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The use of principle component analyses in characterising trace and major elemental distribution in a 55 kyr peat deposit in tropical Australia: Implications to paleoclimate
Authors:Joanne Muller  Malin Kylander  Antonio Martinez-Cortizas  Dominik Weiss  Kevin Blake  Raquel Garcia-Sanchez
Institution:a School of Earth Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville 4811, Qld, Australia
b Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College, London SW7 2AZ, UK
c Natural History Museum, London SW7 2AZ, UK
d Dept. Edafologia y Quimica Agricola, Fac. de Biologia - Campus Sur, E-15782 Santiago, Spain
e Advanced Analytical Centre, James Cook University, Townsville 4811, Qld, Australia
Abstract:The Lynch’s Crater peat deposit in NE-Australia is a sensitive environmental archive located in the tropical Southern Hemisphere. This unique deposit illustrates that local and regional changes had a profound effect on the local Australian ecosystem over the past 55 kyr. To obtain a proxy of past climate changes, trace and major element geochemistry analyses were applied to a 13 m peat core from the crater. Principle component analysis (PCA) was used to identify the main factors that control elemental distribution in the peat and to add interpretative strength to the geochemical behavior of selected major and trace elements. For example, Sc, Al, Cu, and Pb were found to be related to increased erosion of the basin soils, and from this, several periods of significant flux from atmospheric input and/or terrigenous run-off were identified. Geochemically mobile elements during rock weathering and pedogenesis, such as Mg, Ca, and Sr helped to identify the peat ombrotrophic-minerotrophic boundary at ∼1.5 m depth and offered important information about fluxes of these nutrients to the mire and their dynamics within the deposit. Arsenic and V comparisons between the peat record (high concentrations in some peat sections) and in local basin rocks (very low concentrations), suggested the presence of a long range, atmospheric dust source early in the formation of the mire. The Lynch’s Crater peat record presents a continuous record of environmental change in tropical Australia and contributes new understanding to geochemical processes in peatlands.
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