{"title":"Controls on rare earth elements distribution from Kerala coast, southwest India over the past 2000 years","authors":"M. Manoj, B. Thakur, P. Uddandam","doi":"10.1080/15275922.2021.1940383","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Climate changes on the Southwest coast of India have essential impacts on social and economic development, and the ecosystem of Southern India. Here, we present the last 2000 cal yr AD rare earth elemental records of the sediment core from the Cherai, Kerala coast, southwest India. The light rare earth elements (LREE) were the most abundant fraction in the core sediment, followed by medium rare earth elements (MREE) and heavy rare earth elements (HREE). Total REE (ΣREE) showed a significant correlation with fine fractions and Y, Al, Ti, Fe and total organic carbon content of the sediments, suggesting an intrinsic relationship between REE, total organic carbon and fine grain-size fraction. The LREE and MREE were enriched over the MREE due to their high adsorption with the fine fraction. The lack of correlation between terrigenous elements and low Y/Ho elemental ratio suggests a minor shift in the source materials. High ΣREE values during warm (Medieval Warm Period/ Medieval Climate Anomaly (MWP/MCA) and cold Little Ice Age (LIA) periods indicate a high influx of lithogenous materials during these intervals. The negative δCe values except MCA suggest a suboxic condition and the δEu values suggest feldspar-rich source rock material derived from moderately weathered sediments. It also indicates that the REE variations are controlled by factors like river supply, biological productivity and redox condition. A close link between monsoonal precipitation and REE records existed on the southwest coast of India. During the Dark Age Cold Period (DACP)/MWP transition, a sudden increase in monsoon is documented and the monsoon precipitation was further decreased during LIA and Current Warming Period. The Cherai core REE records synchronize with the episodes of centennial-scale warm/cool events and essentially follow the northern hemispheric climate cycles.","PeriodicalId":11895,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Forensics","volume":"46 1","pages":"28 - 43"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Forensics","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/15275922.2021.1940383","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
Abstract Climate changes on the Southwest coast of India have essential impacts on social and economic development, and the ecosystem of Southern India. Here, we present the last 2000 cal yr AD rare earth elemental records of the sediment core from the Cherai, Kerala coast, southwest India. The light rare earth elements (LREE) were the most abundant fraction in the core sediment, followed by medium rare earth elements (MREE) and heavy rare earth elements (HREE). Total REE (ΣREE) showed a significant correlation with fine fractions and Y, Al, Ti, Fe and total organic carbon content of the sediments, suggesting an intrinsic relationship between REE, total organic carbon and fine grain-size fraction. The LREE and MREE were enriched over the MREE due to their high adsorption with the fine fraction. The lack of correlation between terrigenous elements and low Y/Ho elemental ratio suggests a minor shift in the source materials. High ΣREE values during warm (Medieval Warm Period/ Medieval Climate Anomaly (MWP/MCA) and cold Little Ice Age (LIA) periods indicate a high influx of lithogenous materials during these intervals. The negative δCe values except MCA suggest a suboxic condition and the δEu values suggest feldspar-rich source rock material derived from moderately weathered sediments. It also indicates that the REE variations are controlled by factors like river supply, biological productivity and redox condition. A close link between monsoonal precipitation and REE records existed on the southwest coast of India. During the Dark Age Cold Period (DACP)/MWP transition, a sudden increase in monsoon is documented and the monsoon precipitation was further decreased during LIA and Current Warming Period. The Cherai core REE records synchronize with the episodes of centennial-scale warm/cool events and essentially follow the northern hemispheric climate cycles.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Forensics provides a forum for scientific investigations that address environment contamination, its sources, and the historical reconstruction of its release into the environment. The context for investigations that form the published papers in the journal are often subjects to regulatory or legal proceedings, public scrutiny, and debate. In all contexts, rigorous scientific underpinnings guide the subject investigations.
Specifically, the journal is an international, quarterly, peer-reviewed publication offering scientific studies that explore or are relevant to the source, age, fate, transport, as well as human health and ecological effects of environmental contamination. Journal subject matter encompasses all aspects of contamination mentioned above within the environmental media of air, water, soil, sediments and biota. Data evaluation and analysis approaches are highlighted as well including multivariate statistical methods. Journal focus is on scientific and technical information, data, and critical analysis in the following areas:
-Contaminant Fingerprinting for source identification and/or age-dating, including (but not limited to) chemical, isotopic, chiral, mineralogical/microscopy techniques, DNA and tree-ring fingerprinting
-Specific Evaluative Techniques for source identification and/or age-dating including (but not limited to) historical document and aerial photography review, signature chemicals, atmospheric tracers and markets forensics, background concentration evaluations.
-Statistical Evaluation, Contaminant Modeling and Data Visualization
-Vapor Intrusion including delineating the source and background values of indoor air contamination
-Integrated Case Studies, employing environmental fate techniques
-Legal Considerations, including strategic considerations for environmental fate in litigation and arbitration, and regulatory statutes and actions