Plinio Jaqueto

and 7 more

Paleoclimate studies on speleothems commonly use oxygen isotopes as a record of precipitation variability and carbon isotopes to document soil, vegetation, and atmospheric processes. Magnetic minerals in speleothems record complementary paleoclimate information but need to be interpreted within the context of the particular geographic and geologic setting in which a karst environment occurs. This study surveys 23 caves in South America (7°N to 25°S latitude). The present-day climate is dominated by a monsoon regime, with variable precipitation between 50 to 800 mm/month covering different biomes, therefore making South America a good candidate to explore the properties of magnetic minerals at the tropical/subtropical climate. We share a database of magnetic properties from 23 stalagmites samples (90 specimens), 4 soil samples (34 specimens) and 2 limestone samples (15 specimens). Measured rock magnetic parameters include magnetic susceptibility, natural, anhysteretic, and isothermal remanent magnetization (NRM, ARM, IRM), as well as low-temperature magnetometry and first-order reversal curves. These data help constrain the types and granulometry of the magnetic mineralogy that commonly occur in South American speleothems, their host carbonates, and their overlying soils. We show that concentration-dependent parameters in soils overlying the caves are two to three orders of magnitude higher than those in stalagmite and limestones. Despite these differences, unmixed coercivities between soil (median value of 19 mT) and stalagmites (median value 20 mT) and substantially different from those of host limestones (median 39 mT). Our results suggest that much of the magnetite in South American speleothems is pedogenic in origin, and may allow magnetic measurements to capture changing soil and vegetation dynamics in the epikarst through time.

Valdir Novello

and 15 more

Due to the many factors controlling δ13C values in stalagmites, complicating their paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental interpretation, most studies do not present d13C values, but instead focus mainly on δ18O values. This is also the case for most cave studies from tropical South America, where many new δ18O stalagmite records covering the last millennia were recently published. Here, we review the d13C values in stalagmites, investigating the influence on this proxy of local hydroclimate, altitude, temperature and vegetation types, by employing a new dataset composed of published and unpublished carbon isotope records from various sites in tropical South America. The main factors influencing δ13C values are associated with the local hydroclimate, followed by minor effects from temperature. Most of the isotopic records show a significant correlation between the δ13C and δ18O values, indicating a close relationship between local hydroclimate and atmospheric convective processes related to the South American Monsoon System. The predominance of C3 plants above most of the karst systems studied here is responsible for the low δ13C values (≤6‰) in most of the speleothems, while local hydroclimate associated with prior calcite precipitation process is the main driver behind its variability during the last two millennia. Using Monte Carlo Principal Component Analysis, we produce an index of the mean hydrologic conditions and its changes over tropical South America for the last two millennia, which is closely related to monsoon variability for the period prior to 1750 CE. The recent break-down in the relationship between monsoon and local hydroclimate may have been caused by the increase in temperature, CO2, deforestation and fire during the current warm period.