Lithium Isotope History of Cenozoic Seawater: Changes in Silicate Weathering and Reverse Weathering
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory · Florida Department of Education
Abstract
Weathering of uplifted continental rocks consumes carbon dioxide and transports cations to the oceans, thereby playing a critical role in controlling both seawater chemistry and climate. However, there are few archives of seawater chemical change that reveal shifts in global tectonic forces connecting Earth ocean-climate processes. We present a 68-million-year record of lithium isotopes in seawater (δ(7)Li(SW)) reconstructed from planktonic foraminifera. From the Paleocene (60 million years ago) to the present, δ(7)Li(SW) rose by 9 per mil (‰), requiring large changes in continental weathering and seafloor reverse weathering that are consistent with increased tectonic uplift, more rapid continental denudation,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 146
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Weathering
- Geology
- Sedimentary rock
- Seafloor spreading
- Seawater
- Silicate
- Geochemistry
- Geologic record
- Life below water