Abstract

Biomarker accumulation rates in nine different time slices in three cores on and at the foot of a submarine high in the northern Arabian Sea (the Murray Ridge) were measured to investigate the influence of oxygen exposure time on the preservation of biomarker signals in the sedimentary record. All three sites experienced the same history of surface water productivity and sediment supply but had different bottom-water redox conditions due to their different positions (in, just below, well below) relative to the present location of the intense oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). Past variations in the intensity and position of the OMZ, known from a wide variety of proxies (TOC content, distribution and abundance of planktonic and benthic foraminifera and pteropods, trace metals, and δ 15N), enabled specific biomarker (i.e., n-alkanes, steroids, alkenones, alkyldiols, C 26 fatty acid, loliolide, biphytane diols, and archaeal tetraether lipids) accumulation rates at contrasting oxygen exposure times to be compared. The results indicate that these accumulation rates can vary by more than an order of magnitude for marine biomarkers. In addition, there are significant differences in the degree of oxic degradation of different types of biomarkers: Terrestrial n-alkanes are much more resistant than alkenones and n-alkyl diols, which are more refractory than steroids and biphytane diols. These differences in degree of oxic degradation indicate that biomarker distributions will change on increasing exposure to oxygen. These findings have a significant impact on the application of biomarkers to sedimentary settings in which oxygen exposure time is likely to change significantly.

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