B. Wenzel et al., Comparing oxygen isotope records of Silurian calcite and phosphate - deltaO-18 compositions of brachiopods and conodonts, GEOCH COS A, 64(11), 2000, pp. 1859-1872
Oxygen isotope compositions of Silurian calcitic brachiopod shells from Got
land are compared with those of phosphatic inarticulate brachiopod shells a
nd conodonts from identical stratigraphic horizons. The delta(18)O(phosphat
e) values of inarticulate brachiopod shells vary widely (13.0 to 17.5 parts
per thousand V-SMOW) and are significantly lower than those of coeval cono
dont samples (17.5 to 19.5 parts per thousand V-SMOW). Conodont samples fro
m individual beds have homogenous delta(18)O(phosphate) values with variati
ons close to the analytical precision (+/-0.2 parts per thousand). Together
with a significant correlation of conodont delta(18)O(phosphate) and artic
ulate brachiopod shell delta(18)O(carbonate) values (r = 0.85), this observ
ation suggests that primary marine oxygen isotope compositions are better p
reserved in conodont apatite than in inarticulate brachiopod shell apatite.
However, with decreasing delta(18)O(carbonate) values, the delta(18)O(phos
phate) values of conodonts are higher than expected for theoretical isotopi
c equilibrium with brachiopod calcite. Different habitats of conodonts and
brachiopods cannot account for the observed offset in delta(18)O because bo
th organisms were thriving on a broad shallow marine carbonate platform. Wh
ereas delta(18)O(phosphate) values of Silurian conodonts are close to delta
(18)O(phosphate) values of modern and Mesozoic tropical biogenic apatites,
most Silurian calcitic brachiopod shells from Gotland are depleted in O-18
when compared to modern or Mesozoic brachiopods. We therefore suggest that
Silurian conodonts from Gotland record paleotemperature and delta(18)O of S
ilurian sea water more faithfully than coeval calcitic brachiopod shells. C
opyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.