Abstract

We analyzed D/H ratios of common terrestrial leaf wax lipids in a 1400 year sediment core from the Santa Barbara Basin (SBB) to test whether they accurately record terrestrial climate in Southern California. The D/H ratios of long chain n-alkanes vary substantially with depth, but are poorly correlated with other terrestrial climate proxies. Interference from fossil hydrocarbons may be at least partly responsible. Long chain n-alkanoic acids exhibit nearly constant downcore D/H ratio values. This constancy in the face of known climatic shifts presumably reflects a substantial residence time for leaf wax compounds in terrestrial soil and/or on the basin flanks. Alternatively, the isotopic composition of meteoric waters in Southern California may not covary with climate, particularly aridity. However, the δD values of n-C 22 and n-C 24 fatty acids, commonly attributed to terrestrial aquatic sources, are partially correlated with Southern California winter Palmer Drought Severity Index, a tree ring-based climatic proxy ( R 2 0.25; p < 0.01) on multi-centennial scales with an inferred ca. 215 year time lag. The improved correlation of these biomarkers can be explained by the fact that they are not stored in terrestrial soil nor are subject to interference from fossil hydrocarbons. Our study indicates that the SBB is unlikely to preserve high resolution leaf wax D/H records that can serve as quantitative paleoclimate proxies, though some qualitative information may be retained. More generally, the sources of lipids in marginal marine basins need to be carefully evaluated prior to attempting paleoclimate reconstruction based on the leaf wax D/H proxy.

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