Abstract

The use of skeletal oxygen isotopic records for use in paleotemperature reconstruction has been hampered by the lack of independent evidence for ocean water oxygen isotopic composition. The δ18O record from homeothermic cetaceans has provided an independent estimate of ocean δ18O values represented by the Calvert and Choptank formations of Maryland. Fish teeth and bones (especially shark and ray teeth) were also collected from these sediments and provide the basis for paleotemperature estimates for represented time slices of the middle Miocene. Trends in δ18O values of the fish phosphate throughout the Calvert Formation are of opposite polarity to the trends from the cetacean bone phosphate. Paleotemperatures calculated using the cetacean proxies for ocean δ18O values sharpen the already present trend, indicating that ocean temperatures increased during episodes of greater glaciation and decreased during periods of lesser or no glaciation. When using modern average ocean values of 0‰ SMOW in the paleotemperature calculation, however, corrected paleotemperatures for the Choptank Formation do not alter the existing pattern of temperatures.

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