo (1982b) between
153 the 30-60 m, both agree about the isolation of the bottom and the existence of stagnant water
154 below the sill depth a main part of the year. Richards (1960) does not discard the possibility
156 The superficial waters (photic zone) enriched in nutrients during the renewal period stimulate
157 biosynthesis processes and are responsible for the cyclic process associated to the high
158 primary productivity (231 g/m2.year according to Romero et al., 2013). Bonilla and Lin
7
159 (1979) suggest that the high concentration of organic matter in sediments of the gulf mainly
161 Century-scale analysis of the late Holocene sedimentary record from Cariaco Basin indicates
162 a major climatic change around the end of the Little Ice Age interpreted as a relative reduction
163 in local upwelling (Black et al., 1999; Black et al., 2004; Peterson and Haug, 2006; Polissar et
165
166 5. METHODOLOGY
167
169
170 Two short gravity cores (around one meter) were selected among a set of 18 ones; they were
171 achieved in the Guaracayal depression: Cariac-09-06 (10°28’29”N; 63°57’58”W) and Cariac-
172 09-05b (10°18’19’’N; 63°58’57”W) in 2009, at a 90 meter water depth (Figure 1), on board
173 the R/V GUAÏQUERI II. At the laboratory, the cores were cut into two halves. Each half-
174 section was described in detail and pictures were taken. The lithological description of the
175 sequence allowed the identification of different sedimentary facies. The visual description of
176 smear slides of the sediment permitted better characterizing the different units present.
177 The Cariac-09-06 was sampled every 5 mm, and the Cariac-09-05B every 2.5 cm following
178 the methodology proposed by Heiri et al. (2001). The Loss On Ignition (LOI) analyses were
179 used to estimate the variations of organic and carbonate fraction contents in sediments,
180 performed in the oven Nabertherm Controller B180 of the Dynamic Environments and
181 Territory of the Mountain laboratory (EDYTEM). The weight loss during a first heating step
182 to 550°C corresponds to LOI550, while the second ignition phase to 950°C allows the LOI950
183 calculation. These values are respectively proportional to the amount of OM and carbonate.
8
184 The high resolution particle size analysis were performed in the Earth Science Intitute
186 2000 at a continuous interval of 1 cm for the whole cores and each 2 to 5 mm for selected
187 sections. Two statistic parameters were used (Mean size and Q99) to characterize the evolution
189 In order to characterize the (OM) a set of 57 ROCK-EVAL pyrolysis measurements from
190 bulk sediment samples were carried every 2 cm from Cariac-09-06. Once dried to 60°C and
191 pulverized, the measurements of hydrogen index (HI), oxygen index (OI) and total organic
192 carbon (TOC) parameters were performed using a ROCK-EVAL 6 analyzer (RE6, Vinci
193 Technologies®) in the ISTO laboratory at the Orléans University following the method
194 described by Espitalie et al. (1985) and Lafargue et al. (1998). These values were used to
195 discriminate the source of OM in the bulk samples through the use of the modified Van
197
199
200 In the Gulf of Cariaco, three different types of material were sampled for dating purpose: 1)
201 Carbonate macro-rests: these samples correspond to well preserved pteropods (planktonic)
202 and bivalves shells (benthic); 2) Terrestrial macro-rests: only two samples were found and
203 collected, a leaf into the Cariac-09-06 and a well-preserved wood fragment in the Cariac-09-
204 10 core; 3) SBOF for each contemporary macro-remain (carbonated and terrestrial) was also
205 collected. These samples principally correspond to a silt-sized terrigenous fraction rich in
206 organic particulate matter, in which the carbonate content was removed by acid wash (HCl)
14
207 prior analysis. The 24 conventional C ages determined in this study were corrected by
208 isotopic fractionation, using the delta 13C values and processed at two laboratories, the Saclay
9
209 CEA Laboratory of the CNRS-INSU ARTEMIS program and in BETA ANALYTIC
210 laboratory.
211
212 6. RESULTS
213
215
216 The two cores display a uniform olive green silty sediment, darker than most detrital sand
217 layers. These observations associated to grain size, LOI analysis and smear slide description
219 -Facies 1: it is present in all cores. Its color is predominantly olive gray (5 Y 3/2) and is rich
220 in organic matter (≃19% wt). Particle size distributions (Figure 3) shows a dominance of silt-
221 sized particles between 15-30µm (Cariac-09-06: 70.0 ± 4.5 %; Cariac-09-05B: 63 ± 6 %),
222 lesser amounts of clay size (Cariac-09-06: 14 ± 3 %; Cariac-09-05B: 10.0 ± 1.6 %) and sand
224 slides display that silt-sized particles are a mixture of a lithic fraction (~70%) and different
225 kinds of biogenic materials (30%). The principal mineral grains are of: gypsum, quartz,
226 calcite, halite and mica. The biogenic fraction includes foraminifera (<2%), mollusc shell
227 fragments (<3%), diatoms (5%) and organic matter particle (20%). These characteristics
228 define the permanent (“background”) sedimentation, representing about 90% of the sediments
230 - Facies 2: it is composed of olive gray silty sediment (5Y4/1), slightly lighter than facies 1,
231 with thicknesses between 2 and 4 cm, accompanied by macroscopic fibrous OM and leaf
232 fragments. This more terrigenous siliciclastic facies was identified three times in the core
233 collected from the deepest area of the gulf (Cariac-09-06). The most superficial level of the
10
234 three (40-45 cm deep) does not have a distinctive imprint on the mean grain size profiles (this
235 level slightly exceeds the average grain size of the whole core: 32 µm). However, it is
236 possible to distinguish this facies on the Q99 profile through a significant increase in grain
238 The Cariac-09-05B core, located 2 km west of the Cariac-09-06 core in the Guaracayal basin,
240
242
243 Two profiles of LOI550, LOI950 and refractory residues vs. depth (Figure 3) illustrate the
244 variations of OM content, carbonate content and siliciclastic residues. The average amount of
245 OM in Cariac-09-06 corresponds to 19 % wt with a standard deviation of 0.5. This value does
246 not change abruptly along core, except for the facies 2 with an increase of siliciclastics
11
248
249 Figure 3. Evolution of different particle size fractions (sand, silt, and clay), Q99, mean grain size and parameters
250 derived from the loss of ignition (LOI). Estimated weight percent of siliciclastic residues, carbonate (LOI 950) and
252
253 On the Cariac-09-05B core, the average amount of organic fraction is estimated at 19.7 % and
254 σ = 1.3 (from LOI550), very close to those values estimated from visual inspection of smear
255 slides. At 42 cm depth we observe an increase of the refractory fraction percentage. However,
256 this change is not eye-visible on the split core. In this core the carbonate percent remains
257 almost constant (6% average, σ = 1), in the same way as in the other core, the amount of
259
261
12
14
262 Conventional C measurements performed on Cariac-09-06 and Cariac-09-05B cores are
263 presented in Table 1. Preliminarily the conventional ages obtained from carbonate shells and
264 SBOF were calibrated with R=0. Ages derived from shells were calibrated using the
266 The dated SBOF samples appear largely of marine origin. Following interpretations of
267 Espitalie et al. (1985), the different domains into Pseudo - Van Krevelen diagram (Hydrogen
268 Index (HI) vs. Oxygen Index (OI)) lead to the distinction of three types of organic matter:
269 Type I of lacustrine origin, type II which is of marine origin and type III, which is mostly
270 continental in origin. Langford and Blanc-Valleron (1990) propose a distribution of type II
271 organic matter unextractable on this diagram, constrained between 500 and 200 HI.
272 Consequently, considering the test results of ROCK EVAL pyrolysis (Figure 4) these samples
274 The conventional age of the Cariac-09-06-1 sample (Table 1) is reported in percentage of
275 modern carbon (112.6 ± 0.3 pCM). Its negative equivalent radiocarbon age BP is calculated
276 with the R-code package to perform classic age-depth modelling Clam 2.2 (Blaauw, 2010)
277 and calibrated with the post-bomb curve corresponding to the zone 2 in the north hemisphere
278 (Hua et al., 2013). The atmospheric sample (Cariac-09-06_5 sample) was calibrated with the
279 curve INTcal13. The conventional ages from SBOF show inversions between 80.0 and 83.5
13
Figure 5. Plot of conventional ages for Cariac-09-06
Figure 4. Modified Van Krevelen diagram presenting
core (non-calibrated age). Ages in red correspond to
the results of ROCK-EVAL pyrolysis. It includes 57
marine carbonated samples, while in blue to organic
samples from Cariac-09-06 core. The samples located
fraction of the sediment. The sample in green
near the limit of Type III OM (red points) were
corresponds to the age of a terrestrial macro-rest.
collected from facies 2 at 84 and 95 cm depth.
ANE: Atmospheric Nuclear Experiments.
281
282 Table 1. Radiocarbon ages obtained from Cariac 09-06 and Cariac 09-05B cores
14
12 Cariac-09-06_10 BA 65.5 SBOF 1210 ± 30 -19.7 834-671 737 336-Post BP 0 199
1
Abbreviations
BA: Beta Analytic; CEA-S: Saclay CEA Laboratory of the CNRS-INSU ARTEMIS; SBOF:
283 .
284 The depth distribution of uncalibrated ages (Figure 5) shows a linear pattern controlled by the
285 nature of the dated material. Ages in red are carbonate samples: bivalves shell (benthic) and
286 pteropod (planktonic), the SBOF samples are indicated in blue and the only atmospheric
14
287 sample in green. Both shells and SBOF sediment C ages, mostly follow a
288 chronostratigraphic order, but the relatively older dates of bulk samples suggest a reservoir
290 The offset with the zero of the model is approximately 390 yr for carbonated samples and
291 1000 yr for SBOF samples. The grey bars, represent the facies 2 deposits. The horizontal
292 arrow indicates the quasi-constant shift between the ages of SBOF and its marine coeval
15
294
295 7. DISCUSSIONS
296
298
299 The age of the most superficial samples (above 15 cm depth in core) will not be considered in
300 this calculation. The modern organic carbon content in the sample of marine origin collected
301 within the first 15 cm implies that the sediments placed to this same depth may potentially
302 record an increase in the 14C activity associated to post-bomb peak. Consequently, the global
304 Facies 2 type sediments (grey bands in Figure 5) present an increase of siliciclastic material
305 (Figure 3a). This facies could be correlated with two coarse siliciclastic layers (fine sand)
306 identified in a core close to the south coast (Cariac-09-18; see Figure 1 for location). In these
307 layers (in the proximal zone) the base-to-top evolution of grain size have the structure of a
308 hyperpycnal flow composed of an upward-coarsening basal unit, an upward-fining top unit
309 and an internal maximal grain size in between. Thus the facies 2 is considered as the distal
310 facies of a terrigenous input interpreted as flood event deposits (Aguilar et al., 2015).
311 In these deposits, dated SBOF samples present an age inversion and thus have to be removed
312 from the ΔR calculation. The significant offsets from the general trend recorded between 82-
313 84 cm and 94-98 cm depths in the age model are considered as a consequence of dating of old
314 reworked organic matter material of terrestrial origin (Figure 4) transported during settling of
316
318
16
319 In the Gulf of Cariaco the local reservoir effect had not been reported previously, either for
320 organic sediments or for carbonates. From dating of monospecific samples of planktonic
321 foraminifera collected inside the sub-basin east of the Cariaco Basin (900 m depth, Figure 1),
322 Hughen et al. (2004) proposed R(t) = 430 ± 30 and ΔR = 20 values. Compared with open
323 North Atlantic values (435 ± 31) (Mangerud et al., 2006), this age reservoir shows no
324 significant offset. This fit between 14C marine reservoir age recorded in planktonic samples of
325 the Cariaco basin and the open sea values has been explained by well-equilibrated dissolved
326 CO2 in surface waters with respect to the atmosphere (Hughen et al., 1998).
327
328 A minor difference among the global mean sea surface reservoir ages and the values yielded
329 by foraminifera in the deep Cariaco Basin, leads us to suppose that shells samples from the
330 Gulf of Cariaco could record negligible ΔR values. This assumption is supported by the fact
331 that water exchange between open sea and the gulf concerns the sub-surface water (<120 m;
332 Richards, 1960). For this reason, the Marine13 curve (Reimer et al., 2013) was used here to
333 calibrate carbonated samples (pteropods and bivalves) from Cariac-09-06 core, without
335
336 The age-depth curve for the Cariac-09-06 core, built with ages from marine carbonated
337 samples (Figure 7) both planktonic and benthonic organisms, does not present significant age
338 shift, suggesting that the superficial and deep waters in the gulf do not record an apparent ΔR.
339 The absence of a positive offset, between ages obtained at the top of core and the zero of the
340 model - after the correction with the Marine13 curve - leads us to suppose that the ΔR
341 recorded in carbonates is negligible. In addition to this argument, the fit between of the only
342 “atmospheric” sample recovered within the gulf, with the age vs. depth curve, allows us to
343 presume that there is not ΔR value to suppress. This fact must be associated to the reduced
17
344 depth in the gulf (<100m) and to exchange process of superficial and sub-superficial waters
346
347 7.3. Modern marine ΔR age estimation on particulate organic matter sample
348
349 Plot of Figure 4 underlines that all ages obtained from SBOF samples are yielding an
350 overestimation. But this age shift is relatively constant along the core with respect to its
351 coeval marine carbonate sample. This result leads us to propose the existence of a constant
353 The regional reservoir age is defined by the expression R'(t) = global R(t) + ΔR, where R(t)
354 term is incorporated into the global marine curve and ΔR is equivalent to the regional
14
355 reservoir age offset from ocean C age. This ΔR value can be calculated based on pairs of
357 ΔR = conventional age of marine sample - Marine 14C ages calculated from atmospheric ages (1)
358 In order to calculate the ΔR recorded by the SBOF samples, we used: 1) the conventional
359 radiocarbon age from the plant fragment (A = 150 ± 30); 2) the equivalent marine radiocarbon
360 age derived from the atmospheric sample (B = 536 ± 80); 3) the measured SBOF
363 Marine13 and Intcal13 are plotted. Here, the atmospheric (leaf) sample is first calibrated with
364 the atmospheric calibration curve (Reimer et al., 2013), its cal. age is then projected vertically
365 upon the Marine 13 curve (Reimer et al., 2013) and converted to a equivalent marine
367 The ΔR value is the difference between the SBOF conventional radiocarbon age and the
368 marine radiocarbon age equivalent to the sample of atmospheric origin (Figure 6):
369 ΔR = C – B (2)
18
370
371 Figure 6. Conversion of 14C conventional ages into calendar ages for sub-aerial samples equilibrated with
372 atmosphere (lower curve) and marine samples (upper curve). The age difference between the 2 curves for a
373 given calendar date corresponds to the marine reservoir age R(t). Dating of the terrestrial macro-remains at 150 ±
374 30 (A) gives a marine conventional 14C age of 536 ± 80 yr and thus a reservoir age of 1230−150 = 1080 yr.
375 Difference from the global mean reservoir age (ΔR) for SBOF sample is obtained by subtracting the marine
376 model age value estimated at the calendar date from the measured apparent 14C age, thus 1230−536 = 694 yr.
377
378 Assuming that ΔR value recorded in the shells is null, the B term of the formula (2) for the
379 ΔR estimation can be substituted by conventional marine ages derived from dated marine
380 carbonate samples. Thus, we proceed to estimate the average value of the local reservoir
381 effect registered into the SBOF using the following equation:
382 ΔR = SBOF conventional age - conventional marine age from coeval marine carbonate sample (3)
383 Six pairs of samples provide a weighted mean ΔR = 633 ± 24 (with an error on the weighted
384 mean, n = 6, ± 1 σ) calculated following Scott et al. (2007), which are presented in Table 2.
385
386
19
(cm) age14C BP
388
389 The error on the weighted mean obtained was considered too low (±24, table 2). Here we use
390 the standard error for predicted values (formula 4) proposed by Russell et al. (2011) in order
392 Standard error = error on the weighted mean 2 standard deviation on the ΔR values 2 (4)
393 Using the standard error for predicted values the ΔR value is 633±64. In order to evaluate the
394 ΔR value, on Figure 7 we represented the age-depth curve from SBOF samples (blue) and the
395 age-depth curve from marine carbonate samples (black and grey) derived from Cariac-09-06
396 core, eliminating the inversed ages associated to flood events. The calibration of conventional
397 ages from carbonated samples (benthic and planktonic specimens) with Marine13 curve
398 seems to be enough to build a coherent age-depth curve. This curve shows a linear trend
399 without any abrupt changes in the sedimentation rate. Even the correction of the age obtained
400 from pteropods collected at 15 cm depth-in-core fits. The extrapolation of the age-depth curve
401 up to the top of the core, points out to an age close to the coring period (2009). We propose
402 that ΔR values in carbonates samples can be kept, because of: 1) the absence of a positive
20
403 offset between age at the top of core, 2) the alignment of the only atmospheric age recovered
405
406 The corrections of reservoir effect (ΔR = 633 ± 64 yr) before calibration are thus applied to
407 the radiocarbon dates obtained from SBOF, and a constant sedimentation rate of 1.6 mm/yr is
408 deduced (Figure 7); it is close to the one derived from marine carbonates samples (1.7
409 mm/yr). The offset between zero of the model and the top of the core disappears. The
410 superposition of the two age-depth curves shows that the deviation between both are less than
411 the radiocarbon dates uncertainties (<30 yr). Therefore, we consider that the corrected ages
412 derived from SBOF can be used to perform the chronological sedimentation control within
414 In a first approximation, the first 30 cm of the sedimentary record were discarded in the
415 calculation of ΔR under the suspicion that age from SBOF sample was affected by the modern
14
416 increased C activity linked to atmospheric weapon tests. The later ones leads to a decrease
417 of ΔR recorded in the OM as observed on the superficial level of the uncalibrated ages
418 (Figure 5). The here-studied sedimentary sequence seems to record a constant ΔR in the
21
420
421
422 Figure 7. Comparison between age-depth curves of marine carbonate samples (black line) and sediment
423 particulate organic fraction (SBOF) samples (blue line), performed with “clam R code package” from samples
425
426 7.4. Potential source of reservoir effect in sediment bulk organic fraction
427
428 Due to scarcity of carbonated lithological units in the watershed, a limited dissolution and
429 hydrolysis process in semi-arid environments and the absence of ΔR on marine carbonate, the
430 hard water effect is considered negligible on the estimated value of ΔR for SBOF.
431
432 On the other hand, gas emissions associated with faults and known hydrocarbon seepages
433 reported in the gulf along the southwestern coast of the Araya Peninsula, are considered as
434 potential old carbon sources. The methanotrophic bacteria in the organic matter could
435 incorporate, into its structure, 14C depleted methane recording anomalously old 14C age in this
436 type of samples (Reeburgh and Heggie, 1977; Fontugne et al., 2009).
22
437 An alternative explanation to the local reservoir effect recorded in the organic components of
438 the sediment deeper than 30 cm could be the strong trade wind-driven upwelling (Berger et
439 al., 1966; Taylor and Berger, 1967; Goodfriend and Flessa, 1997) reported in this Caribbean
440 zone during the Little Ice Age (Black et al., 1999; Polissar et al., 2006). The supply of
441 transported organic detritus transported (Okuda, 1981) into the gulf by upwelling from the
442 Cariaco Basin may be thus combined to the settling of local planktonic production.
443 Terrigenous siliciclastics levels have been identified and associated to continental sediments
444 input which may also contain reworked organic matter. Such a mixing with in situ OM may
445 lead to: either an underestimated age (terrestrial plants immediately reworked after growth,
446 with contemporaneous atmospheric CO2), or an overestimated ages (long time lapse between
448
449 The possible decrease of the reservoir effect in the most recent sediments (above 30 cm depth-
450 in-core) could be explained by an increase of terrestrial OM which is supposed to directly fix
451 the atmospheric CO2. Nevertheless, this explanation seems unlikely, based on the following
452 reasons. First, we found evidences for a mainly marine OM settling in the Gulf of Cariaco
453 (Aguilar et al., 2015). Second, according to different investigations (Black et al., 2004;
454 Peterson and Haug, 2006; Polissar et al., 2006), the end of the Little Ice Age is characterized,
455 in the studied area, by a decrease of upwelling. Thus, we favour a modification of seawater
457
459
460 In order to validate the proposed calibration parameters, the ΔR value calculated from Cariac-
14
461 09-06 SBOF samples was used to correct the C ages derived of organic samples collected
23
462 from another core, close to the previous one (Cariac-09-05B, Figure 1 for location). Figure 8
463 shows the evolution of age-depth relationships with the application of successive corrections
464 to non calibrated values. The age vs. depth curve on the right (dashed green line) corresponds
465 to conventional ages, the intermediate model (solid blue line) results from the application of
466 global reservoir correction with Marine13 calibration curve. The ages displayed by the red
467 curve have the correction of both R(t) an the above estimated ΔR. An average sedimentation
468 rate (1.6 mm/yr) very similar to the one estimated for the Cariac-09-06 core is obtained. The
469 absence of age offset at the top confirms the potential use of the local reservoir effect value
470 calculated in this study for radiocarbon age calibration in the Gulf of Cariaco.
471
472 Figure 8.Age-depth curve of Cariac-09-05B core. Dashed line: conventional 14C ages, blue dashed line:
473 calibrated 14C with Clam code package and Marine13 curve. Red dashed line: calibrated ages with the Marine13
475
476 8. CONCLUSION
477
24
478 The analyses presented in this work provide a ΔR estimation than can be used for correction
479 of 14C ages of SBOF samples from the Gulf of Cariaco. Our results indicate that, despite the
14
480 effect of a significant upwelling regime, C dating of different carbonated samples (benthic
481 and planktonic) do not record local reservoir effect (ΔR = 0). The average ΔR value derived
482 from sediment bulk particulate organic fraction 14C measurements was successfully applied to
483 produce a geochronology for sediment cores, and seem to be constant over the last 600 cal.
484 BP. Two explanations can be proposed to explain the high value of ΔR registered in the
485 organic fraction of the sediments: 1) the contribution of 14C-depleted organic detritus from the
486 upwelling, 2) the incorporation, within bottom microbial food chain, of possible 14C-depleted
487 methane seeping along the active El Pilar fault. Our analyses favour a major impact of
488 upwelling.
489
490 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
491
492 The Gulf of Cariaco coring survey performed in 2009 is part of a Venezuelan-French ECOS-
494 earthquakes, extreme-weather events - along the edge Caribbean of Venezuela, through a
497 laboratory facilities. Our investigations also benefit from CNRS-INSU ARTEMIS facility for
14
498 C dating. I. Aguilar’s stay in ISTerre Laboratory was funded through a FUNDAYACUCHO
499 PhD grant 756521F. Finally, many thanks to the whole crew of R/V GUAIQUERI II for their
500 unconditional and effective technical support and Andres Lemus, head of CAMUDOCA.
501
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28
Figure_1 TIFF
Click here to download high resolution image
Figure_2 TIFF
Click here to download high resolution image
Figure_3 EPS
Figure_4 EPS
Figure_5 EPS
Figure_6 EPS
Figure_7 EPS
14
-8 to -47 cal C cal yr BP
20
14
232 to 0 cal 14C cal yr BP
103 to 0 cal C cal yr BP
14
226 to 0 cal C cal yr BP
40
14
403-54 cal 14C cal yr BP
Depth (cm)
60
14
405-262 cal C cal yr BP
14
336-0 cal C cal yr BP
Shell model age
Bulk organic fraction
model age
80 Pteropod
Bivalve shell
SBOF
Leaf calibrated age
Instantaneous events 14
100 716-505 cal 14C cal yr BP
Dated sample 640-527 cal C cal yr BP
14
826-547 cal 14C cal yr BP
723-609 cal C cal yr BP
0 500 1000
cal BP
Figure_8 EPS
30 cm = 661-546 cal. yr BP
1040 ± 30 yr BP
30 cm =226-0 cal. yr BP
40
Depth (cm)
61 cm = 1032-875 cal. yr BP
60
1390 ± 30 yr BP
61 cm = 501-276 cal. yr BP
80
cal BP
Table_1
Table 1. Radiocarbon ages obtained from Cariac 09-06 and Cariac 09-05B cores
Conventional δ13C Marine13 Age cal. BP2
1
N° Sample name Lab. Depth Type Median Median
age (BP) o/oo (Cal. BP)2 (ΔR = 633 ± 64yr)
1
Abbreviations
BA: Beta Analytic; CEA-S: Saclay CEA Laboratory of the CNRS-INSU ARTEMIS; SBOF:
Table 1. ΔR calculation.
Depth Conventional
Sample Type ΔR (yr)
(cm) age14C BP