Presentation type:
SSP – Stratigraphy, Sedimentology & Palaeontology

EGU26-23290 | Orals | SSP4.5 | Jean Baptiste Lamarck Medal Lecture

 The green poles of a warmer past: how Antarctic polar forests shaped plant evolution  

Benjamin Bomfleur

Today, Antarctica appears as a continent locked in eternal ice and snow, but its sedimentary record preserves rich fossil archives of past life. Because present-day Antarctic landmasses have already been circling in polar latitudes for more than 300 million years, many Antarctic fossil occurrences derive from past high-latitude palaeoecosystems without modern analogue. Of special importance are exceptional plant-fossil assemblages—some classic, some only recently discovered—from the early Mesozoic of the Transantarctic Mountains. These yield exquisitely preserved plant compressions and anatomically preserved biotas in silicified peat and wood, allowing detailed insights into the biology and ecology of past polar forests during times of global warmth. The Late Triassic vegetation of Gondwana is particularly well-known. It was dominated by Dicroidium seed-ferns, conifers, ginkgoes, cycads, and diverse fern communities, and documents sophisticated adaptations to extreme seasonal light regimes, including widespread deciduousness, growth dormancy, and specialized understorey life strategies. There is now increasing evidence that such high-latitude ecosystems acted as evolutionary refugia during major biotic crises. The iconic Triassic Dicroidium plants, for example, survived the end-Triassic mass extinction in Gondwanan high-latitude populations and persisted there long into the Jurassic, far beyond their time of disappearance at lower latitudes. Recent discoveries from previously unexplored regions of northern Victoria Land substantially expand this perspective, revealing unexpected growth strategies, complex ecological interactions, and evidence for extreme evolutionary stasis. Taken together, the fascinating fossil record of the Transantarctic Mountains highlights the varied roles of high-latitude palaeoecosystems in plant evolution during times of global change.

How to cite: Bomfleur, B.:  The green poles of a warmer past: how Antarctic polar forests shaped plant evolution , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23290, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23290, 2026.

EGU26-9577 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6 | Highlight | SSP Division Outstanding ECS Award Lecture

Onset of strong Iceland-Scotland overflow water 3.6 million years ago 

Matthias Sinnesael and Boris Theofanis Karatsolis and the Expedition 395 Scientists

North Atlantic DeepWater (NADW), the return flow component of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), is a major inter-hemispheric ocean water mass with strong climate effects but the evolution of its source components on million-year timescales is poorly known. Today, two major NADW components that flow southward over volcanic ridges to the east and west of Iceland are associated with distinct contourite drift systems that are forming off the coast of Greenland and on the eastern flank of the Reykjanes (mid-Atlantic) Ridge. Here we provide direct records of the early history of this drift sedimentation based on cores collected during International Ocean Discovery Programme (IODP) Expeditions 395C and 395. We find rapid acceleration of drift deposition linked to the eastern component of NADW, known as Iceland–Scotland Overflow Water at 3.6 million years ago (Ma). In contrast, the Denmark Strait Overflow Water feeding the western Eirik Drift has been persistent since the Late Miocene. These observations constrain the long-term evolution of the two NADW components, revealing their contrasting independent histories and allowing their links with climatic events such as Northern Hemisphere cooling at 3.6Ma, to be assessed.

How to cite: Sinnesael, M. and Karatsolis, B. T. and the Expedition 395 Scientists: Onset of strong Iceland-Scotland overflow water 3.6 million years ago, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9577, 2026.

The hydrological response of a basin is fundamentally controlled by geomorphic processes, structures, and physiographic characteristics. Horton’s geomorphological laws, basin topology, and kinematic properties have long been employed to derive flood response in ungauged basins through various Geomorphological Instantaneous Unit Hydrograph (GIUH) frameworks. This study investigates ten ungauged tributary sub-basins of the Shilabati River in eastern India to analyse how basin morphometry and topology regulate travel-time distribution of water particles and flash-flood potential. The Width Function Instantaneous Unit Hydrograph (WFIUH), a GIUH variant, is applied to derive the geomorphological control on peak flow and time to peak, while the morphometric analysis is performed to investigate the effect of basin characteristics on these hydrologic response parameters. The WFIUH is obtained using the flow length extracted from the SRTM DEM, together with spatially variable and fixed hillslope velocities estimated from land use-land cover and slope using the Soil Conservation Services (SCS), uniform-flow, and Manning’s velocity formulae. Due to the absence of observed streamflow, WFIUH results are evaluated against the Geomorpho-climatic Instantaneous Unit Hydrograph (GcIUH) derived from climate-dependent channel velocity and drainage network topology, as well as observed flood events. 
Results show that all variable-velocity WFIUHs have longer time bases and a lower peak flow than fixed-velocity WFIUHs, because the highest velocity cells are associated with the smallest drainage contributing areas. The SCS-based variable velocity WFIUH aligns with the GcIUH, reproducing both the peak flow and time to peak of the IUH more accurately compared to the other methods. Small, circular, and comparatively steeper sub-basins exhibit shorter times to peak (8.5-10.5 hours), indicating a high flash-flood potential, mainly in sub-basins 3-6. On the contrary, elongated and well-bifurcated sub-basins reveal slightly delayed peaks (10.5-15.5 h) but remain capable of producing moderate-to-high floods due to their larger drainage areas, as confirmed by the flash flood event in 2025 in sub-basins 1, 8-10. Correlation analysis reveals that circularity ratio, relief ratio, and hypsometric integral are positively associated with peak flow, suggesting enhanced flow synchronization in compact and steep sub-basins. In contrast, time to peak shows moderate to strong negative correlations with these parameters and positive correlations with stream length and bifurcation ratios, indicating delayed response in elongated and highly branched drainage networks due to dispersed flow paths.
Therefore, basin morphometry and drainage network topology effectively govern hydrologic responses of the sub-basins. The spatially variable SCS velocity-based WFIUH provides a more realistic depiction of hydrologic response in ungauged sub-basins. Hence, this method is well-suited for event-based lumped hydrological modelling as well as for sub-basin prioritization in flash flood risk assessment.

How to cite: Das, T. and Das, S.: Geomorphic controls on flood response using the Width Function Instantaneous Unit Hydrograph framework , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-570, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-570, 2026.

EGU26-2250 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Feasibility of Action Camera-Based Videogrammetry for Multi-Temporal 3D Monitoring of Rubble-Mound Breakwaters 

Valentina Martínez Olmedo, Ana Margarida Bento, Marcos Arza-García, and José Alberto Gonçalves

Coastal protection infrastructures such as rubble-mound breakwaters (RMBs) demand frequent geometric inspection to quantify armor-layer dynamics and support reproducible structural monitoring. While UAV-based photogrammetry and LiDAR are established reference techniques for rapid 3D mapping, high revisit rates remain operationally constrained by wind sensitivity, sensor payload limits, and regulatory flight restrictions. Videogrammetry complements these approaches by increasing inter-frame overlap and mitigating missed-trigger acquisitions, especially useful in complex coastal scenes (e.g., those affected by occlusions between armor units and block interstices). As in conventional photogrammetry, videogrammetry relies on image redundancy and self-calibration rather than highly sophisticated instrumentation. Despite this potential, consumer-grade action cameras remain scarcely validated for multi-epoch 3D monitoring in coastal engineering, mainly due to wide-angle lens distortion and coarse onboard GNSS geotag precision.

This study assesses pole-mounted GoPro videogrammetry for multi-temporal 3D relative change detection in the emerged portions of a detached rubble-mound breakwater at Cabedelo do Douro (PT). Two survey epochs were acquired in July 2024 and November 2024 to characterize the above-water zone, inspecting the seaward slope, the landward armor-toe transition, and the horizontal crest platform segment at one of the heads of the RMB. Frames were extracted at 1 Hz and processed in Metashape using an SfM-MVS (Structure-from-Motion Multi-View Stereo) self-calibrating camera model. Multi-epoch point clouds were coregistered in CloudCompare with ICP (Iterative Closest Point) refinement over stable crest and toe areas, and 3D changes were quantified using M3C2 (Multiscale Model-to-Model Cloud Comparison), generating signed distance maps and detection histograms. A concurrent UAV-RTK survey, supported by additional GNSS-measured ground control points (GCPs), served as a geometric benchmark.

Mean ActionCam-to-UAV sensor offsets were +0.06 m, confirming that, despite potentially unstable absolute georeferencing in GoPro-derived reconstructions, the resulting point clouds preserve sufficient geometric and scale consistency to support relative multi-temporal 3D change detection and the identification of concrete armor-unit displacements. Results confirm that pole-mounted videogrammetry supports rapid, repeatable, low-cost SHM (Structural Health Monitoring) observations, providing defensible detection thresholds and reproducible change-detection limits for engineering interpretation and maintenance support.

How to cite: Martínez Olmedo, V., Bento, A. M., Arza-García, M., and Gonçalves, J. A.: Feasibility of Action Camera-Based Videogrammetry for Multi-Temporal 3D Monitoring of Rubble-Mound Breakwaters, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2250, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2250, 2026.

EGU26-5775 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Fully Automated Unsupervised Machine Learning Framework for Mapping Erosion Hotspots in Quick Clay Areas Using Remote Sensing–Derived Data 

Orkun Türe, Rui Tao, Jean-Sébastien L’Heureux, Emir Ahmet Oguz, and Ankit Tyagi

Quick clays are fine-grained, highly sensitive marine deposits that are widespread across formerly glaciated regions, including Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Canada. The low remoulded strength of the quick clays makes them particularly susceptible to extensive retrogressive landslides, which pose serious challenges to society. Erosion is recognized as one of the most important pre-conditioning and triggering factor for quick clay landslide. Therefore, identification of the erosion hotspots is essential for understanding landslide initiation processes and for effective hazard mitigation in quick clay terrains. Machine learning has emerged as an effective tool for erosion hotspot mapping, allowing complex spatial patterns and nonlinear interactions among erosion-controlling factors to be identified from remote sensing–derived data. Recent studies have demonstrated that Deep Neural Networks can be effectively employed to identify erosion-prone zones in quick clay environments when sufficient labelled data are available. This study investigates whether unsupervised machine learning applied to remote sensing–derived data can effectively identify erosion hotspots in quick clay areas. A fully automated, Python-based workflow was developed for erosion hotspot mapping in quick clay areas using remote sensing–derived data. The dataset includes terrain, hydrological, environmental, and anthropogenic parameters relevant to erosion and slope instability. Initially, a total of twenty input parameters were considered. Pearson correlation coefficients were computed to assess inter-feature dependencies, and principal component analysis (PCA) was employed to evaluate feature importance. The unsupervised analysis was performed using multiple clustering techniques to capture different structural characteristics of the data where each cluster represents a distinct level of erosion susceptibility. The results suggest that the proposed unsupervised framework can effectively delineate erosion hotspots in quick clay areas and constitutes an initial step toward the development of early warning systems.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Research Council of Norway through the SAFERCLAY project (Grant No. 352887). Orkun Türe was supported by the Council of Higher Education of Türkiye under the DOSAP scholarship programme and served as a visiting researcher at NGI and NTNU.

How to cite: Türe, O., Tao, R., L’Heureux, J.-S., Oguz, E. A., and Tyagi, A.: Fully Automated Unsupervised Machine Learning Framework for Mapping Erosion Hotspots in Quick Clay Areas Using Remote Sensing–Derived Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5775, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5775, 2026.

EGU26-5929 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Controls on the size and mobility of deep-seated landslides in the North Tanganyika - Kivu Rift region, Africa 

Toussaint Mugaruka Bibentyo, Antoine Dille, Axel Deijns, Charles Nzolang, Stijn Dewaele, and Olivier Dewitte

The size and mobility of landslides control their impact on both landscapes and communities. Despite their importance to understanding landslide mechanisms and associated hazards, few studies have examined the factors controlling these two characteristics, particularly at a large scale. This is especially the case for deep-seated landslides that occur across diverse geomorphological and lithological settings. Further, most research focuses on recent landslides and thus fail to consider historical processes that could be associated with environmental conditions that differ from the contemporary ones. Here, we investigate the influence of geomorphology and lithology on the size and mobility of old and recent deep-seated landslides in the North Tanganyika-Kivu Rift region in Africa, an under-researched mountainous environment located in the tropics. Based on a comprehensive inventory of ~2500 landslides, we show that mobility increases with size, especially for the old landslides. These old landslides are significantly larger than the recent ones, likely due to potential progressive landslide growth over time and  influenced by the region’s paleoseismic activity. The main controls on both the size and mobility of deep-seated landslides are lithology and, to a lesser extent, fluctuations in Lake Kivu’s level during the Holocene. Landscape rejuvenation by migrating knickpoints associated with rifting also plays a key role in determining landslide size: in rejuvenated landscapes, landslides tend to be larger than those in relict landscapes. The presence of these large landslides favours the development of smaller ones along their margins, reflecting the influence of path dependency on landslide occurrence and size. Our findings underscore the importance of considering the chronology of landslide occurrence and the long-term legacy of landscape evolution in shaping landslide characteristics.

How to cite: Mugaruka Bibentyo, T., Dille, A., Deijns, A., Nzolang, C., Dewaele, S., and Dewitte, O.: Controls on the size and mobility of deep-seated landslides in the North Tanganyika - Kivu Rift region, Africa, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5929, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5929, 2026.

EGU26-6006 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

High-energy sediment dynamics in ephemeral Andean mountain streams: The case of Río Seco, Peru 

Lenin Rosales Torres and María Cárdenas-Gaudry

Ephemeral mountain streams on the western Andean slopes remain dry most of the year, yet during intense rainfall events they generate short-lived flash floods with exceptionally high sediment transport capacity. This study investigates the hydraulic response of the upper Río Seco micro-basin (Huaycoloro catchment, Peru) under extreme rainfall scenarios, using a hydraulic–geomorphological framework that links surface hydrology with sediment mobility thresholds. Design discharges were estimated through IDF-based rainfall analysis and classical hydrological methods, while sectional hydraulic modelling using the Manning equation provided flow velocities and bed shear stresses along representative channel reaches. Results indicate mean velocities ranging from 2.4 to 3.4 m/s and shear stresses up to 215 Pa. These values exceed the critical shear stress of the coarse gravel bed by more than five times, indicating generalized sediment mobility and strong incision potential in confined steep reaches. Such conditions promote significant sediment supply from the upper basin, increasing the likelihood of downstream channel aggradation and flood hazard in peri-urban sectors of eastern Lima. To our knowledge, this is the first hydraulic–geomorphological quantification of sediment mobility thresholds in an arid Andean micro-basin under design-storm conditions. The findings provide quantitative evidence supporting the need to transition from purely water-based flood models toward sediment-inclusive risk assessments in steep ephemeral mountain catchments.

How to cite: Rosales Torres, L. and Cárdenas-Gaudry, M.: High-energy sediment dynamics in ephemeral Andean mountain streams: The case of Río Seco, Peru, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6006, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6006, 2026.

Flood-prone small mountainous catchments hosting critical infrastructure, such as bridges and transport networks, require integrated hydrologic–hydraulic analyses to ensure long-term resilience under changing climatic and land-use conditions. This study develops a coupled HEC-HMS–HEC-RAS modelling framework to quantify design discharges, inundation patterns and local hydraulic controls for the torrential stream crossing the settlement of Kato Nevrokopi in Northern Greece. Using high-resolution topographic data (DEM), GIS-based basin delineation and long-term rainfall records, design storms for multiple return periods are derived and transformed into flood hydrographs at the catchment outlet. These hydrographs force 1D steady-flow simulations in HEC-RAS, explicitly representing bridges, piers and local constrictions that act as morphodynamic bottlenecks and potential failure points under extreme flows. Model results are used to generate flood extent and water-depth maps for events up to the 1,000-year return period, identify critical cross-sections where afflux and backwater effects are most pronounced, and assess the effectiveness of alternative layout and channel-training configurations. The analysis is framed within the current EU Floods Directive 2007/60/EC and Greek legislation for stream delineation, linking quantitative hazard metrics to planning constraints and infrastructure design requirements. The work highlights how relatively simple, openly available tools, when combined with detailed geometric representation of bridges and channel morphology, can support evidence-based decisions on flood protection works, minimise over-engineering, and improve the adaptive management of critical infrastructure in steep, data-scarce basins.

How to cite: Pavlidis, K. and Valyrakis, M.: Hydrologic-hydraulic modelling and flood hazard mapping for infrastructure resilience in a small mountainous catchment on Northern Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7986, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7986, 2026.

EGU26-8868 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Natural Riverbed Stability in a Small-to-Medium-Sized Mountainous River: A Baseline Investigation of the Qin River Prior to the Pinglu Canal Construction 

Supeng Zhu, Jian Sun, Changgen Liu, Lihua Chen, and Wenzhou Chen

The construction of mega-canals necessitates a profound understanding of the pre-existing fluvial equilibrium to mitigate adverse geomorphic consequences, particularly in rivers with limited channel capacity. This study focuses on the intrinsic stability mechanisms of the Qin River, a typical small-to-medium-sized mountainous river in South China, prior to the implementation of the Pinglu Canal project. Field surveys and sediment analyses were conducted to characterise the natural bed state, with a focus on a morphologically representative reach. The findings indicate that the riverbed has historically maintained a strong dynamic equilibrium, supported by lateral confinement from riparian vegetation and natural armor processes unique to mountainous fluvial regimes, which are derived from tributary inputs. The analysis reveals that specific hydrodynamic thresholds and sediment connectivity are essential for maintaining this stability. Therefore, rather than hydraulic stress alone, the system's main vulnerability is determined to be the possible disruption of these established equilibrium conditions, particularly with regard to geological substrate constraints and longitudinal continuity. These results establish a scientific standard for assessing the potential disturbance risks of canalization in delicate mountainous river systems by providing a critical morphodynamic baseline.

How to cite: Zhu, S., Sun, J., Liu, C., Chen, L., and Chen, W.: Natural Riverbed Stability in a Small-to-Medium-Sized Mountainous River: A Baseline Investigation of the Qin River Prior to the Pinglu Canal Construction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8868, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8868, 2026.

EGU26-10337 | Posters virtual | VPS26

ArtPOP - Automated RecogniTion of Palynomorphs and Organic sedimentary Particles  

Kasia K. Śliwińska and Nikolai Andrianov

The traditional workflow in palynology begins with the removal of rock minerals through acid digestion and heavy liquid separation, followed by mounting the organic residue on a glass slide, and analysing it under a transmitted light microscope. Using the microscope, palynologists manually identify and assign the observed particles to predefined categories within a designated counting area on each slide. Counting typically continues until a target number of particles has been reached (often between 200 to 300).

Beyond the commonly analysed palynomorphs such as pollen, spores, and dinoflagellate cysts, palynological slides may also contain a diverse range of acid resistant organic sedimentary particles, including freshwater algae, phytoclasts, amorphous organic matter, and many others. Examining the full spectrum of these particles is known as palynofacies analysis. It is one of the most powerful methods for reconstructing depositional environments in sedimentary rocks, as it relies on the distribution and relative abundances of these particles.

However, traditional counting methods for palynological and palynofacies analysis present several limitations. The counting area is rarely defined with precision, making it difficult to reproduce analyses. As a result, if any annotations need to be corrected, the entire counting workflow must be repeated. A particularly challenging aspect is the objective estimation of particles such as amorphous organic matter or phytoclasts, which are always fragmented and do not exist as discrete entities. Moreover, identification accuracy can vary substantially between analysts depending on experience, introducing challenges for reproducibility, comparability, and integration across datasets.

Digitizing palynological slides offers a promising opportunity to reduce subjectivity and personal bias by enabling particle annotation directly on high resolution digital images. This approach also supports iterative analysis, allowing annotations to be updated or refined without repeating the microscopy workflow. Through the ArtPOP project, we aim to develop objective, widely applicable annotation tool that enhance the robustness of paleoenvironmental reconstructions and facilitate integration across diverse palynological datasets. In this presentation, we provide an overview of challenges and advantages associated with digitizing the palynological workflow. We also present our preliminary results of the AI-augmented annotation of selected sedimentary particles.

How to cite: Śliwińska, K. K. and Andrianov, N.: ArtPOP - Automated RecogniTion of Palynomorphs and Organic sedimentary Particles , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10337, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10337, 2026.

EGU26-10713 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Delayed carbon-cycle stabilization and ecological recovery across the K/Pg boundary: evidence from the Um Sohryngkew River section, Meghalaya (India) 

Subham Patra, Jahnavi Punekar, Priyeshu Srivastava, Suman Rawat, Arun Bhadran, and Drishya Girishbai

The Cretaceous–Paleogene (K/Pg) mass extinction represents one of the most severe crises in Earth history, with marked regional variations in the tempo of pre- and post-extinction environmental stress and ecological recovery. The Um Sohryngkew River (USR) section of Meghalaya (NE India) provides a unique perspective on stress and recovery dynamics in a marine setting proximal to the Deccan Traps. This study integrates planktonic foraminiferal assemblage data with sedimentological observations and bulk-carbonate δ13C measurements to reconstruct the nature and duration of marine stress and to constrain the timing of ecological and carbon-cycle recovery in the eastern Tethyan realm. This integrated, high-resolution multi-proxy approach was previously lacking for this Deccan-proximal archive, and provides a critical constraint on how volcanogenic forcing modulated K/Pg stress and recovery at regional to global scales.

The late Maastrichtian record at USR indicates highly stressed surface-ocean conditions. Planktonic assemblages are dominated by small opportunistic taxa, particularly Guembelitria cretacea (>80%), with strong dwarfing, dominance of thin-walled morphotypes, poor preservation, and a near absence of heavily calcified taxa (e.g., Pseudotextularia spp., Globotruncana spp.). These assemblage and preservation features point to sustained calcification stress and unfavourable conditions for carbonate production in surface waters, consistent with enhanced nutrient input and surface-water acidification under intensified continental weathering/runoff and volcanogenic CO2 emissions. Following the K/Pg boundary, planktonic foraminiferal abundance (4 tests/g) and diversity remained markedly suppressed through the early Danian. The post-boundary interval is similarly characterised by persistent dominance of small opportunistic taxa (>30%; e.g., Guembelitria spp. and Chiloguembelina spp.) and continued dwarfing, indicating sustained calcification stress and hindered ecosystem rebuilding. Bulk-carbonate δ13C indicates delayed carbon-cycle recovery, beginning only after ~750 kyr at USR compared to ~200–300 kyr at many distal sites. Ecological recovery lagged further, with low diversity and small test sizes persisting for ~2 Myr until biozone P1c, indicating decoupling between carbon-cycle recovery and biological reorganization under continued environmental forcing.

The first robust evidence for ecological improvement appears in planktonic foraminiferal biozone P1c, where assemblages become more diverse and better preserved, test sizes increase, and morphogroup proportions stabilise. These changes suggest improved conditions for calcification, progressive strengthening of the pelagic carbonate system, and a more efficient biological pump. By biozones P1c–P2, community structure indicates that ecological balance was largely restored, and carbonate production increased steadily towards a better-developed carbonate-factory environment. Comparison with global K/Pg records suggests that recovery mechanisms in the USR section broadly mirror global ecological and biogeochemical feedbacks, but their timing is substantially delayed relative to distal sections. Importantly, similar evidence for prolonged stress and delayed recovery has also been documented from the Krishna–Godavari Basin of southern India, supporting a coherent regional pattern in marine environments proximal to the Deccan Traps. Together, these Deccan-proximal records highlight strong spatial heterogeneity in post-K/Pg recovery trajectories, including a delayed return to stable carbon cycling, carbonate production, and ecosystem structure.

How to cite: Patra, S., Punekar, J., Srivastava, P., Rawat, S., Bhadran, A., and Girishbai, D.: Delayed carbon-cycle stabilization and ecological recovery across the K/Pg boundary: evidence from the Um Sohryngkew River section, Meghalaya (India), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10713, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10713, 2026.

EGU26-11678 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Rare-event detection of incipient sediment motion from smart-particle time series using deep learning 

Ilias Mavris and Manousos Valyrakis


Incipient sediment motion in turbulent flows remains difficult to characterize and predict because the underlying hydrodynamic forces are highly intermittent and events are sparse in time, even in well-controlled experiments. This study investigates whether temporal deep-learning architectures can detect the onset of particle motion directly from high-frequency velocity time series measured by an instrumented “smart sphere” [1, 2], without explicit force or torque measurements. The workflow includes detrending and cleaning of raw signals, physics-informed signal transforms (e.g. smoothed velocity, acceleration, jerk, and kinematic impulse proxies), segmentation with sliding windows, and supervised training of temporal deep-learning architectures, including recurrent, convolutional, and attention-based models, using class-imbalance mitigation such as focal loss, class weighting, and data augmentation.
Hyperparameter optimization is performed automatically with Optuna, and model performance is assessed using ROC and precision–recall curves, confusion matrices and time-resolved prediction performance. Results show that all tested architectures can learn consistent kinematic signatures preceding incipient motion from single-axis velocity time series, with models incorporating attention mechanisms achieving the highest recall on rare motion-onset events, consistent with their ability to focus on intermittent, high-magnitude kinematic bursts preceding entrainment. These findings demonstrate that deep learning applied to smart-particle sensor data can provide an efficient, non-intrusive tool for particle-scale sediment transport monitoring and real-time–capable event detection. The approach is directly relevant to the session’s focus on particle-scale transport mechanics and data-driven upscaling, and opens avenues for integrating deep-learning-based event detection into multi-scale sediment transport models in geophysical and engineered flows.

References
[1] Al-Obaidi, K., Xu, Y., & Valyrakis, M. (2020). The design and calibration of instrumented particles for assessing water infrastructure hazards. Journal of Sensor and Actuator Networks, 9(3), 36.
[2] AlObaidi, K., & Valyrakis, M. (2021). Linking the explicit probability of entrainment of instrumented particles to flow hydrodynamics. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 46(12), 2448-2465.

How to cite: Mavris, I. and Valyrakis, M.: Rare-event detection of incipient sediment motion from smart-particle time series using deep learning, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11678, 2026.

EGU26-12124 | Posters virtual | VPS26

Seasonal variability at the onset of the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age: insights from Gigantoproductus shells 

Gaia Crippa, Lucia Angiolini, Karem Azmy, Enrico Cannaò, Eamon Doyle, Giovanna Della Porta, John Murray, Michael O’Connell, Marco Viaretti, and David A.T. Harper

Understanding transformations of the climate system in the geological past is essential for predicting and mitigating the effects of global climate change in the next future. The geological record provides a unique archive that documents long-term fluctuations of environmental variables, including seasonality. Seasonality appears to have played a crucial role in extreme climate transitions, highlighting the importance of constraining its variability in the past. Increased seasonality is often associated with colder conditions and the development of ice accumulations, making it a key parameter for understanding and forecasting climate change.

Species of the brachiopod Gigantoproductus are giants within the Palaeozoic sedentary benthos, characterised by exceptional size and thick shells, reaching over 30 cm in width and more than 1 cm in shell thickness. These features make them unparalleled bioarchives for palaeoecological and palaeoclimatic reconstructions, enabling the investigation of long-term changes during key intervals of past climate change.

In this study, specimens of Gigantoproductus semiglobosus from upper Visean (Mississippian, Carboniferous) successions of western Ireland (Aran Islands and the Burren) were subjected to detailed diagenetic screening and subsequently analysed using a sclerochemical approach (δ18O, δ13C). These analyses were used to reconstruct seasonal variability and to provide additional evidence for the timing of Mississippian phases of the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA).

Our results show that δ18O profiles from well-preserved shells record high seasonal variations (Δδ18O = 0.9 to 1.9 ‰ corresponding to a ΔT = 4 to 11 °C) for palaeoequatorial settings, as also observed in coeval species of Gigantoproductus from the UK (Angiolini et al., 2019). This seasonal variation is much higher than that recorded in comparable shallow water, low latitude environments both nowadays and in the distant past. The pronounced seasonality recorded by several species of Gigantoproductus from western Ireland and the UK at low palaeolatitudes supports the onset of a sustained Gondwanan glaciation in the late Visean. Also, the palaeogeographic distribution of the species of Gigantoproductus and the geochemical composition of their shells indicate that low-latitude Mississippian ocean waters did not experience a temperature decrease at the onset of the Gondwanan glaciation, but rather a marked increase in seasonal variability.

Overall, this study highlights the importance of resolving long-term changes in seasonality, using fossil carbonate shells as palaeoclimatic archives during different intervals of climate change, in both the recent and distant past, to better understand and predict long-term transformations of the climate system.

 

 

References

Angiolini et al. (2019). The giants of the phylum Brachiopoda: a matter of diet? Palaeontology, Vol. 62, Part 6, pp. 889–917

How to cite: Crippa, G., Angiolini, L., Azmy, K., Cannaò, E., Doyle, E., Della Porta, G., Murray, J., O’Connell, M., Viaretti, M., and Harper, D. A. T.: Seasonal variability at the onset of the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age: insights from Gigantoproductus shells, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12124, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12124, 2026.

EGU26-15851 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Geomorphological controls on the persistence and extent of Landfast Sea Ice in James Bay Region 

Debangshu Banerjee, Kaushik Gupta, and Anirban Mukhopadhyay

Bathymetry plays a critical role in determining the occurrence and stability of landfast sea ice, although its seasonal impact on sub-Arctic ice-covered shelves has yet to be thoroughly quantified and understood. Our study explores the ways in which nearshore bathymetry and coastal topography influence the spatial distribution, seasonal persistence, and variability of landfast sea ice, with an emphasis on shallow embayments of James Bay. Our hypothesis suggests that factors like coastal orientation and bathymetry provide extent and stability to the landfast sea ice in the James Bay region, rather than being exclusively governed by marine and atmospheric factors. Using satellite-derived observations of landfast sea-ice delineations, regional bathymetric datasets, and information on coastal geomorphological configuration, this analysis will quantify statistical relationships among the landfast-ice edge extent and persistence metrics with the bathymetric thresholds and coastal orientations. Initial findings indicate that recurrent landfast ice extents are larger and their persistence is higher when there is a shallow water column, undulating bathymetry with mounds, and/or offshore features. Our observations support the hypothesis that bathymetry plays a crucial role in determining the presence and stability of landfast sea ice. By explicitly correlating bathymetry and geomorphology with landfast ice phenology and stability indicators, our research aims to advance both conceptual and quantitative understandings within coastal ice modelling frameworks and refine projections concerning the response of landfast sea ice to ongoing Arctic amplification and climate change.

How to cite: Banerjee, D., Gupta, K., and Mukhopadhyay, A.: Geomorphological controls on the persistence and extent of Landfast Sea Ice in James Bay Region, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15851, 2026.

EGU26-17175 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Physical geomorphometry: From a concept to practical applications 

Anton Popov and Jozef Minár

Physical geomorphometry is young way that describe land surface morphology through gravitational energy and mass and energy movement. Unlike statistical and general geomorphometric approaches, physical geomorphometry bridging land surface characteristics and fundamental physical processes allows to interpret geomorphological primitives from genetic point of view. In this study we incorporated latest achievements of physical geomorphometry concept to demonstrate a transition from theoretical aspects to practical applications of the concept.

In the research we applied a set of physical geomorphometric (PG) indices that describes landform development from different points of view. Moreover, we used a modified algorithm of physically based elementary land-surface segmentation algorithm that integrates dynamic least-squares DEM generalization with object-based image analysis. The method is evaluated across contrasting environments, including glacial and karst landscapes, and is further extended to marine settings for seabed landform classification. Key contribution is the application of PG signature concept that unify the set of PG indices and therefore quantitatively describes landforms based on the balance and magnitude of geomorphic energies.

Our results demonstrate that the approach allows us to obtain genetically interpretable landforms both in terrestrial and submarine landscapes. Physical geomorphometric signature is highly effective in landform groups comparison and detection of each group’s potential affinity to development i.e. their disequilibrium. It also helped us to define transitional forms of landforms that are usually overlooked by general geomorphological methods.

Overall, the work highlights robustness and applicability of the concept of physical geomorphometry in various application in geosciences and beyond, that was partially demonstrated in the research.

How to cite: Popov, A. and Minár, J.: Physical geomorphometry: From a concept to practical applications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17175, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17175, 2026.

EGU26-19944 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

FROM CATCHMENT TO CHANNEL: HIGH-PERFORMANCE PARALLEL MODELING OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT IN THE TEL RIVER BASIN USING ANUGA Sed 

Akshay Vyankat Dahiwale, Upasana Dutta, Yogesh Kumar Singh, Girishchandra Yendargaye, T S Murugesh Prabhu, and Sekhar Muddu

The Tel River, a major tributary of the Mahanadi River in eastern India, exhibits strong spatial and temporal variability in flow and sediment dynamics due to its monsoon-driven hydrology, heterogeneous terrain, and increasing human interventions. Soil erosion and sediment transport, although naturally driven by rainfall and surface runoff, have been significantly altered by agriculture, urbanization, and water management structures, leading to changes in soil loss, sedimentation, and degradation of water resources. Therefore, in this study, the production of soil erosion in the Tel River Basin is estimated using the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE), while riverine sediment transport is simulated using ANUGA-Sed, a two-dimensional shallow-water hydrodynamic and sediment transport model based on a finite-volume scheme. The ANUGA flow and sediment modules were calibrated and validated using observed discharge and suspended sediment data from multiple gauging stations along the Tel River. Parallel simulations performed on the Param Pravega high-performance computing systems significantly reduced computation time while maintaining numerical accuracy, enabling high-resolution modelling of the entire Tel River Basin. The model was further evaluated for elasticity, computational accuracy, and optimal grid distribution per node on the HPC system, demonstrating robust scalability and efficient utilization of computational resources.

The model results show strong agreement with observations, with errors in net erosion and deposition generally below 10%. The simulations successfully reproduce the spatial patterns of sediment generation, transport, and deposition along the river network. Importantly, the model provides new insights into sediment dynamics between gauging stations where direct measurements are unavailable and captures cross-sectional channel changes associated with sediment transport processes. These results were further validated using field-based suspended sediment data collected in October 2023 at intermediate river locations using portable sampling instruments. The simulations reveal distinct zones of high erosion and deposition that are critical for understanding flood conveyance and channel stability. Overall, the results confirm that ANUGA-Sed can reliably simulate suspended sediment transport and riverbed changes in monsoon-dominated river systems.

How to cite: Dahiwale, A. V., Dutta, U., Singh, Y. K., Yendargaye, G., Prabhu, T. S. M., and Muddu, S.: FROM CATCHMENT TO CHANNEL: HIGH-PERFORMANCE PARALLEL MODELING OF SEDIMENT TRANSPORT IN THE TEL RIVER BASIN USING ANUGA Sed, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19944, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19944, 2026.

EGU26-19976 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Cryoseismic monitoring in the Schirmacher Oasis, East Antarctica 

Nivika Singh Sattasi, Vipul Silwal, Manoj Tm, Ariz Ahamad, Ankit Suthar, and Sanjay Singh Negi

We conducted a two-month-long cryoseismic monitoring study in the Schirmacher Oasis, East Antarctica, to investigate icequake activity caused by the movement and melting of ice sheets. For this purpose, we deployed a Raspberry Shake seismometer on the Antarctic land and ice sheet for a month. Through a comparative analysis of the recorded seismic data, we gained insights into ice dynamics and diurnal icequake patterns. The Raspberry Shake instrumentation, powered by solar energy, offers a cost-effective approach for establishing a dense seismic network. During installation, the seismometer, solar controller, and Li-ion battery were housed in a wooden box lined with nitrile foam for insulation. The analysis suggests that icequake detections follow a distinct diurnal pattern, with more events occurring during the daytime. Furthermore, we also observe interdependence between icequake detections and high wind speeds.We use a multi STA/LTA approach for event detection on a continuous 11-day period while the seismometer was on ice. We detect 2249 icequake events, which are further manually classified into three categories. More than half of icequakes (67%) belong to a shallow origin and some are indicative of deep icequakes (9%).These findings highlight the need for a denser seismic network and more detailed investigations to further understand the impact of climate change on melting ice sheets.

How to cite: Sattasi, N. S., Silwal, V., Tm, M., Ahamad, A., Suthar, A., and Negi, S. S.: Cryoseismic monitoring in the Schirmacher Oasis, East Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19976, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19976, 2026.

EGU26-20785 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS26

Remote sensing analysis of water dynamics within floodplain lakes in the eastern part of the Mackenzie River delta 

Damian Ciepłowski and Michał Habel

River deltas play a crucial role in the transport of sediments and nutrients between river catchments and the sea. Scientific studies have demonstrated that Arctic deltas have a significant potential for sediment retention. Ongoing climate change is accelerating the thawing of permafrost, which largely constitutes the substrate of Arctic deltas, thereby affecting the morphological and hydrological evolution of these low-lying tundra systems.

The aim of this study is to estimate changes in the surface area and flood storage capacity of deltaic lakes using remote sensing methods. Optical and radar satellite data from Sentinel-2 and RADARSAT-2 were used, obtained under a grant from the Canadian Space Agency (application no. RCM CSA-RC-FORM-0003), together with advanced tools for spatial and radar data analysis. The selected study area is an eastern part of the Mackenzie River Delta (Canada, Northwest Territories), namely Big Lake, located near the city of Inuvik, approximately 130 km from the Beaufort Sea. The Big Lake is a through-flow lake with an area of about 800 ha. It is part of a system of approximately 2,000 lakes that maintain year-round connectivity with the East Channel, one of the main distributary channels conveying water within the delta.

The presented results are based on satellite and hydrological analyses conducted at the beginning of the ice-free water period, occurring at the turn of May and June. The study includes a comparison of satellite observations with gauge data. To determine the extent and volume of floodwaters, the Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI), advanced radar data analyses, and statistical analyses of hydrological data from Water Survey of Canada (WSC) were applied. Satellite imagery acquired during open-water seasons made it possible to delineate shoreline extents and the associated water surface elevations. Selected years from the period 2011–2024 were analysed; for example, it was estimated that at the turn of May and June 2024 the lake stored approximately 8.2 million m³ of water over a period of 49 days.

Considering sediment transport, the Mackenzie River is the largest supplier to the Arctic Ocean, delivers more than 100 million tonnes of sediment annually. Previous studies characterise these sediments as predominantly fine-grained fractions that are easily transported. The presence of an organic-rich catchment combined with the magnitude of fluvial sediment transport highlights the importance of understanding the mechanisms governing sediment distribution, quantities, and areas of deposition within the delta system.

This research is being conducted with the permission of the Government of Canada – North West Territories (NWT) – research licence number 17694 which was issued under application number 6131 and financed by the Polish Ministry of Education and Science - National Research Agency, title: Evaluation of the settling velocity and trapping capacity of sediments in lakes in the Great Arctic River deltas, grant no. 2023/50/O/ST10/00597.

How to cite: Ciepłowski, D. and Habel, M.: Remote sensing analysis of water dynamics within floodplain lakes in the eastern part of the Mackenzie River delta, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20785, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20785, 2026.

The non-linear feedback mechanisms and interactions between discharge-sediment supply and instream (riparian) vegetation cover generate spatio-temporal heterogeneity in braided channel forms. The present study examines such relationships among three contrasting braided rivers of India: the Brahmaputra (highly braided), the Brahmani (weakly braided) and the Netravathi (meandering-braided). Long term JRC Surface water layer, vegetation-water remote sensing indices, numerical model derived hydrological datasets and periodic field visits have been integrated to understand the vegetation–hydrology–sediment coupling across these braided river systems.  The results show that the channel forming discharges in the Brahmaputra shows a hierarchical level and extreme events dominate over the effect of sparse vegetated landforms. In weakly braided reaches, channel-in-channel form oscillates between two extreme nodes depending upon the intensity of disturbing events. For rivers with meandering-braided transition form, channels are relatively stable and riparian vegetation cover generate a stable geometry and absence of floodplain sediment storage.   

How to cite: Pradhan, C.: Integrating Google Earth Engine Cloud Computing and Fluvial Surveys to Quantify Vegetation–Hydrology–Sediment Coupling in Contrasting Braided River Systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21498, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21498, 2026.

SSP1 – General Sessions

EGU26-1262 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP1.1

Paleoclimate reconstruction from Permian paleosols of the Rio do Rasto Formation, Paraná Basin, Brazil 

Caio Paz, Manoela Bállico, Lorenza Belitzki, Monica Manna, and Karin Goldberg

Paleosols preserve critical evidence of past surface conditions and provide key insights into Earth’s environmental evolution. Pedogenetic processes, controlled by parent material, climate, topography, biological activity, and exposure time, record both the duration and intensity of weathering. Micromorphological features in paleosols are particularly valuable for establishing relationships between soil-forming processes and sedimentary structures, supporting robust paleoenvironmental and paleoclimatic interpretations. Permian paleosols from the Paraná Basin, southern Brazil, occur within the Rio do Rasto Formation, which is composed of lacustrine deposits of the Serrinha Member, overlain by aeolian systems, fluvial channels, and overbank successions of the Morro Pelado Member. This study integrates macro- and micromorphological observations with geochemical data (Chemical Index of Alteration – CIA) and mineralogical analyses (X-ray Diffraction – XRD) to reconstruct paleoclimate conditions during paleosol development. Microscale analyses show that variations in clay mineral assemblages and carbonate precipitates strongly control sample coloration, producing whitish, greenish, and grayish tones proportional to carbonate content. The results indicate a predominantly semiarid to arid paleoclimate, characterized by intense wetting–drying cycles, repeated waterlogging, and high evaporation rates. The clay fraction is dominated by expansive clay minerals, particularly smectite, reflecting reduced chemical leaching under seasonal drainage conditions. In contrast, subordinate kaolinite and illite suggest episodic phases of improved drainage and longer subaerial exposure. Pedogenic features such as desiccation cracks, slickensides, bioturbation structures (root traces and burrows), and redoximorphic mottling provide further evidence for soil development under a highly seasonal water regime. Carbonate nodules and evaporitic phases become increasingly abundant toward the top of the stratigraphic succession, indicating a progressive aridification trend associated with the continentalization of Gondwana during the Middle to Late Permian. CIA values demonstrate a regional climatic gradient within the basin, from semiarid conditions in intermediate areas to fully arid, locally evaporitic settings in more distal zones. These results reinforce the value of paleosols as reliable terrestrial paleoclimate proxies and provide new insights into the paleohydrological and climatic evolution of southern Gondwana during the Late Paleozoic. This study contributes to a better understanding of environmental dynamics prior to the Permo–Triassic transition.

How to cite: Paz, C., Bállico, M., Belitzki, L., Manna, M., and Goldberg, K.: Paleoclimate reconstruction from Permian paleosols of the Rio do Rasto Formation, Paraná Basin, Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1262, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1262, 2026.

EGU26-5239 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP1.1

Why did ammonoids go extinct but nautiloids survive the end-Cretaceous mass extinction? 

Michael Schmutzer, Erin Saupe, Christian Klug, Amane Tajika, Frank Wiese, and James Witts

66 million years ago, an asteroid killed the non-avian dinosaurs. It also triggered the extinction of the ammonoids, an iconic and diverse group of shelled cephalopods. Curiously, a far less diverse group of shelled cephalopods survived, the nautiloids. Why did the nautiloids survive, but the ammonoids go extinct? This question is subject to a lively and ongoing debate. Many (not mutually exclusive) hypotheses have been raised, often with some degree of empirical support. For example, nautiloids had larger hatching sizes, which might have allowed them to survive periods of low food availability. Nautiloids also had larger geographic distributions, possibly indicating greater flexibility in response to varying environmental conditions, or a higher chance to end up in refugia post-impact. Drawing on PaleoDB and other published datasets, we collected the largest dataset so far on Maastrichtian shelled cephalopods, combining fossil occurrences, hatching sizes, and body sizes. We present some preliminary findings based on this data. 

How to cite: Schmutzer, M., Saupe, E., Klug, C., Tajika, A., Wiese, F., and Witts, J.: Why did ammonoids go extinct but nautiloids survive the end-Cretaceous mass extinction?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5239, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5239, 2026.

EGU26-5652 | Posters on site | SSP1.1

Mercury accumulation and mutagenesis in ferns surviving mass-extinction 

Bas van de Schootbrugge, Chris Mays, Tomas Navratil, Jan Rohovec, Barry Lomax, Katarina Vogel-Mikus, Han van Konijnenburg-van Cittert, Dennis Brückner, Gijs Maas, Myrthe Arkesteijn, Sofie Lindström, and Antony van der Ent

Mutated pteridophyte spores occur abundantly in conjunction with the end-Triassic mass-extinction (ETME), ~201.6 million years ago, one of the ‘Big Five’ mass-extinction events of the past 500 million years. Based on high concentrations of sedimentary mercury (Hg) in beds that contain abundant mutated fern spore fossils, it has been hypothesized that volcanogenic Hg-emission from large-scale volcanism in the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province exerted stress on standing and pioneering vegetation, causing malfunctions in meiosis and the production of malformed pteridophyte spores. Here, we provide the first clear in vivo evidence for anomalously high Hg among the plants that survived and proliferated through the ETME using synchrotron X-ray fluorescence (XRF). Our analysis reveals highly enriched values of Hg within the fronds of the earliest Jurassic fern Phlebopteris angustiloba from southern Germany. Intriguingly, P. angustiloba, a member of the Matoniaceae, is recognized as the parent plant which produced malformed spores within the Deltoidospora-Concavisporites complex that are common in the same beds that contain the fossil fern leaves. Using XRF and X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) analyses, we made comparisons between the fossil fern leaves and those of extant ferns growing in high-mercury environments in Slovenia, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic. These comparisons suggest that ferns can tolerate elevated Hg-levels and bind it in their placentas with sulfurous compounds. Our combined analysis of extant and extinct ferns suggests that these traits may have evolved in response to past environments with high concentrations of toxic metals—like those caused by magmatically-triggered mass extinctions—during which metal-tolerant strategies would have greatly enhanced survivorship.

How to cite: van de Schootbrugge, B., Mays, C., Navratil, T., Rohovec, J., Lomax, B., Vogel-Mikus, K., van Konijnenburg-van Cittert, H., Brückner, D., Maas, G., Arkesteijn, M., Lindström, S., and van der Ent, A.: Mercury accumulation and mutagenesis in ferns surviving mass-extinction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5652, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5652, 2026.

EGU26-7975 | Posters on site | SSP1.1

Decoding Late Maastrichtian Events: Volcanism, Ocean Changes, and the Chicxulub Impact in Central Anatolia, Turkey 

Thierry Adatte, Uygar Karabeyoğlu, Nicolas Thibault, Michael Joachimski, and Marcel Regelous

The Göynük section emerges as a particularly valuable archive, preserving a continuous ~800 kyr stratigraphy from the CF4 to CF1 planktonic foraminiferal zones (~66.8–66.016 Ma), thus capturing the full trajectory of environmental perturbations leading to the KPg boundary. Notably, the progressive rise in planktonic δ¹³C values, peaks in Hg and Te concentrations between ~66.3–66.01 Ma and shifts in both planktonic and benthic δ¹⁸O point to intensified volcanic activity, most likely linked to the Poladpur pulse of the Deccan Traps. These signals—along with enhanced weathering, increased detrital input, and declining magnetic susceptibility—mark a phase of sustained environmental stress well before the Chicxulub impact. The correlation of benthic δ¹³C variability with Te enrichment suggests SO₂-induced ocean acidification and intermittent collapses/reductions of the export production as major ecosystem stress mechanisms during mid-CF2. In the Göynük and Okçular sections, the abrupt extinction of planktonic foraminifera, the sharp negative shift in δ¹³Cbulk, and the suite of impact proxies including trace element enrichments, such as an Ir anomaly at the KPg boundary in Göynük, reflect a robust signal of the Chicxulub event. The juxtaposition of both impact- and volcanism-related markers thus speaks for a compound scenario in which Deccan-driven perturbations fragilized marine ecosystems, while the Chicxulub impact delivered the final blow.

How to cite: Adatte, T., Karabeyoğlu, U., Thibault, N., Joachimski, M., and Regelous, M.: Decoding Late Maastrichtian Events: Volcanism, Ocean Changes, and the Chicxulub Impact in Central Anatolia, Turkey, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7975, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7975, 2026.

EGU26-8888 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

Is There Evidence of A “Strangelove Ocean” After The K/Pg Boundary?  A New Unbiased Benthic Foraminiferal Record 

Syouma Hikmahtiar, Michael Kaminski, and Asmaa Korin

The response of deep-sea ecosystems to the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K/Pg) mass extinction is crucial for understanding post-impact carbon-cycle disruptions and benthic ecological resilience. Our research presents a new unbiased quantitative record of deep-water agglutinated foraminifera (DWAF) with high resolution, coupled with calcareous nannoplankton and stable carbon and oxygen isotopes from Gubbio (Umbria-Marche Basin, Italy) ranging from 6.4 m below to 6.4 m above the K/Pg boundary clay. The dataset is based on highly standardized sampling intervals and weights, consistent sample preparation, in an attempt to minimize the Signor–Lipps bias, accurate taxonomic treatment and statistical analysis.

DWAF abundance and benthic foraminifera accumulation rates (BFAR) show an abrupt decline and reduction across the boundary, reaching a minimum point in the earliest Danian and followed by a slow recovery over a few hundred thousand years. The case of productivity collapse parallels with a negative excursion in δ¹³C and shifts in δ¹⁸O, suggesting marine carbon cycle disruption. Shannon H and Dominance D diversity indices, supported by diversity curves, display a sharp reduction in species richness and evenness below and above the boundary. The early Paleocene assemblages are described by low diversity, high dominance, and blooms of opportunistic taxa (ReophaxSpiroplectinella). Lazarus taxa were detected higher in the Danian, along with a gradual increase in BFAR and isotopic values.

Benthic foraminifera and isotopic signals point out a temporary reduction in food supply to the deep water, reflecting an unsteady and short-term Strangelove-like response rather than a true Strangelove Ocean as postulated by previous authors. Additionally, the evidence for the survival of benthic foraminifera, the absence of extensive-scale extinction, and the rapid recovery of BFAR and diversity values, does not fully support the Strangelove Ocean scenario. Instead, our unbiased record shows a short-lived decline in marine productivity, followed by a gradual recovery and ecological reorganization. Our results suggest that deep-sea ecological communities at the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary were able to withstand the disturbance, and experienced a reduced food supply rather than a complete shutdown of biological productivity. 

How to cite: Hikmahtiar, S., Kaminski, M., and Korin, A.: Is There Evidence of A “Strangelove Ocean” After The K/Pg Boundary?  A New Unbiased Benthic Foraminiferal Record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8888, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8888, 2026.

EGU26-9703 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

The Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary at Gubbio: an overview of recent stratigraphic and proxy record updates  

Matthias Sinnesael, Alessandro Montanari, Lawrence M.E. Percival, Toni Schulz, Niels J. de Winter, Johan Vellekoop, David De Vleeschouwer, Rodolfo Coccioni, Christian Koeberl, Steven Goderis, and Philippe Claeys

The Cretaceous-Paleogene (~66 Ma) boundary marks one of the ‘Big Five’ mass extinctions of the Phanerozoic. The event continues to spark discussion, and stimulating increasing focus on the study of geological records of that boundary, including the development of robust stratigraphic frameworks and new proxies. Some of the most-studied Cretaceous-Paleogene sections are those near the town of Gubbio, located in the Umbria-Marche Basin in Italy. The construction of cyclostratigraphic age models allows for the refined understanding of the timing and pacing of paleoenvironmental effects of Deccan volcanism and the Chicxulub impact. High-resolution X-ray fluorescence derived elemental profiles allow for detailed stratigraphic correlation and paleoenvironmental interpretations that can be checked across stratigraphically equivalent sections across the basin. New integrated proxy records (e.g. platinum group element and mercury concentrations, osmium isotope ratios) featuring both extraterrestrial impact and large-scale volcanism signatures can now be put on a common timeline to allow the decomposition of its relative contributions. This contribution gives an overview of such progress made for these sections over the last decade of research, and to what new insights it leads.

How to cite: Sinnesael, M., Montanari, A., Percival, L. M. E., Schulz, T., de Winter, N. J., Vellekoop, J., De Vleeschouwer, D., Coccioni, R., Koeberl, C., Goderis, S., and Claeys, P.: The Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary at Gubbio: an overview of recent stratigraphic and proxy record updates , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9703, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9703, 2026.

EGU26-10613 | Posters on site | SSP1.1

From Volcanic Source to Sedimentary Sink - Tellurium as a proxy for LIP volcanism 

Marcel Regelous, Nils Björn Baumann, Thierry Adatte, Roberta L. Rudnick, Blair Schoene, Gerta Keller, Nikhil Sharma, and Karsten M. Haase

Tellurium is a highly volatile, chalcophile and moderately siderophile trace element that is strongly enriched in volcanic gases relative to crustal rocks. Like mercury, tellurium concentrations in sediments can therefore represent a proxy for past volcanic activity, allowing the timing of LIP volcanism relative to environmental and biotic change during mass extinction events to be determined. Previous studies reported high Te contents in sedimentary rocks at the Permian-Triassic, Cretaceous-Paleogene and Paleocene-Eocene boundaries, which may be linked to eruption of the Siberian, Deccan, and North Atlantic flood basalts, respectively.

Due to the low abundance of Te in most geological materials, and the relatively high ionization energy of Te, this element is rarely analyzed and its geochemical behavior is poorly understood. We have developed methods for analysis of nanogram amounts of Te (and other trace elements) using desolvating nebulizer ICP-MS. Addition of a single-step cationic exchange preconcentration allows analysis of samples containing ppt levels of Te. Using these methods, we carried out analyses of different geological materials, in order to advance our understanding of the behavior of Te in volcanic and sedimentary systems and assess its potential as a proxy for volcanic activity.

Glacial diamictite composites, previously used to estimate the average composition of the Upper Continental Crust (UCC), yield an average Te concentration of 36.7 ± 0.5 ng/g. Assuming this is representative of average UCC, this enrichment in Te relative to estimates of the primitive mantle (silicate Earth) of about 12 ng/g, despite tellurium’s moderately compatible behavior during mantle melting, may indicate that Te has been concentrated in the UCC due to volcanic and hydrothermal processes.

Deccan flood basalts that have not fractionated sulfide, have low Te concentrations (average 0.94 ppb, n=12) relative to MORB (3 – 5 ppb), suggesting that Te was largely degassed during emplacement of the subaerial Deccan lavas at 66.5 – 65.5 Ma. By contrast, the red boles (fossil soil horizons) interbedded with Deccan lavas, have high Te concentrations of up to 2200 ppb, indicating that significant amounts of Te were released during volcanism, some of which was deposited close to the site of volcanism. This observation agrees with data of several thousand sedimentary rocks from profiles across the K-Pg boundary in Italy, Egypt, Morocco, Turkey and Spain, thus supporting the use of Te as a geochemical proxy for LIP volcanism.

How to cite: Regelous, M., Baumann, N. B., Adatte, T., Rudnick, R. L., Schoene, B., Keller, G., Sharma, N., and Haase, K. M.: From Volcanic Source to Sedimentary Sink - Tellurium as a proxy for LIP volcanism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10613, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10613, 2026.

EGU26-10627 | Orals | SSP1.1 | Highlight

Magmatism and continental weathering linked to carbon cycle change and climatic disturbance across the Triassic–Jurassic transition 

Weimu Xu, Giorgia Ballabio, Daniel Hnatyshin, Micha Ruhl, David van Acken, Alexander J. Dickson, and Stephen P. Hesselbo

The episodic emplacement of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) triggered profound perturbations to the global carbon cycle, marked by abrupt pCO2 elevations and climatic/environmental disturbance that led to the end-Triassic mass extinction (∼201.5 Ma). While volcanogenic degassing is recognized as the primary trigger of this environmental crisis, the subsequent Earth system feedbacks, particularly the role of silicate weathering in sequestering excess carbon, remain poorly understood. Resolving the temporal interplay between pulsed magmatic degassing and the weathering of fresh basaltic rock and associated carbon drawdown, is essential for understanding the stability of the global climate systems during extreme greenhouse forcing as well as the drivers of Early Jurassic Earth system recovery. In this study, we utilize the osmium (Os) isotope proxy to disentangle the intricacies of couplings between the global carbon cycle, magmatism and continental weathering.

Seawater 187Os/188Os ratios are highly sensitive to the balance between radiogenic continental runoff and unradiogenic mantle-derived inputs. Given the short residence time of Os (~10–50 kyr), this system can provide a detailed archive of rapid shifts in global weathering fluxes. We present a high-resolution initial seawater Os isotope ratio (187Os/188Osi) record from the Prees Borehole (Cheshire Basin, UK), drilled by the International Continental Drilling Program (ICDP) Early Jurassic Earth System and Timescale (JET) project that offers an exceptionally complete stratigraphic succession across the Triassic–Jurassic transition. Our data, integrated with well constrained carbon-isotopic and biostratigraphic frameworks, reveal stratigraphic fluctuations in sedimentary Os-isotopic compositions that suggest temporal changes in global seawater 187Os/188Osi, and by inference allow tracking of CAMP magmatism and changes in global weathering. By placing these findings in a global context, we demonstrate how the competition between volcanic carbon degassing and new weathering sinks governed the evolution of the global carbon cycle and, consequently, the ocean–atmosphere climatic system, providing a mechanistic framework for the environmental recovery following one of Earth’s most severe biotic crises.

How to cite: Xu, W., Ballabio, G., Hnatyshin, D., Ruhl, M., van Acken, D., Dickson, A. J., and Hesselbo, S. P.: Magmatism and continental weathering linked to carbon cycle change and climatic disturbance across the Triassic–Jurassic transition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10627, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10627, 2026.

EGU26-11451 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

Short Local Expression, Long Global Crisis: Astronomical Constraints on Devonian Kellwasser Event Durations from Walnut Creek (New York State, USA) 

Jakob Quabeck, Jana Klisiewicz, Nina Wichern, Or Bialik, Jeffrey Over, Linda Hinnov, Kate Tuskes, and David De Vleeschouwer

The Frasnian-Famennian Kellwasser Crisis (~372 Ma) is one of the most severe marine biocrises of the Phanerozoic Eon. The ecological impact of the Kellwasser Crisis was global in nature and sedimentary sections that record the Kellwasser Crisis commonly contain two organic-rich layers, the Lower Kellwasser (LKW) and Upper Kellwasser (UKW) horizons. This canonical two-step pattern, however, is far from globally uniform and differences in thickness, completeness and lithology are pronounced among depositional settings. Cyclostratigraphic analyses converge in total crisis duration estimates, while high resolution studies reveal substantial differences in the duration and internal structure of the LKW and UKW depending on depositional environment. These differences challenge the assumption that the Kellwasser horizons are isochronous at fine timescales and highlight the need for high-resolution analyses across multiple depositional environments.

To address these uncertainties, we present a cyclostratigraphic and paleoclimatic analysis of a combined sediment core and hand sample dataset of the siliciclastic Walnut Creek section (western New York State, USA). Walnut Creek exhibits a pronounced meter-scale rhythmicity between thicker grey shales and thinner black shale beds that is suggestive of astronomical forcing.

Cyclostratigraphic reconstruction based on XRF analysis indicates a total crisis duration of ~880 kyr, which is consistent with independent estimates from other localities. However, reconstructed durations of ~25 kyr for the LKW and ~8 kyr for the UKW are notably shorter than observed elsewhere. Throughout the crisis interval, black shale deposition in the Appalachian Basin is indicated to be driven by top-down eutrophication linked to precession-paced variations in monsoon strength. The new geochemical and cyclostratigraphic evidence from Walnut Creek demonstrates that the onset of organic-rich LKW and UKW deposition was likely isochronous in the Appalachian Basin and the deeper Rheic Ocean margin, and that astronomical forcing controlled the pacing of the crisis. Notably, the thick organic-rich crisis beds commonly found in deposits from the Rheic Ocean correspond to several, respectively shorter, precession-paced black shale beds at Walnut Creek.

From these findings we identify three first-order factors that locally determine whether LKW and UKW organic-rich horizons formed, how thick they would become, and how long they persisted: (1) the capacity of the hinterland to generate nutrient-rich soils; (2) the sensitivity of the depositional environment to precessional forcing; and (3) the dissipation timescales of oxygen-depleted water masses. Together, these factors explain the global spatial heterogeneity of the geologic expression of the Kellwasser Crisis.

How to cite: Quabeck, J., Klisiewicz, J., Wichern, N., Bialik, O., Over, J., Hinnov, L., Tuskes, K., and De Vleeschouwer, D.: Short Local Expression, Long Global Crisis: Astronomical Constraints on Devonian Kellwasser Event Durations from Walnut Creek (New York State, USA), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11451, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11451, 2026.

EGU26-11783 | Posters on site | SSP1.1

Sediment deformation structures in the Rhaetian of Luxembourg  

Jean Thein, Natascha Kuhlmann, and Robert Colbach

The critical timespan during the Rhaetian (Norian to Hettangian), and in particular the Triassic–Jurassic transition, is known for the catastrophic end-Triassic mass extinction event (201.6 Ma). This occurred in the context of the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea, and was accompanied by strong earthquakes and widespread volcanism.

In Luxembourg, the Rhaetian is exceptionally well preserved as a complete stratigraphic sequence in several drill cores (Elvange, Geyershaff, Grouft, and Heedhaff) and has been studied intensively in detail by the authors. It is subdivided in Luxembourg into a lower part, the Mortinsart Formation (Grès de Mortinsart), and an upper part, the Levallois Formation (Argiles de Levallois). The Mortinsart Formation is built up by alternating greyish-green sand-, and black claystones with rare thin black conglomerates and coaly horizons. They are overlain by the Levallois Formation, a very uniform sequence of reddish-brown claystones with thin silt streaks. Furthermore, the Levallois Formation shows numerous horizons with microfold structures in Luxembourg.

These soft-sediment deformation structures (SSDS) are usually interpreted as seismites because they are earthquake-induced and can be observed in the end-Triassic mass extinction interval across Europe. The origin of these is the intense seismic activity, linked to the formation of the Central Atlantic magmatic province (CAMP) caused by the breakup of Pangea.

The Levallois Formation is separated from the underlying Mortinsart Formation by an extremely chaotic, intensively deformed and completely unsorted horizon, which shows  flame structures, and vertebrate remains are enriched, including dinosaur bones. The regional distribution and geochemical fingerprints indicate that this could be a tsunamite generated by a potential asteroid impact. However, other causes may also have led to the formation of this horizon. Actually, detailed studies are ongoing.

How to cite: Thein, J., Kuhlmann, N., and Colbach, R.: Sediment deformation structures in the Rhaetian of Luxembourg , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11783, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11783, 2026.

EGU26-11955 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

Terrestrial plant extinction during the Permian–Triassic ecosystem crisis 

Yue Liu, Jiaqi Guo, and Yongyun Hu

The end-Permian mass extinction is the most severe ecosystem crisis in the Phanerozoic, profoundly reshaping Earth’s ecosystems on a global scale. How the terrestrial ecosystem was impacted during the crisis remains poorly constrained due to limited fossil records. Especially, there is the lack of a global view of terrestrial ecosystem changes during the mass extinction. Here we combine Earth system simulations with plant fossil records to reconstruct the global distributions of terrestrial biomes across the Permian-Triassic transition. The results show that terrestrial plant extinction initiated in polar regions and gradually extended to lower latitudes. Plants between 50 ºN and 75 ºS were nearly completely extinct, with survival limited to local areas. Concurrently, flora from lower latitudes migrated into polar habitats. Our results provide quantitative global and regional views of terrestrial plant extinction during Earth’s most severe ecosystem collapse, enhancing our understanding of terrestrial biotic responses to extreme environmental change. 

How to cite: Liu, Y., Guo, J., and Hu, Y.: Terrestrial plant extinction during the Permian–Triassic ecosystem crisis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11955, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11955, 2026.

EGU26-13529 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP1.1

High-resolution mercury (Hg) records across the K/Pg boundary: Assessing Deccan volcanism as a global climatic driver 

Vicente Gilabert, Siestke, J. Batenburg, José Antonio Arz, Marcel Regelous, Nils Baumann, Daniel Ferrer, Iván Aparicio, and Ignacio Arenillas

The Cretaceous/Paleogene (K/Pg) boundary (~66 Ma), at which the mass extinction induced by the Chicxulub impact occurred, is preceded by the onset of Deccan Traps volcanism. According to high-precision radiometric dating, the emplacement of this large igneous province occurred from ~300 kyr prior to ~400 kyr after the boundary, potentially affecting Earth’s global climate before, during, and after the extinction event. Nonetheless, despite refined studies published over the last decade, uncertainties persist regarding the rates of volcanic eruption and outgassing, and whether volcanism played a role in the main climatic events across this interval.

In this study, we generated new high-resolution mercury (Hg) concentration data from the internationally recognized K-Pg sites of Zumaia and Caravaca (Spain) and Walvis Ridge Site 1267 (South Atlantic). Our goal is to establish reliable stratigraphic correlations and develop robust, independent age models to infer the temporal relationship between Deccan volcanism and the paleoclimatic changes recorded in the sedimentary record. We calculate Hg mass accumulation rates (MARs) to investigate the nature of the observed Hg anomalies over time. Measured Hg values and calculated Hg MARs display considerable variability between sections; in some cases, higher Hg anomalies were recorded well before the main phase of Deccan volcanism began. This finding raises questions about the utility of Hg as a standalone proxy. Consequently, we argue that for Hg to be considered a reliable geochemical marker for tracking Deccan volcanism, anomalies must be temporally consistent across distant localities and align strictly with the known eruptive history. Our results point out that the greater fit for the Hg anomalies between the studied sections occurred between ~230 kyr prior and 50 kyr after the boundary. These high Hg values are temporally compatible with the emplacement of the bigger eruptive pulses, i.e. the oldest eruptive pulse which includes Kalsubai-Lonavala subgroups formations, and the Poladpur and Ambenali formations respectively, while not showing any clear track of the fourth eruptive pulse related to Mahabaleshwar formation.

According to the extensive climatic proxies generated over the past decades, the only recognizable global climatic event beyond the K/Pg boundary during this interval is the Late Maastrichtian Warming Event (LMWE). Our Hg and MARs anomalies suggest that during the LMWE, Deccan volcanism was involved to some extent. However, the LMWE onset can be dated to ~60 kyr prior to the onset of the temporally consistent Hg and MARs anomalies, suggesting that Deccan volcanism was not the sole trigger of the LMWE. The temperature increase of the LMWE appears to track the last long eccentricity maximum of the Maastrichtian, as originally proposed by Gilabert et al. (2022), reinforcing the hypothesis that orbital forcing played a significant role in the development of this hyperthermal event.  Further studies and age refinement of sedimentary proxies are still required for a better understanding of this episode of Earth’s climatic history.

 

Gilabert, V., Batenburg, S.J., Arenillas, I., Arz, J.A., 2022. Contribution of orbital forcing and Deccan volcanism to global climatic and biotic changes across the KPB at Zumaia, Spain. Geology 50, 21–25. https://doi.org/10.1130/G49214.1

How to cite: Gilabert, V., Batenburg, S. J., Arz, J. A., Regelous, M., Baumann, N., Ferrer, D., Aparicio, I., and Arenillas, I.: High-resolution mercury (Hg) records across the K/Pg boundary: Assessing Deccan volcanism as a global climatic driver, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13529, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13529, 2026.

EGU26-14681 | Posters on site | SSP1.1

The role of mercury biomethylation during end-Devonian and OAE 2 (Cretaceous) biotic perturbations 

Michal Rakocinski, Leszek Marynowski, Marta Palarz, Daria Książak, Zofia Dubicka, Jakub Kucharczyk, Dorota Staneczek, and Wojciech Krawczyński

The Late Devonian and the Middle Cretaceous are crucial periods in Earth's history and especially interesting in terms of macroevolutionary changes in marine vertebrates’ faunas at this time. The Late Devonian (Kellwasser and Hangenberg events) and mid-Cretaceous (OAE 2) events are linked to climate-controlled marine and oceanic anoxic events and biotic turnovers. These intervals are distinguished by unexpected losses in top predators represented by very characterised placoderm fishes and fish-shaped marine reptiles that were lost during these catastrophic events, respectively. During the Hangenberg crisis, they totally extincted all top predatory placoderm fishes, with the largest known predators of the time, such as Dunkleosteus. The Cenomanian-Turonian Mass Extinction is the second-order event of marine extinction and is among the best studied of any mass extinctions. This event is clearly connected with submarine volcanic-controlled climatic warming and the development of anoxic conditions in the oceans. However, one of the more important changes at this time is the total extinction of the fish-shaped or dolphin-shaped marine reptiles, ichthyosaurs, which were nektonic, very mobile, and adapted to cruising long distances, and their physiological adaptation to air breathers makes them more tolerant to oxygenation of the water column. Therefore, it remains a mystery why ichthyosaurs became extinct roughly 28 million years before the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. Both placoderms, as well as ichthyosaurs, were long-lived predators occupying the highest trophic level. Therefore, they could be more sensitive and exposed to toxic metals (such as mercury) bioaccumulation and their biomagnification in the trophic pyramid. Extensive volcanic activity during these periods should deliver huge amounts of highly toxic Hg to aquatic environments. However, the organic form of Hg with one methyl group called methylmercury (MeHg) is more toxic and dangerous to living organisms because it is almost entirely absorbed by the body and flows into the blood, and methylmercury (besides dimethylmercury) is the most toxic form of Hg. The end-Devonian and OAE 2 were characterised by the expansion of anoxic zones in marine environments. In aquatic settings, the main source of methylmercury is biomethylation of Hg by anaerobic microorganisms, such as sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB). Consequently, the conditions during these periods might have been conducive to the biomethylation of Hg. Methylmercury has received global attention since the poisoning of thousands of people in southern Japan (Minamata) in the mid-1950s. Our aim is to address the lack of knowledge surrounding the occurrence and impact of MeHg on past ecosystems, especially in the context of macroevolutionary drastic changes in aquatic vertebrates during total extinctions, such as the placoderm at the end-Devonian and the ichthyosaurs at the end-Cenomanian. Until now, we have found MeHg in sediments representing the Kellwasser event (Germany, Thuringia) and the Hangenberg event (Poland, Uzbekistan, Austria, and Oklahoma). While in the Cretaceous, we found large mercury spikes (> 1500 ppb) in the Apennines (Italy), which are promising for the search for methylmercury. We collected more samples from these crucial intervals, which are being analysed. 

This project was financially supported by the grant of the National Science Centre in Poland (2023/49/B/ST10/00505).

How to cite: Rakocinski, M., Marynowski, L., Palarz, M., Książak, D., Dubicka, Z., Kucharczyk, J., Staneczek, D., and Krawczyński, W.: The role of mercury biomethylation during end-Devonian and OAE 2 (Cretaceous) biotic perturbations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14681, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14681, 2026.

The Mississippian constituted a time of important global changes in marine environments. The mid-Tournaisian Event, also called the Lower Alum Shale Event (LASE), was a global anoxic event that occurred ca. 355 Ma ago. This event is related to global transgression connected with increased productivity, sedimentary starvation, collapsed carbonate production, and drastic facies changes from pelagic carbonate sedimentation to the widespread onset of organic-rich black shales, often with phosphate nodules, followed by black siliceous cherts and lydites in pelagic settings in many parts of the world. In contrast to the younger lower-Mississippian event, the Tournaisian Isotope Carbon Excursion (TICE), the LASE was connected with greenhouse climatic conditions associated with increased volcanic activity. The trigger for the mid-Tournaisian event is still a matter of debate, but intense volcanism (including submarine arc and explosive type) and related climate change seems to be a good causes of these environmental perturbation. The LASE interval was previously investigated in terms of high-resolution inorganic geochemistry and framboidal pyrite analyses in the Carnic Alps (Austria), Montagne Noire (France), Rhenish Massif (Germany) and Holy Cross Mountains (Poland), as well as in terms of organic geochemistry in the last area. Paleoenvironmental and paleooceanographic changes during the LASE event must have influenced the global carbon cycle. However, in contrast to inorganic geochemistry, the data on changes in Corg and Ccarb isotope signatures were sparse and of low resolution. The aim of our study was to fill this gap. Positive carbon anomalies were often associated with oceanic water eutrophication, however some of recent studies provide new perspectives for decipher changes in δ13Corg record, and several negative isotope anomalies have been reinterpreted as a primary signal associated with large-scale thermogenic degassing of light isotopically carbon (12C isotope), due to increased volcanic activity. Our isotopic data reveal negative shifts in the Carnic Alps, Montagne Noire, at the beginning of the LASE interval, reflecting a volcanic impact on the global carbon cycle. The record of stable carbon isotopes presents an extremely similar trend in the isotopic curve in the studied sections (except for France), with a negative shift in the lower part of the LASE horizon, and a positive shift in the upper part. The previous results show that on a regional scale, the LASE in the pelagic setting was not uniform, both in terms of redox changes and intensities of volcanism and styles of magmatism. Several regional magmatic centers are considered as potentially responsible for the drastic depositional changes on a local scale and for the bioproductivity increase on a global scale. Their total contribution led to a maximum of climatic warming after the D-C boundary glacial episode, resultant global transgression, and to the development of anoxia in many parts of the world during the mid-Tournaisian, causing extinctions and faunal turnovers in fossil groups that had just recovered from the global Hangenberg Crisis.

This project was financially supported by the grants of the National Science Centre in Poland no. 2023/49/N/ST10/00857.

How to cite: Kucharczyk, J. and Rakociński, M.: Carbon cycle perturbation and paleoenvironmental changes during the Lower Alum Shale Event (mid-Tournaisian, Mississippian) in southern Euramerican shelf and Palaeotethys Ocean  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16352, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16352, 2026.

EGU26-16830 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

Multiproxy Geochemical Records of the Carnian Pluvial Episode in Laurasia 

Marwa Mohamed Shahid, Aisha Al Suwaidi, Frantz Ossa Ossa, Micha Ruhl, Kim Senger, Robert Raine, and Tianchen He

The Late Triassic Carnian Pluvial Episode (CPE, ~232 Ma) is characterized by significant changes in climate globally, with conditions shifting from arid to humid and wet, followed by a return to arid conditions. The climatic shift, recorded in multiple stratigraphic sections worldwide, is thought to have been driven by a perturbation of the global carbon cycle, associated with the emplacement of the Wrangellian Terrain Large Igneous Province (WT-LIP, ~231-225 Ma). The event is often linked to profound environmental and biotic change, including the rise and diversification of dinosaurs and the establishment of modern ecosystems. Here we present new high-resolution geochemical and sedimentological data from two Carnian successions from Laurasia: the Knocksoghey Formation of the Mercia Mudstone Group in the Carnduff-2 core, Northern Ireland, representing playa-lake and aeolian deposits, and the De Geerdalen Formation, Kapp Toscana Group in the DH-4 core, Longyearbyen, representing deltaic to shallow-marine settings. Together, these sites provide complementary mid- and high-latitude records of environmental change across the Carnian Pluvial Episode (CPE). We integrate carbon isotopes, elemental compositions, weathering indices, clay mineralogy, and Hg/TOC variations to assess the temporal link between the emplacement of the WT-LIP and the onset of the CPE. In the Knocksoghey Formation, the abrupt emplacement of coarser siliciclastic deposits, known as ‘Skerries’, disrupts otherwise monotonous fine-grained red paleosols, interpreted as evidence of enhanced weathering due to the CPE. These deposits are preceded by elevated Hg concentrations, a negative carbon isotope excursion of ~6‰, and concurrent increases in geochemical weathering proxies. Comparisons of Hg/TOC and δ13C data from our records with other localities show a marked increase in the Hg/TOC concurrently with the onset of a stepped negative carbon isotope excursion, similar to other well-characterized LIP-driven climate perturbations (e.g., Toarcian CIE), further supporting the WT-LIP volcanism as the driving mechanism of the CPE.

How to cite: Mohamed Shahid, M., Al Suwaidi, A., Ossa Ossa, F., Ruhl, M., Senger, K., Raine, R., and He, T.: Multiproxy Geochemical Records of the Carnian Pluvial Episode in Laurasia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16830, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16830, 2026.

EGU26-18766 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

Spatial Variability in Triassic–Jurassic Boundary Proxy Records Across Nearshore Settings in the Northeast German Basin 

Mina Mazaheri-Johari, Wolfgang Ruebsam, Matthias Franz, Guido Wiesenberg, Stefanie Kaboth-Bahr, and Lorenz Schwark

The Triassic–Jurassic boundary (TJB) is globally marked by profound environmental change, including disruption of the carbon cycle, global warming, reorganization of sea level, and substantial turnover in marine and terrestrial ecosystems. A characteristic stratigraphic signal of this interval is a negative carbon isotope excursion (NCIE), which is widely correlated and commonly linked to volcanism associated with the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP). However, in shallow epicontinental basins, the magnitude and continuity of this signal can be strongly influenced by depositional setting, complicating the distinction between global environmental forcing and local sedimentary overprints. To assess how nearshore environments modulate TJB proxy records, we examine three stratigraphically correlated Upper Triassic–Lower Jurassic nearshore successions spanning a proximal–distal transect across the northeastern Central European Epicontinental Sea (CEES; North German Basin). These archives comprise the delta-influenced Barth 10/65 core (proximal), the shallow-marine Schandelah core (intermediate), and the outer shallow-shelf Moseberg outcrop (distal). We integrate TOC and Rock-Eval data, δ¹³Corg values, and major and trace element geochemistry to reconstruct carbon-cycle perturbations and depositional and redox conditions across the boundary.

All three successions record a NCIE that starts in the latest Rhaetian and reaches minimum values near the Triassic–Jurassic transition. This excursion coincides with a regressive–transgressive reversal and culminates in the earliest Hettangian flooding, linking the North German Basin records to the global end-Triassic carbon-cycle perturbation. Nevertheless, the expression of the NCIE varies systematically along the proximal–distal transect. The Barth 10/65 core exhibits strong siliciclastic dilution, dominantly oxidized Type III–IV kerogen, and a comparatively muted the NCIE (δ¹³Corg ~3.6‰), consistent with high-energy deltaic settings and limited accommodation space. In contrast, the Schandelah and Moseberg sections preserve more pronounced excursions of approximately 5‰ in δ¹³Corg. At Schandelah, the maximum isotope shift occurs during early transgression, whereas Moseberg retains a clearly developed NCIE despite minor stratigraphic truncation across the boundary interval. Moseberg is further distinguished by higher proportions of hydrogen-rich organic matter and enhanced organic-matter preservation associated with short-lived dysoxic conditions. Enrichment factors of redox-sensitive trace elements (Mo, U, Cu, V) indicate predominantly oxic to weakly suboxic conditions at all sites, ruling out sustained anoxia. Collectively, these results demonstrate that depositional position and sea-level–controlled accommodation exert a strong influence on the apparent magnitude and completeness of TJB carbon-cycle signals in nearshore epicontinental settings, underscoring the importance of paleoenvironmental context when comparing boundary records.

How to cite: Mazaheri-Johari, M., Ruebsam, W., Franz, M., Wiesenberg, G., Kaboth-Bahr, S., and Schwark, L.: Spatial Variability in Triassic–Jurassic Boundary Proxy Records Across Nearshore Settings in the Northeast German Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18766, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18766, 2026.

The Bonarelli event (OAE 2; ~94 Ma) is the second-order extinction event with ~ 26% of marine genera loss, starting from single-celled foraminifera, numerous marine invertebrates, and ending with marine reptiles top predators - ichthyosaurs. Increased submarine volcanic activity is believed to have been the main cause for global climate warming and palaeoceanographic change. Many magmatic centres were active during this period, such as the Caribbean-Columbian Large Igneous Province (LIP), the High Arctic LIP, the Madagascar LIP, the Kerguelen LIP and the Ontong-Java LIP. The close age correspondence between LIPs and biotic overturn suggests that large-scale volcanism could be the main driver of mass extinction. The aim of our research was classic outcrop of the Bonarelli level lying in the Bottaccione Gorge, near Gubbio (Apennines, Italy). To deciphering redox changes at Umbria-Marche basin the U/Th and V/Cr ratios as well as concentration of redox sensitive elements were used (e.g. Mo, U, V, Ni, Cu, Pb, Zn, Se). The values of U/Th ratios in the Bonarelli level (OAE 2) varying from 0.42 to 4.23, while the V/Cr range from 0,59 to 12.48, which is indicative for variable redox conditions ranging from oxic to anoxic-euxinic conditions. More restricted redox conditions in the OAE 2 interval are confirm by enrichments in U (avg. U(EF) = 19.92, Mo (avg. Mo(EF) = 568.45) V (avg. V(EF) = 22.26), Ni (avg. Ni(EF) = 21.04), Zn (avg. Zn(EF) = 53,44) and Cu (avg. Cu(EF) = 47,21. While in the sedimentary background (Scaglia Bianca) values of redox-sensitive trace elements are low e.g. Mo ranging from 0.04to 0.82 ppm, V ranging from 1 to 5 ppb and U often below detection limit (< 0.1 ppm). Volcanic eruptions and submarine hydrothermal activity are the main natural sources of mercury in recent and ancient environments, and are reflected by Hg spikes in sedimentary rocks. We found huge Hg spikes (maximum values >1500 ppb) in the OAE 2 interval with 5 ppb values of sedimentary background of Scaglia Bianca in the classical Bottaccione Gorge. Recently, Hg anomalies were found in the Mentelle Basin, which suggests a regional influence of the Kerguelen LIP located in the Southern Hemisphere. However, our findings of Hg spikes in the Tethys area indicate that the volcanic scenario may be more complex and that the event may be associated with the activity of several, rather than a single, magmatic province. These results are a starting point for research on potential bacterial biomethylation during OAE 2 and the influence of toxic methylmercury on aquatic life, especially top predatory marine reptiles.

 This project was financially supported by the grant of the National Science Centre in Poland (2023/49/B/ST10/00505).

How to cite: Palarz, M. and Rakociński, M.: The record of the redox changes and submarine volcanic activity during the OAE 2 event (Cenomanian-Turonian boundary) in the Gubbio area (Apennines, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19425, 2026.

EGU26-19868 | Orals | SSP1.1

Are Early Paleocene hyperthermals a legacy of the Cretaceous/Paleogene mass extinction? 

Alessandro Mari, Matthew Huber, Lucas Lourens, and Simone Galeotti

The Late Paleocene-Early Eocene is well known as a time interval of greenhouse conditions. Superimposed on these conditions is a series of transient global warming events, including the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM at ~56 Ma), the Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 (ETM2 at ~54 Ma), and ETM3 at ~52.8 Ma, alongside other smaller-scale events. These events, collectively known as hyperthermals, were caused by the release of massive amounts of isotopically light carbon into the exogenic pool - as revealed by negative carbon isotope excursions (CIEs) - leading to global warming and ocean acidification. Hyperthermals were likely triggered by crossing thermodynamic thresholds for carbon release from several potential sources, often in response to orbital forcing, although a volcanic origin for the PETM cannot be excluded. While Late Paleocene-Early Eocene hyperthermals are well documented in both marine and terrestrial sedimentary archives, the recent acquisition of well-resolved records from oceanic cores and land sections has revealed the occurrence of carbon cycle aberrations, potentially representing hyperthermal events also during the early Paleocene. In particular, several events of concomitant shoaling of the lysocline/CCD, as reflected in CaCO3-depleted intervals and negative CIEs, are observed at various sites, including South Atlantic ODP Site 1262, the Bottaccione-Contessa record in Central Italy, the Zumaia section (Spain), and Equatorial Pacific ODP Site 1209. Similar to the Late Paleocene-Early Eocene hyperthermals, these events are associated with maximal astronomical forcing, occurring in correspondence with short- and long-eccentricity maxima. Notably, these events are absent in the Maastrichtian, suggesting that the bolide impact and the major mass extinction marking the Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary may have led to profound changes in the marine carbon cycle and its sensitivity to astronomical forcing.

How to cite: Mari, A., Huber, M., Lourens, L., and Galeotti, S.: Are Early Paleocene hyperthermals a legacy of the Cretaceous/Paleogene mass extinction?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19868, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19868, 2026.

EGU26-21297 | ECS | Orals | SSP1.1

Tracking Cambrian environmental perturbation using a new bradoriid arthropod database 

Ayari Yanagihara, Thomas Vandyk, Thomas Wong-Hearing, Thomas Harvey, Chris Jones, Alex Zammit, and Mark Williams

The Cambrian Period (~539 to 487 Ma) was a pivotal time for biotic innovation. Extinction events played an important role in shaping evolutionary patterns throughout this interval, yet first order questions remain regarding the extent, severity, and mechanisms behind Cambrian extinctions. To address this we present a new global database of bradoriids, microscopic bivalved arthropods, spanning the Cambrian to early Ordovician, which we analyse in terms of biotic response to environmental change. 

Our analyses reveal that most bradoriid fossils come from well-oxygenated shallow marine facies deposited above storm wave base. Therefore, sea surface temperature, oxygen concentration, and mode of dispersal likely exerted strong controls on distribution of these taxa. A smaller proportion of bradoriid occurrences are from deeper water oxic and dysoxic facies, with the relative proportions of deep water oxic and dysoxic varying throughout the Cambrian. The occurrences of some bradoriid fossils in dysoxic facies suggests that these were either benthic taxa, more resilient to marginal oxygen conditions, or pelagic taxa, that lived in overlying better-oxygenated waters.

From Cambrian Age 3 (~521 to ~514.5 Ma) to Age 4 (~514.5 to 506.5 Ma) there was a poleward shift in bradoriid occurrences, away from equatorial latitudes, coupled with a sharp decrease in the proportion of dysoxic deeper water occurrences and increase in well-oxygenated shallow water occurrences. From Cambrian Age 4 to the Wuliuan Age (~506.5 to 504.5 Ma) there was a further decrease in the proportion of low latitude occurrences but an increase in dysoxic deeper water occurrences, returning to proportions similar to Age 3.

Hyperthermal events have been proposed as the driver for the early Age 4 Sinsk extinction and terminal Age 4 extinction of redlichiid and olenellid trilobites. The apparent stepwise poleward shifts in bradoriid occurrences are consistent with hyperthermal temperature rise exceeding thermal tolerance limits in lower latitudes. From Age 3 to Age 4, the decrease in occurrences from deeper dysoxic facies and proportional increase in shallow oxygenated water facies occurrences is consistent with shoaling of anoxic waters forcing benthic taxa, perhaps already close to their minimum oxygen tolerance, to migrate to shallower waters or perish. Shoaling of dysoxic waters is well evidenced as a kill mechanism during the Sinsk event on the Siberian Platform. Coming out of Age 4 into the Wuliuan, the increased proportion of occurrences in deeper waters suggests that these settings may have become more tolerable again, with a lower risk of exposure to lethally low oxygen concentrations. The similar proportional depth distributions of Age 3 and the Wuliuan contrasts with the distribution observed in intervening Age 4, an interval with known extinction events. The combination of palaeolatitude, depth, and seafloor oxygen concentration influence on bradoriid occurrences suggest that Cambrian Age 4 may have been an interval of profound biotic crisis caused by multiple hyperthermal events.

How to cite: Yanagihara, A., Vandyk, T., Wong-Hearing, T., Harvey, T., Jones, C., Zammit, A., and Williams, M.: Tracking Cambrian environmental perturbation using a new bradoriid arthropod database, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21297, 2026.

EGU26-373 | Orals | TS4.1

Tectono-Climatic Controls on Uplift Transients of the Nahuelbuta Forearc Range, Northern Patagonian Andes 

Ambrosio Vega-Ruiz, Vicente Delgado, Simone Racano, Romano Clementucci, Violeta Véliz-Borel, Mauricio Espinoza, Alfonso Encinas, Daniel Melnick, Carlos Asenjo, Patricio Zambrano, and Roberto Larregla

The landscape evolution of forearc ranges along accretionary convergent margins, such as the southern Chilean Coastal Cordillera, is strongly influenced by deep-seated accretion dynamics, enhancing reactivation of inherited upper-plate structures. The Nahuelbuta Range is the fastest uplifting and exhuming sector of the southern Chilean subduction margin. Stratigraphic markers and uplifted marine terraces indicate dome-shaped uplift across a ~100-km-wide zone since ~2 Ma. However, uplift mechanisms remain debated, and rates are resolved only for the last ~0.3 Myr. Furthermore, dense vegetation and weathering have hindered fault mapping, limiting the understanding of the Nahuelbuta Range deformational history.

We combined new surface geomorphic mapping, morphometric drainage analysis, and river inversion modeling to explore the tectonic and climatic influences on the Nahuelbuta Range landscape evolution. We identify a regional low-relief relic surface atop the Nahuelbuta Range, now warped and dissected by fluvial incision and faults. Drainage morphometric anomalies and microseismicity align with WSW- and ENE-trending faults, indicating ongoing trench-parallel shortening. River inversion analysis shows uplift and topographic rejuvenation between 3 and 2.5 Ma approximately, followed by two later discrete uplift episodes. Uplift transients correlate with Late Pliocene to Pleistocene Patagonian glacial expansion periods, suggesting that glacially intensified sediment flux to the trench enhanced basal accretion of sedimentary material. The location and wavelength of surface uplift events match depth and scale expected for slices of basal acreeted material. Seismic imaging of the sediment-rich subduction channel and microseismicity patterns supports this interpretation. We propose glacially driven tectonic underplating drives the oscillatory uplift history of the Nahuelbuta Range, while ongoing trench-parallel shortening enhance trench-parallel shortening and fault reactivation.

How to cite: Vega-Ruiz, A., Delgado, V., Racano, S., Clementucci, R., Véliz-Borel, V., Espinoza, M., Encinas, A., Melnick, D., Asenjo, C., Zambrano, P., and Larregla, R.: Tectono-Climatic Controls on Uplift Transients of the Nahuelbuta Forearc Range, Northern Patagonian Andes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-373, 2026.

EGU26-1155 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Lithospheric weakness and episodic reactivation of the Altyn Tagh Fault since the Early Cretaceous: Insights into stress transfer and Tibetan Plateau growth 

Zhaotong Sun, Giulio Viola, Jing Liu-Zeng, Yong Zheng, Leonardo Del Sole, Yanxiu Shao, Wenxin Wang, Fengzhen Cui, and Xuwen Shen

The mechanisms of stress transfer across continental plate interiors during continent-continent collision, as well as the timing and the style of far-field fault system responses, remain poorly constrained. The collision between the Indian subcontinent and what is now Tibet began in the Eocene and has involved still on-going north-south convergence throughout southern Tibet and the Himalayas, providing an exceptional natural laboratory for studying continental collision processes.

The Altyn Tagh Fault (ATF), a >1600-km-long lithospheric-scale strike-slip fault marking the northern boundary of the Tibetan Plateau, is a key structure for investigating how deformation propagated following the India-Asia collision. However, the timing of its (sinistral?) initiation remains uncertain, with proposed ages ranging from the Mesozoic to the Miocene. These uncertainties largely reflect the involved structural complexities and the difficulty of directly dating the fault's protracted brittle activity. To address this long-standing problem and to better understand the ATF’s evolution and its role in the Plateau build-up, we conducted detailed structural investigations of two significant outcrops in the Old Aksay region (Gansu province). These exposures preserve a complex fault internal architecture containing numerous Brittle Structural Facies (BSFs), that is, distinct rock domains defined by characteristic fault rocks, mineralogy, textures, and kinematics. Repeated faulting at those outcrops localized deformation into weaker zones, creating thick foliated gouge layers, and along discrete slip surfaces, while lithons from earlier slip events were locally preserved. Their juxtaposition records the temporal and spatial evolution of the ATF, including its deformation mechanisms, physical conditions during initial faulting and subsequent reactivations. We combined multiscalar structural analysis with multi-grain-size K-Ar dating of synkinematic illite separated from BSFs at both outcrops.

The results reveal a protracted, episodic faulting history from the Early Cretaceous (~115 Ma) to the Quaternary (~0.6 Ma), documenting at least five reactivation events. The earliest record at ~115 Ma suggests the ATF existed from before collision as a lithospheric weakness inherited from Mesozoic intracontinental deformation. Crucially, we identify an Early Eocene event (~56 Ma) that provides the first direct geochronological evidence for brittle deformation nearly synchronous with the initial India-Asia collision farther south, supporting models of rapid stress transfer to the northernmost plateau margin. A Late Oligocene reactivation at ~26 Ma coincides with rapid, widespread Miocene exhumation and sedimentation across northeastern Tibet. Late Pliocene (~3 Ma) and Middle Pleistocene (~0.6 Ma) events record continuing slip and deformation localization during progressive Plateau expansion.

This intricate >100 Myr archive demonstrates that long-lived lithospheric weaknesses can preserve deformation spanning multiple tectonic regimes. Beyond providing a robust temporal framework for the tectonic evolution of the northern Tibetan Plateau, our results highlight the efficiency of far-field stress transfer through rigid lithosphere even over very large distances, and establish a powerful methodological protocol for integrating geochronological records and structural investigations in intracontinental orogens worldwide.

How to cite: Sun, Z., Viola, G., Liu-Zeng, J., Zheng, Y., Del Sole, L., Shao, Y., Wang, W., Cui, F., and Shen, X.: Lithospheric weakness and episodic reactivation of the Altyn Tagh Fault since the Early Cretaceous: Insights into stress transfer and Tibetan Plateau growth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1155, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1155, 2026.

EGU26-3563 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

Dynamics of Orogenic Collapse Controlled by Coupled Brittle–Ductile Deformation  

Rawi Dawood, Jean-Arthur Olive, and Einat Aharonov

The life cycle of orogenic belts is governed by the competition between compressional tectonic forces that build topography and gravitational forces that destroy it through extension. In mature orogens, extension is commonly thought to involve viscous flow within a weak crustal channel (WCC), driven by topographic gradients between mountain belts and their margins. This process is expressed in the upper crust as normal faulting atop high mountain belts, such as the Tibetan Plateau and the Apennines. However, the mechanical link by which flow within the WCC drives extension in the brittle upper crust remains poorly understood. In previous work (Dawood et al., 2025 EGU), we designed an analytical model predicting the instantaneous, characteristic rate of brittle extension enabled by WCC flow. Here, we extend and test this framework by coupling it with two-dimensional numerical simulations to investigate the time-dependent dynamics of orogenic collapse. While the analytical model captures the static force balance and provides a snapshot estimate of extension rates for a given orogenic state, the numerical approach resolves the temporal evolution of topography, crustal-channel flow, and fault activity. Our simulations show that topographic gradients drive viscous flow within the WCC, which generates basal shear tractions that promote extension along upper-crustal normal faults. We find that sustained orogenic extension requires both a sufficiently weak WCC (ηwcc  ≤ 1021 Pa.s) and an orogenic elevation exceeding a critical threshold height, hmin. This threshold is controlled by the frictional strength of the brittle crust and the magnitude of basal shear stress transmitted from the WCC. Extension rates scale systematically with fault strength, orogenic height, and WCC viscosity and thickness: high extension rates occur for weak faults and high topography (h >>hmin), especially in the presence of a thick, low-viscosity WCC. In contrast, stronger faults, lower elevations, or thinner and more viscous channels suppress extension. Together, these results validate our analytical scaling laws, indicating that while a static force-balance description predicts the instantaneous extensional behavior, numerical models capture the longer-term, time-dependent, self-limiting evolution of collapsing orogens.

How to cite: Dawood, R., Olive, J.-A., and Aharonov, E.: Dynamics of Orogenic Collapse Controlled by Coupled Brittle–Ductile Deformation , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3563, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3563, 2026.

EGU26-3918 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Long- and Short-term Landscape Evolution of the Carpathian Bend Zone – Linking Low-Temperature Thermochronology with Geomorphometric Analyses 

Lea Schönleber, Jan-Christoph Otto, Thomas Pollhammer, Bjarne Friedrichs, Bianca Heberer, Fabian Dremel, Nicolas Villamizar-Escalante, and Christoph von Hagke

The Carpathian Bend Zone is an orocline in the Southeastern Carpathians that links different segments of the Carpathian arc and represents a structurally unique sector of the mountain range. The region experienced Cretaceous to Miocene thick- and thin-skinned nappe stacking as well as post-collisional shortening and out-of-sequence thrusting. Unlike in many other places, these nappe stacks were not overprinted by subsequent back arc extension. In addition to this tectonic inheritance, the bend zone hosts the most seismically active region in Europe, characterized by persistent deep seismicity referred as “seismic nest”. This reflects deep-seated processes that are only partially expressed in the upper crust and are partially manifested through surface uplift and landscape reorganization rather than upper crust faulting.

 These factors lead to preserved nappe stacks and ongoing landscape evolution driven by recent uplift. Previous studies aiming to quantify exhumation and uplift rates have so far been limited to regions north and south of the Bend Zone, leaving this key segment poorly constrained. This study aims at closing this knowledge gap by investigating if long-term and short-term uplift rates are comparable. Furthermore, it collates these data with preexisting rates from other segments along the orogen to reveal local differences in exhumation patterns.

To investigate long-term exhumation, six sandstone samples were analyzed using apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology. Additionally, geomorphometric analyses such as river longitudinal profiles, knickpoints, and χ-maps were used to study topographic evidence of recent uplift and assess drainage divide migration and equilibrium conditions. Furthermore, river terraces were mapped and their relative elevations above the modern riverbed were used to estimate since the Early Pleistocene. By correlating terrace elevations with known dated levels from nearby regions, constraints were placed on the timing of Quaternary incision and rock uplift.

The Apatite (U-Th)/He dates show a variable amount of thermal overprint. Two samples yield (U-Th)/He dates younger than their stratigraphic ages while four samples show dispersed dates older as well as younger than the corresponding Miocene stratigraphic ages. This indicates partial resetting, an inherited thermal history from the grains’ sources, and limited post-Miocene burial. Therefore, assuming a geothermal gradient of 30 °C/km, a maximum amount of approximately 2.7 km of burial since the Middle Miocene can be presumed. The geomorphic signals consistently indicate active uplift within the Bend Zone, particularly in areas where structural controls induce sharp knickpoints and asymmetry in watershed geometry. The average rock uplift rate indicated by river terraces is 1.1 mm/yr since the Middle Pleistocene. In combination with estimated exhumation rates derived from the thermochronological data, a overall stable landscape surface within the Bend Zone is proposed for the last 2.5 Ma. Overall, our results indicate that the Bend Zone has been characterized by low long-term exhumation rates since the mid Miocene and higher uplift rates during the Quaternary.

How to cite: Schönleber, L., Otto, J.-C., Pollhammer, T., Friedrichs, B., Heberer, B., Dremel, F., Villamizar-Escalante, N., and von Hagke, C.: Long- and Short-term Landscape Evolution of the Carpathian Bend Zone – Linking Low-Temperature Thermochronology with Geomorphometric Analyses, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3918, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3918, 2026.

When aseismic ridges carried by the subducting oceanic plate enter a subduction zone, the trench depth and hence the margin relief is reduced, which increases the compression of the upper plate. The increase in compression may be relevant for understanding surface uplift and mountain building in response to ridge-subduction, but detailed effects remain to be explored. Here we use analytical and two-dimensional finite-element force-balance models to investigate the effects of relief changes and other parameters that may change during ridge subduction, including the initial trench depth, the megathrust dip angle, the slab curvature, the submarine surface slope angle, the density structure of the upper plate, the initial mountain height and the surface topography of the upper plate.

Our modeling results indicate that the increase in upper-plate compression mainly depends on the total relief change, the trench depth prior to ridge subduction and the submarine surface slope angle during ridge subduction. Secondarily, the increase in compression also depends on the average dip angle and curvature of the plate interface, as well as on the density structure of the upper plate and the mountain height prior to subduction. The enhanced upper-plate compression due to ridge subduction promotes mountain building in the upper plate until the increase in elevation leads to stress conditions comparable to those before the entrance of the ridge. We investigate this aspect for the subduction of the Cocos Ridge, based on additional finite element models that approximate the setting along the Central American margin near Costa Rica before and after the entrance of the ridge. The models indicate that the mere decrease in trench depth of ~3.3 km due to ridge subduction promoted an increase in mountain height of ~0.6 km. This corresponds to one-third of the maximum uplift inferred for Costa Rica. We further find that the remaining elevation increase of up to 1.4 km cannot be explained by changes in the slab dip angle or upper-plate density structure but may indicate an increase in shear stress along the plate interface. Taken together, our analysis shows that the decrease in trench depth during ridge subduction increases the compression of the upper plate, which promotes surface uplift and mountain building even at greater distances to the ridge.

How to cite: Leng, Y., Dielforder, A., and Hampel, A.: Impact of decreasing trench depth during aseismic ridge subduction on the forearc stress state: Insights from analytical and finite-element force-balance models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5077, 2026.

EGU26-5387 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Tectono-thermal evolution of the Northern Apennines-Alpine knot: a case study from the Bobbio Tectonic Window 

Francesca Stendardi, Daniel Barrera Acosta, Barbara Carrapa, Giovanni Toscani, Irene Albino, and Andrea Di Giulio

The structural and tectonic interactions between the S-verging Southern Alps and the NE-verging Northern Apennines fold-and-thrust belt, and their shared Po Plain foreland basin, represents a classic and long-debated issue in Alpine–Apennine geodynamics. We here investigate a cross section from the Bobbio Tectonic Window (BTW) in the Emilian Northern Apennines, to the central Po Plain subsurface, which records these important relationships. Previous studies focused on fault slip-rate measurements of the buried Northern Apennine thrust fronts, but a comprehensive tectono-thermal study of the Lower Miocene turbiditic sequence outcropping in the BTW is still lacking. In this work, we investigate the relationship between BTW development and the interaction of the Northern Apennines and Southern Alps thrust fronts buried below Pliocene-Pleistocene sediments in the central Po Plain. We analysed the cooling/exhumation history of rocks exposed at the core of the BTW by means of low-T thermochronology (apatite fission-track and U-Th/He) on samples from the Lower Miocene (Burdigalian) Bobbio Fm. and compared them with the slip-rate history of the Northern Apennines buried thrust front along the Emilian Arc. Our thermochronological results from the BTW show a maximum temperature of ca. 85-90°C (apatite fission-tracks partial annealing zone) reached soon after depositional age, followed first by a relatively slow cooling in the Early Miocene- Early Pliocene time window (17-6 Ma), and then by a fast cooling starting between ca. 6 and 4 Ma.  By comparing these results with the slip-rate trend of the buried Apennines thrust front, we interpret them as the signal of an out-of-sequence thrusting reactivation within the inner Northern Apennine fold-and-thrust belt due to the interaction between the Northern Apennines outermost fronts and the Southern Alps.  This study shows how far-field geological structures can influence the general kinematics of the thrust-fold belt, promoting out-of-sequence reactivation of internal tectonic structures and the exposure of deep tectonic units within the BTW.

How to cite: Stendardi, F., Barrera Acosta, D., Carrapa, B., Toscani, G., Albino, I., and Di Giulio, A.: Tectono-thermal evolution of the Northern Apennines-Alpine knot: a case study from the Bobbio Tectonic Window, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5387, 2026.

EGU26-5782 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

How interface weakening and continental structure promote flat slab subduction 

Antoniette Greta Grima and Thorsten Becker

The shallowing of subducting slabs within the upper ~200 km of the mantle, commonly referred to as flat slab subduction is associated with extensive petrological and structural modification of the continental lithosphere. Anomalously buoyant oceanic lithosphere, upper-plate overthrusting, and interactions with cratonic keels have all been proposed as mechanisms promoting shallow slab geometries, yet the dynamics governing the initiation and duration of flat slab subduction remain to be fully understood. Here, we investigate self-consistent flat-slab subduction dynamics using the finite element code ASPECT with adaptive mesh refinement and a free surface boundary condition. We explore the influence of the overriding plate structure, including the presence of continental keels, as well as the role of heterogenous subduction interface strength on shallow slab dynamics. Our results show that flat slab geometries develop when a weak, sediment-rich subduction interface is combined with a positively buoyant overriding continental lithosphere. Substantiating previous studies, we further find that the presence of a strong cratonic keel near the continental plate margin enhances shallow slab underthrusting and encourages flat slab configurations. Importantly, we show that the timing of interface weakening, such as due to influx of sediments, exerts a first-order control on the onset and the longevity of slab flattening. As the slab flattens, pronounced subsidence, extension and transient marine inundation develop within the foreland region of the upper plate, superimposed on broader, large-scale subsidence of the continental interior. Regional uplift and subsidence are thus not solely linked to flat slab emplacement and removal, but also reflect evolving slab dynamics within the shallow upper mantle. Our results provide new constraints on the geodynamic controls of flat slab evolution and their role in driving continent-scale deformation and sediment redistribution.

How to cite: Grima, A. G. and Becker, T.: How interface weakening and continental structure promote flat slab subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5782, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5782, 2026.

EGU26-6495 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

Onset of mountain building in the Qinling Mountains: Evidence from bedrock and detrital low-temperature thermochronology 

Ma Yuxiong, Yang Zhao, Shi Xiaohui, You Jiali, and Ju Dali

Abstract: Hinterland mountains serve as the pivotal link that spatially and temporally couples deep lithospheric processes with surface responses in orogenic systems. The Qinling Mountains, situated in the continental interior of East Asia, form a significant natural boundary that separates China into distinct north-south climatic and geographical zones. A key unresolved issue is the origin of the Qinling Mountains-specifically, the timing and mechanisms of their initial uplift and exhumation. The basin-range structure of the East Qinling provides a natural archive for elucidating this problem, as its formation records the onset of mountain building. This study employs multiple thermochronological techniques, including apatite and zircon fission-track and (U-Th)/He analyses of both basin sediments and bedrock samples across basin-bounding faults. Through analyses of lag-time, elevation profiles, and thermal history modeling, the exhumation history of East Qinling is reconstructed. Results elucidate an early-phase cooling event during ~120-100 Ma, with a rate of 5.9-3.4 °C/Ma. Following a prolonged thermal stagnation until ~80 Ma, a renewed phase of accelerated cooling occurred between 80 and 60 Ma, with cooling rates ranging from 5.3 to 1.0 °C/Ma. Integrating these new results with existing geological evidence, we propose that the Qinling Mountains underwent multi-stage uplift and orogenic processes, driven by far-field tectonic stresses associated with the convergence of surrounding plates. The early Cretaceous rapid cooling and exhumation are correlated with intracontinental deformation stage in the eastern China during the Yanshanian period. However, prolonged erosion and planation resulted in low-relief topography in the Qinling Mountains before the late Cretaceous (~80 Ma). During the late Cretaceous-early Cenozoic, under the far-field influence of Pacific Plate subduction, the East Qinling region experienced intense hinterland extension. This process broke up the pre-existing planation surface and formed a series of alternating basins and ranges, signifying the onset of the mountain building in Qinling mountains. Furthermore, the Qinling Mountains exhibit a spatio-temporal pattern of progressive mountain growth from south to north. This study provides a typical case study for understanding the uplift and tectonic evolution of hinterland mountains.

How to cite: Yuxiong, M., Zhao, Y., Xiaohui, S., Jiali, Y., and Dali, J.: Onset of mountain building in the Qinling Mountains: Evidence from bedrock and detrital low-temperature thermochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6495, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6495, 2026.

EGU26-8121 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Unraveling the tectonic signatures of thin and thick oroclines through a global catalogue 

Andreia A. Hamid, Philip J. Heron, and Stephen T. Johnston

Oroclines are orogenic belts that have been subjected to bending and are a common feature of mountain ranges worldwide. Despite their widespread occurrence, there is ongoing debate surrounding the geodynamic processes responsible for their development. Specifically, there is uncertainty as to whether these orogens involve upper-crustal (i.e, thin-skinned) or large-scale lithospheric (i.e., thick-skinned) deformation, as well as whether their curvature evolves contemporaneously with mountain growth (i.e., progressive orocline) or post-orogenesis (secondary orocline). Such spatial and temporal deformation means that unraveling the tectonic signature of oroclines may significantly enhance our understanding of orocline formation and provide broader insight into the evolution of mountain systems and convergent plate boundaries worldwide. 

Given the widespread occurrence of oroclines, identifying their tectonic signatures requires analyzing their attributes and geodynamic framework within a global context. However, oroclines have primarily been studied individually - which presents a challenge for their comparison. To address this, we present a global catalogue of oroclines and their tectonic signatures based on map-view characteristics, structural deformation style (e.g., thin- or thick-skinned), and kinematic classification (e.g., primary arc, progressive or secondary orocline).  

Our catalogue is generated by analyzing published literature and newly derived data on orocline attributes, collating 30+ oroclines from around the world. Within our dataset, we observe a wide range of tectonic characteristics, including curve lengths, width-to-length ratios, and interlimb angles. However, we also find a specific signature for oroclines that are classified as thin-skinned or thick-skinned – allowing for a clear identification of such geodynamic processes within our catalogue. In our study, we provide an orocline classification system based on the tectonic signatures highlighted in our dataset. This classification system and identified signatures may have several implications for our understanding of lesser-studied oroclines and the evolution of mountain systems worldwide. 

How to cite: Hamid, A. A., Heron, P. J., and Johnston, S. T.: Unraveling the tectonic signatures of thin and thick oroclines through a global catalogue, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8121, 2026.

This study presents a new regional-scale 3D reconstruction of the major Plio–Pleistocene tectonostratigraphic surfaces of the Po Plain Basin (Italy), providing new constraints on the deformation history of this key Mediterranean foreland basin. The model was constructed by interpreting several thousand 2D pre-stack time-migrated (PSTM) seismic profiles, calibrated with an extensive wellbore database. This approach enables a robust regional mapping of structural elements and defined Plio-Pleistocene unconformities.
The results show that the Plio-Pleistocene architecture of the Po Plain is controlled by the interaction of two different geodynamic systems, resulting in a complex source-to-sink system.  Since the Plio-Pleistocene, the advancing Northern Apennines (NA) thrust belt has mostly generated accommodation space, whereas most of the sediment supply came from the Southern Alps (SA). 
Isobath maps provide new temporal constraints on the timing and style of deformation, particularly in the central sector of the Po Plain, where the outermost buried fronts of the NA, belonging to the Emilian Arc fold system, are nearly in direct contact with the outermost fronts of the SA. Our reconstruction demonstrates that the evolution of the NA thrust front was strongly influenced by the presence of the buried SA to the north. Where the NA collided with the SA, out-of-sequence thrusting was triggered within the internal sector of the NA from the middle to late Pliocene, locally persisting until the late Pleistocene. In contrast, where this interaction did not occur, the NA thrust front evolved following a classical in-sequence style, highlighting significant along-strike variability in the structural evolution of the Northern Apennines.
The detailed 3D reconstruction of the entire Po Plain subsurface further allows a robust analysis of the progressive reorganization of basin depocenters through time via the calculation of isochore maps. Beyond providing a three-dimensional depiction of this evolution, these maps enable quantification of sediment volumes deposited between successive unconformities and, subsequently, the calculation of sedimentation rates across the basin.
Decompacted volume analysis reveals a marked increase in sediment accumulation during the Pleistocene, from approximately 31,041 km³ for the entire Pliocene, with a rate of 10.594 km³/Ma to about 60,646 km³ for the Pleistocene, with a rate of 25.269 km³/Ma, based on a 50% sand–50% shale decompaction model. This increase occurred despite an overall reduction in tectonic activity during the Pleistocene within the Alps, the primary sediment source region. This apparent paradox is interpreted as the result of strong climatic forcing associated with progressive climate deterioration and the onset of major Alpine glaciations, which dramatically enhanced erosion in the surrounding orogenic belts. The resulting increase in sediment flux, together with a major marine regression, drove rapid basin infilling and large-scale eastward progradation of the Po Basin system. These findings highlight the fundamental role of climate–tectonic coupling in controlling the evolution of the Po Plain over the last 5 Myr.

How to cite: Barrera, D., Toscani, G., and Di Giulio, A.: How Two Orogens Shaped and Filled a Foreland Basin: Plio-Pleistocene Tectonic and Climatic Controls on the Po Plain Basin (Italy) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8275, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8275, 2026.

EGU26-8585 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Tracing the evolution of the Transantarctic Basin (southern Gondwana) through sandstone petrography 

Luca Zurli, Marco Fioraso, Matteo Perotti, Andrea Di Giulio, Valerio Olivetti, Samuele Pezzoli, Valentina Corti, Francesca Stendardi, and Gianluca Cornamusini

The analysis of clastic sequences is fundamental for understanding plate dynamics, as it record variations in depositional environments and source-to-sink systems. Since the late Paleozoic, contemporaneous with the convergence between the paleo-Pacific plate and Gondwana, sedimentary basins developed in both forearc and retroarc positions of the Gondwanide orogenic system. The Beacon Supergroup in Antarctica and the Parmeener Supergroup in Tasmania represent the sedimentary infill of the Transantarctic Basin, located in a retroarc setting. These successions are mainly composed of fluvial sandy and muddy deposits, which are poorly deformed and currently unconformably overlie older units. Deposition began in the Devonian and ended in the Early Jurassic, spanning more than 200 Myr and encompassing  key events in the history of the Earth, such as the Late Paleozoic Ice Age, the subsequent transition from icehouse to greenhouse conditions, and the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. The composition of sandstones within the Beacon and Parmeener supergroups varies through time and space, correlating with major tectonic processes driven by subduction dynamics, which ultimately controlled the source-to-sink systems feeding these clastic units. Variability in sandstone composition is documented through a quantitative analysis of all available published data, integrated with new datasets from the Transantarctic Mountains and Tasmania. The results reveal a shift from quartz-feldspar-dominated sandstones, indicating derivation from crystalline basement, to volcanic lithic fragment rich sandstones, reflecting a provenance from coeval volcanic arc rocks. This provenance shift occurred diachronously along the basin, whit volcanic component appearing in the central Transantarctic Mountains during the Permian and in Victoria Land and Tasmania during the Triassic. Sandstone composition further indicates that the Victoria Land region evolved from an intracratonic basin in back-bulge position to a foredeep basin setting.

How to cite: Zurli, L., Fioraso, M., Perotti, M., Di Giulio, A., Olivetti, V., Pezzoli, S., Corti, V., Stendardi, F., and Cornamusini, G.: Tracing the evolution of the Transantarctic Basin (southern Gondwana) through sandstone petrography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8585, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8585, 2026.

The contact between the northern edge of the Higher Himalayan Crystalline (HHC) and the overlying Tethyan Sedimentary Sequence (TSS) has long been debated as either a thrust or a normal fault. Initially thought to be a thrust contact, it was later recognized as a zone of crustal-scale normal faults dipping to the north, known as the South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS). This suggests that the overlying TSS has moved northward along the contact relative to the HHC footwall. The cause of the initiation of such a crustal-scale normal-fault system in a convergent setting remains poorly understood, which motivates the present study to re-examine the structure of the HHC-TSS contact in the Dhauliganga valley of the Garhwal Himalaya. Nevertheless, we identified a series of normal faults cutting across the regional foliation of the HHC-TSS rocks during our field investigation, characterized by intense brecciation and gouging, consistent with upper-crustal brittle deformation. Our field observations suggest that these faults primarily formed during the waning phase of Himalayan growth and are unrelated to the northward slip of the TSS over HHC, as these normal faults cut across all dominant structural elements, including the migmatitic layering of HHC at high angles.  In addition, we found a spectacular ductile shear zone within the Milam Formation of the TSS, located directly above the HHC. This zone provides strong evidence of south-vergent thrusting along the contact, as indicated by fold asymmetry, C-S structures, and low-angle Riedel shears, consistent with the Himalayan deformation. Microstructural studies of shear-zone samples reveal that quartz grains are predominantly stretched as we expect in a ductile shear zone, forming lenticular ribbons with high aspect ratios and undulose extinction, whereas the occurrence of smaller, unstrained grains along the edges of larger grains is indicative of subgrain rotation recrystallisation typical of high temperatures (~400°-500°C). XRD analysis further confirmed the presence of graphite in the mylonitized samples, and the alignment of graphite along shear fabrics suggests the influence of shear heating during their formation. Our new findings of deformation structures along the HHC-TSS contact recognize the importance of reevaluating and expanding our understanding of the structural evolution in this area, particularly in the context of the India-Eurasia collision. Based on field and microstructural observations, we suggest that the collision between India and Eurasia caused the TSS to thrust over the HHC, while steeply dipping normal faults that have affected all previous structural features in the HHC and TSS are a later phenomenon that helped the Himalayan mountain belt attain stability of the Himalayan wedge from a supercritical stage.

How to cite: Das, A. and Bose, S.: Deformation at the contact between the Higher Himalayan Crystalline and the Tethyan Sedimentary Sequence: Thrusting versus normal faulting conundrum, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9016, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9016, 2026.

EGU26-9943 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Sedimentary architecture of Late Cretaceous to Early Eocene flysch sequences in the Swiss Alps 

Sophia Johanna Swaton, Guilherme Bozetti, Chantal Laeticia Schmidt, Balthasar Lukas Epprecht, Gabriel Lukas Graf, Jörg Hermann, and Fritz Schlunegger

The Campanian/Maastrichian to Lutetian Alpine flysch sequences of the Schlieren- and Gurnigel nappes record deposition in an ocean-continent subduction setting related to Alpine orogenesis. Despite extensive studies of these flysch deposits, the existence of a source-to-sink relationship between the two units remains debated. Here, we logged 50-70 m-thick successions of the Gurnigel and Schlieren deposits at two sites, respectively, at a scale of 1:20. The ages of the analysed sediments range from the Thanetian to the Lutetian. We measured the paleoflow directions using sole marks and cross-bedding, and conducted drone surveys to document the large-scale depositional architecture. Our aim was to reconstruct a potential proximal-to-distal relationship between the two sequences.

In the Schlieren nappe, the analysed sediments are dominated by coarse-grained (grain size up to 2 mm) sandstone beds <5 m thick, characterised by a matrix-supported fabric and sole marks at their bases. The finer-grained sandstone beds (grain size up to c. 0.6 mm) are <50 cm thick. They display a massive, grain-supported fabric with normal grading at the base, followed by parallel lamination and occasionally ripple marks at the top. Mudstone beds (clay and silt fraction) are up to 30 cm thick. They are massive to parallel-laminated and locally show bioturbation. Mudstone beds contribute to <10% to the entire suite. Paleoflow directions scatter between the NE and SE. Drone surveys disclose the presence of troughs up to 7 m deep and ten meters wide. They are cut into sandstone beds and backfilled with coarse-grained, massive to laminated sandstones.

By contrast, the Gurnigel sequences are dominated by a succession of sandstone beds with mudstone interbeds. Sandstone beds are <1.5 m thick. They have a planar base, are medium- to fine-grained (grain size ranging from c. 0.1 to 0.6 mm) and show a fining-up trend. Individual beds display a succession of sedimentary structures occasionally starting with a massive fabric. It is followed by mm-scale plane lamination, ripple marks with convolute bedding and sub-mm laminations towards the top. Mudstone interbeds, up to 30 cm thick, are massive to parallel laminated and strongly bioturbated, comprising up to 40% of the surveyed outcrop. Drone imagery shows that laterally continuous, horizontally layered beds dominate the overall architecture. However, lenticular sandstone beds with scours up to 50 cm deep occur locally. Sole marks and cross bedding indicate paleoflow toward the S and W.

The sedimentary structures indicate that the Schlieren sediments were deposited predominantly by (hyper)concentrated, friction-controlled flows and concentrated currents where grain-grain interactions dominate. In contrast, the Gurnigel sediments most likely accumulated from surge-like turbidity flows driven by dynamic pressure. Although the inferred surges recorded in the Gurnigel sediments could, in principle, have resulted from flow separation – with coarse-grained material accumulating in the more proximal Schlieren area and finer-grained fractions being deposited in a more distal setting such as the Gurnigel realm – we discard this interpretation. This conclusion is supported by the opposite paleoflow directions, which indicate that no source-to-sink relationship existed between the two depositional systems.

How to cite: Swaton, S. J., Bozetti, G., Schmidt, C. L., Epprecht, B. L., Graf, G. L., Hermann, J., and Schlunegger, F.: Sedimentary architecture of Late Cretaceous to Early Eocene flysch sequences in the Swiss Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9943, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9943, 2026.

EGU26-11098 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

Dynamic Mantle Support Beneath the Eastern Anatolian Plateau Since ~13 Ma Inferred from Zircon Hf Isotopes 

Adar Glazer, Dov Avigad, and Navot Morag

The Eastern Anatolian Plateau is a broad, high-elevation (~2 km), low-relief collisional plateau in eastern Turkey that developed following the Arabia-Eurasia collision and the transition to a post-collisional tectonic setting. It occupies a central position between the Bitlis-Zagros suture to the south and the Eastern Pontides-Lesser Caucasus mountain ranges to the north and is associated with widespread Neogene volcanism. Since the Early-Middle Miocene, uplifted regions along the Bitlis segment of the Arabia-Eurasia convergence zone, including parts of the Eastern Anatolian Plateau, were drained toward the northern Eastern Mediterranean, delivering large volumes of sediment to the deep sea and forming thick flysch successions. These deposits archive the crustal inventory exposed at the time and provide a valuable record of the tectono-magmatic evolution of the convergence zone. Here, we present detrital zircon U-Pb-Hf data from Late Miocene sediments recovered from DSDP Sites 375/376 and ODP Site 968 in the northern Eastern Mediterranean to constrain the sequence of tectono-magmatic events associated with Arabia-Eurasia convergence, with particular emphasis on the timing of the establishment of a post-collisional regime. Detrital zircon U-Pb-Hf data record Upper Cretaceous and Eocene magmatic flare-ups related to Neotethys subduction, as well as a prominent Miocene magmatic flare-up with distinct age modes at ~17, ~11, and ~6 Ma associated with the transition to a post-collisional regime. Hf isotope compositions of Miocene detrital zircons reveal a systematic shift from highly variable, evolved signatures before ~13 Ma to predominantly juvenile signatures thereafter. This shift indicates an increasing contribution of mantle-derived sources to magmatism since the mid-Miocene, relative to earlier evolved or mixed mantle-crustal sources. We interpret this transition to indicate that Neotethys slab break-off or lithospheric mantle delamination beneath Eastern Anatolia had largely progressed toward completion by ~13 Ma, signaling the establishment of post-collisional tectonic conditions. Notably, this transition slightly predates the inferred onset of plateau uplift at ~11 Ma, suggesting that mantle reorganization beneath Eastern Anatolia preceded, and was not synchronous with, the surface expression of uplift.

How to cite: Glazer, A., Avigad, D., and Morag, N.: Dynamic Mantle Support Beneath the Eastern Anatolian Plateau Since ~13 Ma Inferred from Zircon Hf Isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11098, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11098, 2026.

EGU26-11459 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Inferring uplift histories from landscapes using hypsometric curves 

Fergus McNab, Peter van der Beek, Taylor Schildgen, and Jens Turowski

One of the main ways in which deep seated tectonic or geodynamic processes influence the Earth's surface is by driving rock uplift. Variations in rock uplift through space and time combine with surface processes, such as erosion in rivers and on hillslopes, to shape the surface landscape. These relationships imply that, if we can adequately parameterise surface processes, we may be able to infer rock uplift histories from observations of present day topography. Efforts to do so formally using inverse modelling have mostly focused on the shapes of river profiles. Such approaches can reproduce well observed profiles, and yield uplift histories broadly consistent with independent constraints. However, they generally assume a fixed drainage planform, and neglect any information stored in the rest of landscape (i.e., in hillslope topography). Landscape evolution models, which include descriptions of hillslope processes and allow drainage planforms to evolve, may address these issues, but come with their own challenges. In particular, a strong dependence of modelled drainage planforms on the initial condition, which is generally poorly constrained, complicates direct comparison of observed and modelled topography.

Here, we explore the utility of hypsometric curves – cumulative distribution functions of elevation within a domain – in inverse landscape evolution modelling (we also include equivalent functions for slope and curvature). These curves' integrative nature should make them relatively insensitive to the precise positions of individual valleys and ridgelines. By comparing hypsometric curves from many simulations, with and without added noise, we assess their sensitivity to initial conditions, erosional parameters and uplift histories. We confirm that hypsometric curves are insensitive to initial conditions, particularly when normalised by the mean – rather than, as is traditional, the maximum – value in the domain. For landscapes in a dynamic equilibrium with the imposed uplift rate, the main control on the normalised hypsometric curve is the relative importance of fluvial and hillslope processes. Multiple erosional parameters influence this balance, introducing trade-offs to the misfit space. Nevertheless, individual parameters do have subtle secondary effects that allow them to be determined independently, at least for relatively low noise levels. In transient landscapes, features of simple uplift histories – such as timings and amplitudes of step changes in uplift rate – also appear to be recoverable. We conclude that hypsometric curves can form useful bases for inverse landscape evolution modelling, which could in turn provide novel insights into the tectonic and geodynamic processes that drive rock uplift.

How to cite: McNab, F., van der Beek, P., Schildgen, T., and Turowski, J.: Inferring uplift histories from landscapes using hypsometric curves, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11459, 2026.

EGU26-12076 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Indentation tectonics in the Swiss Préalpes Romandes caused by the uplift of the Aar Massif: insights from high-resolution 3D structural modelling 

Sebastian Drvoderić, Marco Herwegh, Alfons Berger, Fritz Schlunegger, Matteo Furlan, Eva Kurmann, Stephan Dall’Agnolo, Philippos Garefalakis, Riccardo Monti, and Ferdinando Musso Piantelli

The Prealps represent a complex nappe system consisting of Mesozoic to early–middle Cenozoic sediments deposited in the Penninic domains, detached from its substratum during the Alpine orogeny. During subsequent phases of subduction and collision, these nappes were transported along the active plate interface between Adria and Europe far to the north. Today, they lay above the transition between the Helvetic Nappes and the Subalpine Molasse. As a result of long-term displacement and successive deformation, the Prealps exhibit a complex structural architecture that records the cumulative tectonic evolution. We developed a 3D model to yield a high-resolution visualization of the structural architecture and its spatial changes within the Préalpes Romandes. These observations allow us to correlate nappe internal deformation with movements of underlying nappes, which is the goal of this work.

The Préalpes Romandes are crosscut by predominantly north–south–oriented sinistral strike-slip faults. These structures range from large-scale faults that transect the entire Prealps nappe stack and accommodate offsets of several kilometers, to minor faults with displacements of only a few meters to tens of meters. Smaller faults are commonly linked by lateral offsets to form continuous step-over fault systems and typically terminate within the detachment horizon. In contrast, larger strike-slip faults must breach the basal detachment of the Prealps to maintain a kinematic balance and are therefore rooted in deeper structural units. Despite a regional change in stratigraphic orientation of approximately 30° from east to west, the orientation of sinistral strike-slip faults remains largely unchanged. An increasing number of NW–SE–oriented dextral strike-slip faults in the eastern Préalpes Romandes indicate a change in the regional kinematic regime.

Based on our results, we interpret that the Préalpes Romandes experienced a young (Miocene) phase of deformation following early stages of subduction related nappe transport. We relate this Miocene phase of deformation to the uplift of the Aar Massif. This caused differential motion beneath the Prealps, which is expressed by strike-slip deformation, rotation and back-thrusting within the Préalpes Romandes. We additionally invoke this motion to have controlled the differential migration within the nappe stack, resulting in ~30° counter-clockwise rotation and a general northwestward displacement of the eastern Préalpes Romandes. In addition, the presence of a northern backstop subsequently promoted the occurrence of a lateral escape along local dextral strike-slip faults. A correlation of our 3D model with seismically active zones at greater depth discloses the occurrence of structures that were offset in response to the uplift of the Aar massif during Miocene times. These observations document a complex multistage deformation sequence associated with late-stage collision and uplift tectonics in the subsurface, where the initial sinistral movement has been disrupted and partially reoriented by the latest tectonic evolution. It also highlights the role of strike-slip structures as key elements for understanding the long-term tectonic evolution of the region.

High-resolution 3D modelling therefore provides a powerful framework to unravel internal structural relationships, integrate them with surrounding geology, and develop coherent palaeogeographic reconstructions through space and time.

How to cite: Drvoderić, S., Herwegh, M., Berger, A., Schlunegger, F., Furlan, M., Kurmann, E., Dall’Agnolo, S., Garefalakis, P., Monti, R., and Musso Piantelli, F.: Indentation tectonics in the Swiss Préalpes Romandes caused by the uplift of the Aar Massif: insights from high-resolution 3D structural modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12076, 2026.

EGU26-13259 | Orals | TS4.1

Thermochronological record of slab flattening and roll-back in the eastern part of the Colorado Plateau 

Audrey Margirier, Jessica R. Stanley, Stuart Thomson, Pierre G. Valla, Konstanze Stübner, Kimberly Huppert, and Georgina E. King

The influence of deep-seated processes on tectonics and magmatism has been documented at large scale in different orogens, such as the American Cordilleras. Understanding how these processes shape orogens through time is essential to disentangle their interactions with climatically-driven surface processes. The Colorado Plateau experienced a complex Cenozoic uplift and exhumation history, yet the drivers, magnitude and timing of the successive exhumation phases, as well as their role in conditioning late-stage canyon incision, remain strongly debated. In particular, the legacy of Farallon slab subduction, through slab flattening, subsequent rollback, and associated uplift from combined tectonics, magmatism, and dynamic topography, may have fundamentally structured the plateau prior to more recent canyon incision.

We combine apatite (U–Th–Sm)/He dating with apatite fission-track analysis from bedrock samples collected along an elevation profile in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison (eastern Colorado Plateau). By integrating these thermochronological data with the timing of regional erosional unconformities, we provide new constraints on the Cenozoic thermal evolution of basement rocks in this area. Our results reveal an early cooling phase between ca. 70 and 60 Ma. This phase is followed by reheating between ca. 35 and 30 Ma, corresponding to a temperature increase of ~40 °C, and by a subsequent cooling phase from 30 to 25 Ma of similar magnitude. A final cooling phase occurring after ~5 Ma is required to reach present-day surface temperatures. We interpret the early cooling phase as exhumation related to Laramide deformation associated with Farallon slab flattening. The reheating phase is contemporaneous with a widespread mid-Cenozoic magmatic flare-up interpreted to reflect slab rollback processes. The reheating may be specifically associated with a regional increase in the geothermal gradient or burial beneath volcanic sequences, or a combination of both. The final cooling phase is attributed to Plio-Quaternary incision of the Black Canyon, which generated ~800 m of relief.

Together, these results highlight how the sequence of slab flattening and subsequent rollback exerted a first-order control on Colorado Plateau surface uplift, exhumation and magmatism, thereby preconditioning the landscape on which Plio-Quaternary canyon incision developed. These thermochronological data will be integrated with existing thermochronological datasets to assess at larger scale the spatio-temporal variability of exhumation and reheating in response to changes in the geometry of the downgoing slab.

How to cite: Margirier, A., Stanley, J. R., Thomson, S., Valla, P. G., Stübner, K., Huppert, K., and King, G. E.: Thermochronological record of slab flattening and roll-back in the eastern part of the Colorado Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13259, 2026.

EGU26-13851 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Kinematic Decoupling and Orogenic Trend Variations in Arcuate Fold-and-Thrust Belts: Exploring Possible Deep Controls 

Inmaculada Expósito, Manuel Díaz-Azpiroz, Alejandro Jiménez-Bonilla, and Juan Carlos Balanyá

First-order orogenic arcs are often divided into second-order curves, termed salients and recesses (convex and concave to the transport direction, respectively). Although several studies have analysed the supracrustal factors controlling this festooned geometry, the potential role of deep-seated mechanisms has received little attention.

In the northern branch of the Gibraltar Arc, the orogenic grain of the central and western Betics external fold and trust belt (FTB) draws two secondary arcs, connected by a salient-recces transition segment, whose southernmost limit is the Torcal shear zone (TSZ). The central FTB salient consists of WSW-ENE to W-E thin-skinned shortening structures involving post-Burdigalian, syn-orogenic sequences in its deformation front. Thrust surfaces are dominantly SE to S-ward dipping and slickenlines suggest NNW-SSE to N-S transport directions. At the SW end of this salient, just east of the TSZ, the shortening structures trend becomes N-S. The westernmost FTB salient, within the Gibraltar Arc hinge, is defined by NW to W-ward verging, shortening structures with radial transport direction. Arc-parallel extension occurred coeval with arc-orthogonal shortening. Both salients are connected by the aforementioned transitional domain, an E-W to ENE-WSE transpressive band, dominated by dextral strike-slip deformation. This transpressive zone is significantly segmented into scattered topographic highs due to  orogen-paralell extension, mainly  accommodated by NW-SE  normal and dextral faults.

These three tectonic domains seem to have been differentiating since the upper Miocene to Holocene suggesting a decoupling between the W-ward migrating hinge of the Gibraltar Arc and the rest of the arcuate chain. Such decoupling would fit well with the existence of a W-E trending STEP fault, whose easternmost tip were located under the transition between the central and western Betics. Thus, the dominantly dextral, significantly stretched TSZ, located just north of the betic FTB/hinterland boundary, would be the expression in the FTB of such deep STEP fault. In this context, the recent FTB deformation in the central Betics would respond mainly to the current NW-SE shortening undergone by the Iberian Peninsula, whereas the kinematic features of both the transitional transpressive band and the westernmost FTB are consistent with a WNW-ESE directed far field vector associated with the arc westward migration. Interestingly, the recent intraplate deformation in the Betics foreland has produced greater relative uplifts in front of the central Betics, mostly accommodated in overall WSW-ENE faults, than in westernmost sectors. Additionally, the kinematics of reactivated structures in the westernmost sector of the foreland is compatible with a WNW-ENE convergence. Assuming some amount of mechanical plates coupling along the northern branch of the Betics, these foreland deformation features would agree with the proposed difference in the convergence angle along the central and western Betics FTB.

This work is supported by projects PID2024-159481NB-I00 and by ERDF/EU.

How to cite: Expósito, I., Díaz-Azpiroz, M., Jiménez-Bonilla, A., and Balanyá, J. C.: Kinematic Decoupling and Orogenic Trend Variations in Arcuate Fold-and-Thrust Belts: Exploring Possible Deep Controls, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13851, 2026.

EGU26-14604 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Andean Cross Section at 30ºS: A Window Onto the Tectonic Evolution of a Non-Collisional Orogen 

William Munday, Pablo Santolaria, and Josep Anton Muñoz

At 30º South, the western Central Andes are comprised by the Coastal Cordillera, a seemingly little-deformed zone containing Mesozoic volcanic arc and back arc-related rocks . To the east, the Vicuña fault separates the Coastal Cordillera from the Principal Cordillera and the Frontal Cordillera. Those two units  display relatively small areas of Mesozoic sedimentary cover that have been preserved despite the uplift which exposes mainly Carboniferous to Triassic plutonics. Further east in the Precordillera, deformation involves increasingly recent Cenozoic sedimentary units.

Based on 2025 campaign field data acquisition and the revision of previous geological maps, we present a structural cross section along a 30ºS, E-W transect and its restoration . During the Mesozoic, extension in the Coastal Cordillera was mainly accommodated by the west-dipping Vicuña fault from the Jurassic to Late Cretaceous. Constraints from pluton emplacement depths and stratigraphic relationships suggest that significant uplift and topographic growth might have interrupted this extension in the Early Late Cretaceous in the Coastal Cordillera. Uppermost Cretaceous syn-orogenic deposits mark the onset of contraction. Upon shortening, the Vicuña fault was folded and reactivated as a west-vergent thrust during the uplift of the Principal Cordillera. This shortening episode also created the present-day relief in the Coastal Cordillera although the timing of this uplift is not well constrained. Subsequently, shortening propagated eastwards into the foreland of the orogen, forming the folds and thrusts of the Precordillera.

Our cross section suggests successive phases of extension and compression which can alternate at variable timescales and operate in different locations. This tectonic evolution raises numerous questions: Which geodynamic factors drive the occurrence of contraction or extension? What is the relationship between surface and deep crustal structures? In a non collisional context, what controls the localization of deformation?...

 

How to cite: Munday, W., Santolaria, P., and Muñoz, J. A.: Andean Cross Section at 30ºS: A Window Onto the Tectonic Evolution of a Non-Collisional Orogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14604, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14604, 2026.

The northeastern margin of the Arabian Plate, now represented by the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt, records the tectonic evolution of the region from Paleozoic rifting and the opening of the Neo-Tethys Ocean to Mesozoic convergence and Cenozoic continental collision. Furthermore, under oblique collision, late Cenozoic deformation is partitioned between right-lateral strike-slip motion along the Main Recent Fault in the northeast (NE) and a shortening component across the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt. In this study, we examined the brittle structures that developed during deformation in the northwestern segment of the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt, within the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Our goal was to reconstruct the deformation history and spatial variations in stress. We collected approximately 250 fault-slip measurements at 28 localities along a transect crossing the belt, from the Zagros Suture Zone in the northeast to the Foothill Zone in the southwest. We applied paleostress inversion techniques to the dataset, enabling identification of distinct stress regimes in the region. Our initial results indicate temporal changes in the paleostress regime, which could be linked to a slight anticlockwise rotation associated with oblique collision. These paleostress analyses have implications for reconstructing convergence direction, kinematics, and the temporal evolution of the orogen.

How to cite: Zebari, M., Navabpour, P., and Ustaszewski, K.: Paleostress Reconstruction in the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt, Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Implications for the Arabia–Eurasia Convergence and Oblique Collision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14813, 2026.

EGU26-15999 | Posters on site | TS4.1

 Insight on recent tectonic deformation in the Himalayas of central Nepal provided by fluvial terrace geometries  

Madison Preece, Daniel Stockli, Ryan Thigpen, and Sean Gallen

Topography is a direct manifestation of the coupling of tectonic and surface processes and this connection between rapid erosion and high uplift rates is most readily evident in the frontal High Himalayas– an area that provides an excellent opportunity to study the progressive evolution geomorphic features in response to the interplay of these processes. An abrupt topographic break between the low-relief Lesser Himalaya and the high-relief Greater Himalaya has received significant attention, but the processes that govern its evolution remains debated. While it is commonly accepted that active tectonics are required to produce the topographic break, it remains debated whether it is driver by a blind mid-crustal ramp or discrete thrust faulting that daylights at the mountain front. Evidence for out-of-sequence thrusting has been documented along the orogen at similar elevations as the topographic break, suggesting active surface faulting could play a major role in generating and sustaining this marked topographic break. In central Nepal, where the topographic break is most pronounced, thermobarometric data indicate pronounced differences in maximum pressure temperature estimates (>300°C, >4 kbar) experienced by juxtaposed Greater Himalayan units. Consequentially, this structure likely plays a major role in accommodating shortening within the orogen, which is expected to build significant topography. In the Annapurna region, this boundary lacks a thick mylonitic shear zone, suggesting that it may have experienced recent brittle activity. This study investigates neotectonic offsetting and warping of fluvial terraces that record recent thrust activity within the past tens of thousands of years. Newly available two-meter resolution digital elevation data coupled with field observations, provide an unprecedented opportunity for identifying neotectonic deformation of fluvial terrace geometries across the topographic break. We present terrace tread data from the Seti river drainage in central Nepal. An important limitation, however, is that these digital elevation data allow for detailed imaging of terrace tread deposits, rather than bedrock strath terraces, and thus are also influenced by sedimentation processes. We present preliminary interpretations based on first-order changes in terrace tread geometries over kilometers distance, ensuring that evidence is recorded across multiple terrace levels, and in some cases supported by additional bedrock data. Seti River terrace tread profiles suggest divergence upstream of the topographic break, which can be caused by differential uplift or changes in sediment flux. Multiple terrace levels also appear folded near the structural position of the Chamrong thrust, mapped in the neighboring Modi Khola drainage. At this location, we also report evidence of pervasive brittle bedrock deformation. The combination of these features suggests possible tectonic deformation at multiple locations along the Seti River that are consistent with active brittle out-of-sequence thrusting along the mountain front. We plan to combine these data with UAV models of strath terrace geometries to clarify these preliminary interpretations.

How to cite: Preece, M., Stockli, D., Thigpen, R., and Gallen, S.:  Insight on recent tectonic deformation in the Himalayas of central Nepal provided by fluvial terrace geometries , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15999, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15999, 2026.

EGU26-16211 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Reconstructing the Cenozoic uplift history of the Korean Peninsula using fission-track thermochronology: implications for East Asian tectonics 

Yong-Un Chae, Sujin Ha, Yong Il Lee, Taejin Choi, Sung-Wook Jeen, Hyoun Soo Lim, and Seungwon Shin

The Korean Peninsula is located along the eastern margin of the Eurasian Plate and is characterized by a pronounced east-high, west-low topography, commonly attributed to Cenozoic tectonic processes associated with the evolution of the East Sea (Sea of Japan). The East Sea is a back-arc basin that opened from the Early Oligocene (ca. 32 Ma) to the late Middle Miocene (ca. 12 Ma) and has been subjected to an E–W compressional stress regime since the Early Pliocene (ca. 4 Ma). Quaternary marine terraces indicate rapid uplift along the east coast (200–300 m/Myr), whereas the western coast shows relative stability or subsidence, suggesting strong spatial heterogeneity in recent crustal deformation. However, low-temperature thermochronological data generally indicate more moderate long-term Cenozoic exhumation rates, implying that the rapid Quaternary uplift reflects late-stage acceleration rather than long-term average behavior.

To investigate the long-term cooling and exhumation history of the Korean Peninsula, we conducted zircon and apatite fission-track (FT) dating on 21 samples from 12 plutonic bodies. Zircon FT ages range from ca. 173 to 51 Ma, and apatite FT ages range from ca. 46 to 12 Ma, with mean track lengths of 12.94–14.61 μm, indicating no significant post-cooling thermal disturbance. Apatite FT ages are generally older in inland regions (av. ~37.5 Ma) than along the east coast (av. ~25.0 Ma), suggesting long-term differences in cooling and exhumation histories. Assuming a geothermal gradient of ~30 °C/km, average exhumation rates are estimated to be ~90 m/Myr for inland regions and ~150 m/Myr for the east coast. However, fission-track data alone cannot uniquely constrain the timing of possible uplift acceleration. To better resolve late Cenozoic exhumation and assess the role of Quaternary tectonics, apatite (U–Th)/He dating is currently being conducted on selected samples.

 

How to cite: Chae, Y.-U., Ha, S., Lee, Y. I., Choi, T., Jeen, S.-W., Lim, H. S., and Shin, S.: Reconstructing the Cenozoic uplift history of the Korean Peninsula using fission-track thermochronology: implications for East Asian tectonics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16211, 2026.

EGU26-20678 | Orals | TS4.1

Linking Surface Geomorphology to Deep Lithospheric Processes beneath the Betic Cordillera (SE Spain) 

Marc Viaplana-Muzas, Jaume Vergés, Ivone Jiménez‐Munt, Montserrat Torne, Lucia Struth, David Cruset, Mahdi Najafi, and Daniel García‐Castellanos

The Betic Cordillera of southeastern Spain experienced kilometer-scale surface uplift since the late Miocene, leading to widespread emergence of marine sedimentary units and contributing to the isolation of the Mediterranean Sea from the Atlantic Ocean at the end of the Miocene. Previous geophysical studies have linked this uplift to deep lithospheric processes, particularly the evolution and detachment of a subducted slab beneath the region. However, the geomorphic imprint of these processes across the Betic Cordillera has not been comprehensively characterized.

Here, we investigate the landscape response to late Cenozoic uplift using quantitative geomorphic analysis. We combine high-resolution topography with river longitudinal profile analysis, knickpoint mapping, and river network metrics such as normalized channel steepness (ksn) and χ-values. This approach allows us to assess spatial patterns of landscape disequilibrium and to infer the evolution of surface uplift.

Our results reveal a clear obliquity between the trend of maximum topography and the main tectonic structures of the Betics, a relationship that differs from other Mediterranean orogens. This anomalous elevation pattern spatially coincides with the region of lithospheric slab detachment previously identified by seismic tomography, suggesting a strong coupling between mantle dynamics and surface deformation. River profile metrics show strong contrasts in ksn and χ-values across the main drainage divide, indicating a transient, orogen-scale landscape and asymmetric erosion. These contrasts imply active migration of the principal drainage divide toward the Atlantic-facing basins, supported by the presence of wind gaps and river capture features.

Knickpoint distributions further indicate increasing landscape disequilibrium toward the southwestern Betics, consistent with a laterally propagating uplift signal. Together, these geomorphic observations provide independent evidence for epeirogenic uplift driven by slab tearing beneath the Betic Cordillera, with westward propagation rates estimated at approximately 100–160 km per million years.

This work is funded by GEOADRIA (PID2022-139943NB-I00) and MAPA (PIE-CSIC-202430E005) from the Spanish Government and the Generalitat de Catalunya Grant (AGAUR 2021 SGR 00410).

How to cite: Viaplana-Muzas, M., Vergés, J., Jiménez‐Munt, I., Torne, M., Struth, L., Cruset, D., Najafi, M., and García‐Castellanos, D.: Linking Surface Geomorphology to Deep Lithospheric Processes beneath the Betic Cordillera (SE Spain), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20678, 2026.

EGU26-21961 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Evolution of the northern Andean Flat Slab Segment 

Andreas Kammer, Gerold Zeilinger, Camilo Ernesto Quintero, and Wilson Daniel Cifuentes

In the northern Andean block the subducting Nazca plate contains a flat slab segment that notably influences the structural styles of the mountain belts of the Southamerican plate. A seismotectonic break at approximately 4°N is often referred to as the Caldas Tear. In contrast to the obvious aseismic ridges associated with the southern edges of the Peruvian and Chilean flat slab segments, there is no distinct single oceanic feature that limits the size of the North Andean flat slab segment. Instead, a ridge-transform system can be extrapolated into the inboard domain of the trench. This explains the presence of the Istmina Transverse Range along a transform-parallel sector, as well as the Miocene Combia volcanic province where this transform-parallel sector turns into the ridge-parallel discontinuity of the Caldas Tear. Folding of the forearc basins and the Eastern Cordillera of the retroarc domain provides evidence of a margin-wide, NW-SE contractional regime, which has been independently documented by regional paleostress determinations. Further structural evidence for oblique convergence comes from a clear collisional feature formed by a sweeping linear transform fault, which is now situated beneath the Istmina Transverse Range. This feature resulted in a triangular re-entrant of the Western Cordillera, causing it to bend around the Transverse Range. On the retroarc side, the southward propagation of the flat slab segment is evident in fold terminations within the Eastern Cordillera, as well as in the relay pattern of frontal thrust faults at its foothills. The southern morphotectonic break of the Caldas Tear juxtaposes the intramontane Bogotá basin, which belongs to the flat-slab segment, with a folded flank of an E-vergent anticlinorium that marks the deformational style related to the steeply dipping Nazca plate. In our contribution, we depict representative, but less evolved transverse lineaments of the Eastern Cordillera and characterize their deformation style. We also observe the local presence of salt nappes and compare the retarded vs. accelerated intrusive ascent of magmatic manifestations, discussing their relevance with respect to possible plate configurations that suggest lithospheric tearing or bending. The guiding question that informs our research is whether these surface processes provide insight into time slices of the evolving flat slab segment.

How to cite: Kammer, A., Zeilinger, G., Quintero, C. E., and Cifuentes, W. D.: Evolution of the northern Andean Flat Slab Segment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21961, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21961, 2026.

EGU26-22451 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Thrust tectonics in the External Hellenides: from a salt-bearing rifted margin to convergence in a retreating subduction zone  

Marco Snidero, Pablo Martinez Granado, Pablo Santolaria, and Josep Anton Muñoz

The Hellenides constitute a long-lived convergent system resulting from oceanic–continental subduction and subsequent continental collision between Apulia and Eurasia. Their external domain developed above inherited sectors of a hyperextended Mesozoic passive margin, composed of alternating thick carbonate platforms including the Apulian (and Pre-Apulian) and Gavrovo units, and thin basinal domains such as the Ionian. Such inherited structural and stratigraphic architecture exerted a first-order control on thrust localization, wedge geometry, and foreland basin evolution. Since the Late Cretaceous, convergence was accompanied by significant slab retreat, producing a strongly asymmetric orogen with outward thrust propagation in the prowedge and coeval extension in the Aegean region.

We present three E-W, regionally balanced cross sections across the External Hellenides, sequentially restored to constrain the pre-contractional configuration of the sedimentary cover, the kinematic evolution of the thrust belt, and its relationship with inherited rift-related domains and salt-related deformation. The cross sections run through the western Hellenides and are roughly parallel to the main transport direction. The northernmost section crosses the Corfu area, whereas the southernmost profile is located south of the Kefalonia Fault, where the tectonic regime transitions from continental collision to active oceanic–continental subduction.

The sections are based on detailed field surveys along the Ionian structural unit, integrated with published seismic profiles and exploration wells. In the eastern Ionian zone, synclines affecting Jurassic to Oligocene–Miocene flysch are generally broad, whereas toward the west, folding becomes tight to isoclinal, locally forming box-type folds with overturned limbs. Anticlines are tight, variably elongated, doubly plunging, and locally associated with breakthrough thrusts. This structural contrast reflects variations in pre-orogenic stratigraphic thickness and mechanical behaviour: tight folds involve a thin sedimentary cover detached on Triassic salt, while broader synclines record deformation of thicker, locally welded successions. The pre-contractional Ionian basin consisted of a salt-influenced deeper-water carbonate system with salt pillows and plateaus, and subsident areas receiving episodic carbonate debrites from adjacent shallow-water domains. The absence of halokinetic sequences in the pre-orogenic succession suggests that diapirism in the study area was exclusively syn- to post-shortening and controlled by shortening-related uplift and erosion.

During contraction, all the Ionian structural units show regionally consistent allochthonous behaviour, detached along Triassic evaporites and overthrusting the autochthonous structural units together with Aquitanian deposits, as documented by tectonic windows. Progressive Miocene deformation involved thicker sub-thrust units, producing broader structures that subsequently controlled deformation of the overlying thinner Ionian units.

Sequential restoration from the Oligocene to the present reveals forward-propagating thrusting consistent with a prowedge-dominated orogen above a retreating slab. This supports an evolution in which thin-skinned deformation above Triassic evaporites and subsequent reactivation of sub-thrust structural units was driven by underplating of Adriatic crust beneath the External Hellenides. Our balanced cross sections provide quantitative constraints on the relative proportions of accreted versus subducted continental crust of the former hyperextended margin, and allow prosing a tentative location for the transition between the Pre-Apulian ramp and the Ionian basinal domain, which acted as precursor for thrust nucleation.

How to cite: Snidero, M., Martinez Granado, P., Santolaria, P., and Muñoz, J. A.: Thrust tectonics in the External Hellenides: from a salt-bearing rifted margin to convergence in a retreating subduction zone , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22451, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22451, 2026.

EGU26-533 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Inventory of young mass wasting events in Mars' Southern Hemisphere: Insights into characterization and formation mechanisms 

Deniz Yazıcı, Oguzcan Karagoz, Thomas Kenkmann, Filippo Carboni, and Tolga Görüm

Landslides are key geomorphic features on Mars that record past climate conditions, slope stability, and volatile-driven processes. We present a regional inventory of 290 landslides between 20°S and 50°S on Mars, focusing on Late Amazonian events underrepresented in global databases. To map landslides, we used high-resolution Context Camera (CTX) (5 m/px) satellite imagery, and detailed morphometric analyses were performed using stereo-derived CTX Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) (6 m/px) satellite. The mapped landslides were classified into three major types: rock avalanches, slumps, and ejecta-type features. Our results indicate that landslide areas range from 0.26 to 174 km², with estimated volumes between 0.003 and 5.72 km³. The height-to-length (H/L) ratios, varying from 0.00013 to 0.268, reveal substantial differences in mobility and formation mechanisms. Approximately 40% of landslides at high southern latitudes display morphologies suggestive of basal ice lubrication or cryosphere involvement, supporting ice-facilitated movement mechanisms. Crater size-frequency distribution (CSFD) analysis constrains absolute model ages of these landslides between 3.50 and 480 Ma (Middle to Late Amazonian), indicating repeated mass-wasting activity over extended geological timescales.

Spatial correlation analyses between landslides and glacial features such as Lineated Valley Fill (LVF), Lobate Debris Aprons (LDA), and Concentric Crater Fill (CCF) reveal a strong association between ice-bearing terrains and enhanced landslide mobility. These findings indicate that subsurface ice acted as both a stabilizing and lubricating agent, reducing basal friction while promoting high mobility under favourable thermal conditions.

These results provide the first comprehensive dataset of southern mid-latitude landslides, filling a major gap in Martian landslide inventories. The morphometric variability observed in this region demonstrates that cryosphere-substrate interactions play a crucial role in shaping Martian slope processes. Our findings underscore the complexity of mass wasting dynamics and their strong linkage to past climate fluctuations, providing new constraints on the timing and preservation conditions of buried ice deposits across Mars' recent geological history.

How to cite: Yazıcı, D., Karagoz, O., Kenkmann, T., Carboni, F., and Görüm, T.: Inventory of young mass wasting events in Mars' Southern Hemisphere: Insights into characterization and formation mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-533, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-533, 2026.

EGU26-2886 | PICO | GM6.1

Formation of lunar swirls: Implications from Chang’E-1 Interference Imaging Spectrometer data 

Dawei Liu, Zhibin Li, Zongyu Zhang, Hongbo Zhang, and Chunlai Li

Lunar swirls remain one of the most enigmatic geological features on the Moon's surface. They appear as sinuous, high albedo patterns that are interwoven with “dark lanes” and stand out against the low-albedo background. Their unique spectral properties and strong correlation with lunar magnetic anomalies have attracted widespread scientific interest. The origin of lunar swirls is still debated. The prevailing solar wind deflection model suggests that pre-existing magnetic anomalies deflect incoming solar wind particles, leading to different degree of space weathering inside and outside the swirls and resulting in their distinctive spectral characteristics. As a key product of space weathering, nanophase iron (npFe0) directly reflects this differences inside and outside the swirls. In this study, we investigated the npFe0 content distribution of the swirl regions, offering a new perspective on the origin of lunar swirls.

In this study, we developed a model to estimate npFe0 content in lunar highland and maria soils using band ratio of remote sensing data based on laboratory-measured spectral data and npFe0 content of returned Apollo lunar samples. Then, this model was employed to the hyperspectral data acquired by Chang’E-1 Interference Imaging Spectrometer (IIM) to map the npFe0 content across five typical lunar swirl regions including Reiner Gamma, Mare Ingenii, Rima Sirsalis, Airy, and Firsov. Our results showed that npFe0 content in on-swirl regions is lower than that in off-swirl regions, indicating a suppressed space weathering effect within the swirl regions. Moreover, the relative npFe0 abundance between swirl dark lanes and surrounding off-swirl regions seems to be linked to different stages of space weathering. The distinct difference in npFe0 abundance between on-swirl regions and off-swirl fresh craters could be due to their different weathering processes. Additionally, we found a correlation between npFe0 abundance and the intensity of lunar magnetic anomalies in swirl regions. This indicates that the shielding effect of magnetic anomalies against solar wind particles may be influenced by the strength of the magnetic field. A potential relationship between npFe0 and OH-/H2O distributions within swirl regions also offer valuable insights into the solar wind-induced formation of lunar surface water. These findings support the hypothesis that incoming solar wind particles are deflected in swirl regions, leading to reduced space weathering on their surfaces.

How to cite: Liu, D., Li, Z., Zhang, Z., Zhang, H., and Li, C.: Formation of lunar swirls: Implications from Chang’E-1 Interference Imaging Spectrometer data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2886, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2886, 2026.

EGU26-2921 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Ground Verification Test for Tianwen-2 Payloads 

Chunlai Li

China's Tianwen-2 exploration mission is designed to perform comprehensive remote sensing, in-situ exploration, and sample return from the target small celestial bodies (2016HO3 and the main-belt comet 311P) through a series of operations including flyby, orbiting, landing, and sample collection. The mission will further investigate the formation and evolution of these target celestial bodies, their orbital dynamics, as well as correlations between the returned samples, meteorites, and data obtained from ground-based and remote sensing observations. Prior to the launch of the Tianwen-2 mission, we carried out comprehensive ground-based test to verify the detection capabilities of its nine onboard payloads and to assess the accuracy of the data they are designed to acquire. 

Results show that all payloads have met the predetermined test objectives, demonstrating robust detection performance and reliable data validity. The images obtained by the Asteroid Medium Angle Camera and Narrow Angle Camera deliver images with a modulation transfer function (MTF) ≥ 0.2, capable of providing high‑quality imagery for morphological studies. The Asteroid Laser Detection and Ranging achieves a measurement accuracy better than 3cm, enabling precise acquisition of three-dimensional topographic data of the asteroid surface. Spectral data obtained by the Asteroid Multispectral Camera, Visible and Infrared Imaging Spectrometer, and Thermal Emission Spectrometer show good agreement with reference measurements from standard instruments, confirming their capability to identify various minerals. The Dust Multi-properties Analyzer module of the Asteroid Dust and Volatiles Analyzer successfully measures dust‑particle size, morphology, velocity, and mass. The Volatiles Ion Trap Analyzer module of the Asteroid Dust and Volatiles Analyzer can detect no fewer than 14 gas species, with concentration measurement accuracy better than 33%. Using a dual‑probe gradient magnetic‑field measurement method, the Asteroid Magnetometer effectively suppress spacecraft magnetic interference and acquired valid magnetic-field information of the detection target. The Asteroid CoreScan Radar can achieve penetration depths of 35m and 5m for its low-frequency and high-frequency channels, respectively.

How to cite: Li, C.: Ground Verification Test for Tianwen-2 Payloads, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2921, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2921, 2026.

EGU26-5111 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Flow dynamics and behavioural characteristics of sublimation-driven granular flows under laboratory conditions 

Sharon Diamant, Susan Conway, Lonneke Roelofs, Matthew Sylvest, Zoe Emerland, Jonathan Merrison, Jens Jacob Iverson, Maarten Kleinhans, Jim McElwaine, Manish Patel, and Tjalling de Haas

Throughout our Solar System, erosional processes reshape the surfaces of terrestrial and icy bodies, ranging from planets and moons to asteroids and comets. One such process is mass wasting, which transports loose material downslope driven by gravity, forming slides, avalanches or flows depending on conditions. Over the past decades, the role of volatiles in their formation has been debated. Our understanding of extraterrestrial mass wasting relies heavily on Earth analogues; however, these are mostly influenced by liquid water, which is not stable on other planetary surfaces. Yet, numerous extraterrestrial landforms indicative of mass wasting occur on planetary surfaces with (seasonal) ice or frost and on slopes too gentle for dry material to move unaided.
Ice sublimation is a potentially plausible mechanism for driving extra-terrestrial mass wasting, whereby solid volatiles directly transition into vapour. This can initiate flow and reduce friction between sediment particles. However, because of the lack of terrestrial analogues and the complexity of producing a usable numerical model, the mechanics of sublimation on sediment mobilisation, particle dynamics and flow behaviour remain unclear. Here, we investigate the roles of volatiles and environmental conditions on the mobility and dynamics of sublimation-driven mass wasting and the morphology of their deposits.
Over the past two years, we created flows driven by sublimating CO2 using flume set-ups in two low-pressure chambers at the Open University (Milton Keynes, United Kingdom) and Aarhus University (Aarhus, Denmark). Ambient pressure was varied stepwise from 0.1 to 1000 mbar to cover the
environmental conditions of a broad range of terrestrial and icy bodies. The mass flows consisted of dry ice mixed with either high-density (∼ 2600 kgm−3) or low-density granular material (410 - 1300 kgm−3), the latter was utilised to simulate reduced gravity. The results show that reduced ambient pressures increase the volume flux of gas, thereby enhancing the fluidisation, flow mobility and runout length, particularly for low-density flows. This suggests that terrestrial bodies with lower surface gravity have more mobile sublimation-driven flows. The behaviour of the mass flows varied noticeably with ambient pressure, showing transitions through different fluidisation regimes, each marked by distinct features. At high pressures (> 20 mbar), we observe steady flows. In the 20 - 1 mbar range, the flows start to exhibit bubbles, surges and outbursts. Below 1 mbar, turbulent behaviour emerges with a diffuse particle suspension flowing above a dense layer. These behavioural regimes are similar to the regimes observed in fluidised bed experiments and have been recognised in snow avalanches and pyroclastic density currents on Earth. Currently, we are analysing internal particle dynamics and velocities for these regimes using particle tracking software. Our research shows that sublimation can be an effective driver for mass wasting on terrestrial bodies with low ambient pressures, low gravity and the presence of volatiles other than water, and might operate in distinct fluidisation regimes.

How to cite: Diamant, S., Conway, S., Roelofs, L., Sylvest, M., Emerland, Z., Merrison, J., Iverson, J. J., Kleinhans, M., McElwaine, J., Patel, M., and de Haas, T.: Flow dynamics and behavioural characteristics of sublimation-driven granular flows under laboratory conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5111, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5111, 2026.

EGU26-5639 | PICO | GM6.1

Fluvial to deltaic clinoforms observed by Curiosity in Gale crater’s Mount Sharp 

Gwénaël Caravaca, Nicolas Mangold, Gilles Dromart, William Rapin, Edwin S. Kite, Rebecca M. E. Williams, Stéphane Le Mouélic, Olivier Gasnault, Erwin Dehouck, Nina Lanza, Ashwin Vasavada, and Abigail Fraeman

The Curiosity rover continues its exploration of Mount Sharp, Gale crater’s ~5000 m-high sedimentary pile, and has been traversing for the past three years the Layered Sulfate unit (LSu), an interval initially characterized from orbit and thought to have recorded a global climatic transition toward the more arid conditions we observe nowadays on Mars. This unit, also informally known as the Mirador formation, is rich in sulfates and record mostly aeolian settings. Unexpectedly, the rover has also encountered numerous strata arguing for a recurring aqueous activity punctuating the overall arid, aeolian depositional environment.

Lately, Curiosity explored the “boxwork” unit, a high-interest region named after the orbital observation of “box-forming”, (deca-)meter-scale rectilinear features cropping out of the ground. Diagenetically-altered, fine-grained rocks making the most of the boxwork unit are probably of lacustrine origin, stressing out the importance of these aqueous conditions in the midst of the LSu. But when looking at the walls of this valley, made up of the Texoli, Mishe Mokwa and Cordillera buttes, we notably observe coarser-grained, erosion-resistant beds displaying a wealth of multi-scale sedimentary structures.

Among them are several occurrences of clinoform geometries that we sorted into three classes. Type 1 are characterized by inclined, sigmoidal to poorly cross-bedded strata, filling meter-scale, individualized lens-shaped bodies. Type 2 are characterized by inclined strata, sigmoidal but more cross-bedded strata. They are also observed filling lens-shaped bodies, but contrary to Type 1, these lenses are laterally stacked and cross-cutting each other’s immediate neighbor. Finally, Type 3 clinoforms occur in unconfined packages evidencing clearly sigmoidal, steeply-dipping (15-20°) and non-cross-bedded strata. While they are conformable with lower sub-horizontal layers pertaining to the bedrock, their top is mostly truncated by unconformable sub-horizontal layers. At the outcrop, the steeply dipping, sigmoidal strata also define a conspicuous lobate shape.

We interpret Types 1 and 2 clinoforms as the record of fluvial channels, with Type 1 a record of braided rivers and Type 2 a record of laterally migrating bars of a meandering river. Type 3 marks a conspicuous change and we interpret the vertical tripartite stratal pattern as bottomsets, foresets and topsets of a Gilbert-deltaic suite. These strata reflect fluvial to deltaic depositional settings with decreasing levels of energy from strictly fluvial, individual channels (Type 1), meandering channels (Type 2) and finally within a delta (Type 3).

These settings are in line with the quieter, presumably lacustrine, environment the boxwork unit’s strata likely origin from, and could represent the local sedimentary input. They contrast with the overall arid, aeolian structures observed to make most of the surrounding buttes and overall LSu. They nevertheless highlight a recurrence of humid episodes throughout the LSu. These events illustrate a more complex and unpredictable climatic pattern as Mars became colder and more arid.

How to cite: Caravaca, G., Mangold, N., Dromart, G., Rapin, W., Kite, E. S., Williams, R. M. E., Le Mouélic, S., Gasnault, O., Dehouck, E., Lanza, N., Vasavada, A., and Fraeman, A.: Fluvial to deltaic clinoforms observed by Curiosity in Gale crater’s Mount Sharp, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5639, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5639, 2026.

EGU26-7823 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

The Effect of Sand-Mediated Non-Contact Interaction Between Barchans onTheir Steady-State Profiles 

Sofia Navarro Yabe, Kojiro Otoguro, Hirokazu Ninomiya, Masashi Shiraishi, and Hiraku Nishimori

Barchans are crescent-shaped dunes found in deserts with little sand, where winds blow continuously in one direction. They migrate in the downwind direction at speeds of several meters per year as sand eroded from the upwind slope is deposited on the downwind side. A characteristic feature of barchans is the localized sand outflow from their downwind-extending horns. Because barchans typically exist in clusters, this horn outflow can become sand inflow to barchans located further downwind, inducing sand-mediated interaction between upwind and downwind barchans.Most previous studies on barchan interaction have focused on direct contact interactions, i.e., collisions. However, it has recently been recognized that non-contact interaction mediated by sand transport can occur without collision. Studies on this type of interaction remain limited.This research focuses on non-contact sand-mediated interaction between upwind and downwind barchans. The interaction is investigated using a simplified crest line model [1]. This model is characterized by a small number of variables, which provides a distinct advantage in making theoretical analysis tractable.We obtain an analytical steady-state solution. The steady-state barchan shape is symmetric with respect to the sand supply source. The steady-state configuration consists of two parabolic solutions whose axes are laterally shifted due to sand inflow and connected at the supply source. Both the crest height of the steady-state barchan and the lateral displacement of the axes can be obtained analytically. We find that the steady-state barchan shape is determined by the migration velocity of the barchan and the sand inflow rate. In addition, the inverse proportionality between barchan height and migration velocity is theoretically confirmed in this study, a relationship well known in previous studies.The analytical solution shows good agreement with our previous numerical results. Our results provide deeper mathematical insight into non-contact sand-mediated interaction in barchan dune fields and offer a foundation for future studies on barchan collisions.

[1] L. Guignier. et al., Sand dunes as migrating strings, Physical Review E (2013)

How to cite: Navarro Yabe, S., Otoguro, K., Ninomiya, H., Shiraishi, M., and Nishimori, H.: The Effect of Sand-Mediated Non-Contact Interaction Between Barchans onTheir Steady-State Profiles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7823, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7823, 2026.

This study aims to isolate the effect of gravity on delta morphodynamics, a key uncertainty in interpreting Martian deltaic systems. Terrestrial deltas are commonly used as a framework to interpret deltas on Mars, yet the planet’s lower gravity fundamentally alters sediment transport processes and, consequently, delta morphology and evolution. Previous work has demonstrated that reduced gravity enhances net sediment transport for a given discharge and channel geometry, promoting a higher proportion of suspended sediment transport (Braat et al., 2024). However, the implications of these effects for delta morphodynamics have remained largely unexplored.

We conducted physical experiments in the Earth Simulation Laboratory at Utrecht University. Deltas were formed autonomously in a 3 cm-deep flume with a constant water (300 L/h) and sediment supply (2 L/h). Martian gravity was simulated by reducing the sediment particle weight through the use of low-density grains (nutshell particles, ~1350 kg/m³), thereby isolating sediment density as a proxy for gravitational effects. This approach generated higher mobility sediment and a greater fraction of suspended transport, consistent with expectations for Martian conditions. The resulting low-density deltas were compared to reference deltas formed with standard silica sand (~2650 kg/m³).

The experiments show that reduced sediment density leads to deltas with gentler equilibrium slopes and larger surface areas. The lower equilibrium slope requires little aggradation, and most of the sediment supply can be used for progradation. Low-density deltas also develop more pronounced levees, likely due to enhanced suspended sediment transport. These levees, together with minimal gradient advantages across the delta plain, result in reduced system dynamics: channels are more stable, and large-scale avulsions occur at relatively low frequencies. In contrast, normal-density deltas exhibit more frequent channel migration and avulsions. As a result, low-density deltas develop more irregular, multi-lobed planform geometries, whereas normal-density deltas tend to remain semi-circular or half-oval in shape.

These findings demonstrate that gravity alone can exert a first-order control on delta morphodynamics. Morphological characteristics commonly interpreted on Mars as indicators of fine grain sizes, high sediment mobility, or elevated discharges may instead arise from the effects of reduced gravity. Consequently, caution is required when interpreting Martian deltas solely based on terrestrial analogues.

 

 

How to cite: Braat, L.: Rethinking Martian Deltas: The Influence of Reduced Gravity on Delta Morphology and Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11314, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11314, 2026.

EGU26-12154 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Slope Lineae as Potential Geologic Markers of Recent Devolatilization on Mercury 

Valentin T. Bickel, Giovanni Munaretto, Silvia Bertoli, Gabriele Cremonese, Pamela Cambianica, and Natalia A. Vergara Sassarini

Slope lineae are bright, elongated streaks on Mercury’s slopes. Along with hollows, lineae are considered one of the youngest geologic features on Mercury. Past surveys suggested a qualitative relation between lineae and subsurface volatiles, implying that lineae could be geologic markers of the recent – and potentially ongoing – release of subsurface volatiles on Mercury. However, lineae have not been systematically mapped across Mercury and no quantitative analysis of their abundance, distribution, and geostatistical properties has been conducted. In [1], we use a deep learning-driven approach to scan through ~112,000 MESSENGER images and catalog slope lineae across Mercury to a) characterize their spatial distribution as well as their morphometric and spectral properties and b) use geostatistical and change detection approaches to explore whether lineae are active today – and whether they could be tied to recent or ongoing devolatilization on Mercury. Our analysis presents several arguments for a direct link between lineae formation and devolatilization: 1) lineae appear to feature a blue spectral slope, like hollows, 2) lineae largely source from hollows and hollow-like features, 3) lineae are predominantly hosted by small, young impact craters that penetrated volcanic deposits, i.e., in a geologic context that facilitates (vertical and lateral) access to subsurface volatiles, 4) lineae tend to cluster on equator-facing slopes, 5) lineae appear to be hosted by terrain with slightly higher (modelled) bi-annual peak temperatures at the surface and at shallow depth, and 6) several lineae occur on shallow slopes well below the angle of repose of dry regolith, suggesting the presence of volatiles as a fluidizing agent (more details are presented in [1]). We do not observe any lineae activity between 2011 and 2015, such as changed or newly formed lineae, implying that lineae activity occurs below MESSENGER’s spatial resolution and/or on timescales longer than ~4 years. Devolatilization-driven lineae activity is a hypothesis that will be scrutinized by the ESA/JAXA (European Space Agency, Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency) BepiColombo spacecraft and the SIMBIO-SYS instrument suite (Spectrometer and Imaging for MPO BepiColombo Integrated Observatory SYStem) that are expected to initiate their science investigations in early 2027.

 

[1] Bickel et al. (2026). Slope lineae as potential indicators of recent volatile loss on Mercury. Communications Earth & Environment (in press).

How to cite: Bickel, V. T., Munaretto, G., Bertoli, S., Cremonese, G., Cambianica, P., and Vergara Sassarini, N. A.: Slope Lineae as Potential Geologic Markers of Recent Devolatilization on Mercury, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12154, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12154, 2026.

EGU26-13591 | PICO | GM6.1

Secondary pyroclastic cones created by syn-eruptive wind  

Thomas J. Jones and Bartosz Pieterek

Mafic eruptions and their associated lava fountains are a widespread form of volcanism on both Earth and other planets. These eruptions typically produce scoria and spatter cones, or hybrids of the two, and both the characteristics of the associated tephra blanket and the morphology of the pyroclastic cone can forensically provide quantitative information about the eruption conditions. However, the morphology of a pyroclastic cone results from a complex interplay between syn-eruptive processes (e.g., volume of magma erupted, grain size of pyroclasts produced, syn-eruptive wind) and post-formation erosional processes. Thus, to quantitatively use cone geomorphology to inform on volcanic processes, the contribution of each of these factors must be disentangled. Specifically, here, we focus on the effect that atmospheric winds have at the time of the eruption in controlling the resultant cone morphology. We investigate Volcán del Cuervo, a pyroclastic cone in Lanzarote that has a complex morphology consisting of a distinct, elongated shape, with a second accumulation of pyroclastic material adjacent to the main crater. Here, we use an unnamed aerial vehicle to acquire a high-resolution, photogrammetrically derived digital elevation model (DEM). This DEM allows us to quantify the cone morphology and the precise location of the associated pyroclastic deposits. Samples were collected and associated grain size and density measurements were performed to characterise the pyroclastic material constituting the cone. Together, these data were then used in a ballistic trajectory model to constrain the critical wind and eruptive conditions required to form a secondary cone. Through transplanetary analogies, we conclude that secondary cone formation by this mechanism may bias remotely sensed detections of eruptive centres on planetary surfaces. Misinterpretation of these cones as separate eruptive vents would lead to an overestimation of past volcanism. Correct identification of secondary cones can instead provide direct constrains on eruption dynamics and past atmospheric conditions, including prevailing wind directions—an aspect that is particularly important in planetary environments where direct field validation remains unfeasible.

How to cite: Jones, T. J. and Pieterek, B.: Secondary pyroclastic cones created by syn-eruptive wind , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13591, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13591, 2026.

EGU26-14513 | PICO | GM6.1

Interannual variability of sand dune fluxes and the influence of dust storms across Mars 

Matthew Chojnacki, David Vaz, and Simone Silvestro

Diverse aeolian bedforms, including dunes, megaripples, and ripples, are migrating across the surface of Mars today, as driven by seasonally variable winds. While long-term sand flux and their regional boundary conditions have been well constrained for many dune fields, an understanding of annual sand transport variability (or consistency) is lacking. Here we provide a decadal-scale analysis of migration patterns for Martian aeolian dune systems and test the hypothesis that global dust storm (GDS)-related winds can influence bedform sediment fluxes.

Annual migration was assessed at select sites in High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) orthoimages (0.25–1-m/pix) and digital terrain models. Displacements were recorded by manually mapping polylines along the dune crests in GIS over 3-8 Mars years’ worth of images. Sand fluxes were computed using slipface heights from the HiRISE topography, along with dune migration estimates – see Urso et al. 2017; Chojnacki et al. 2024. A total of 20 dune fields were analyzed from 85°N-45°S for Mars years (MY) 28-36, where sites were chosen based on data availability and long-term migration trends.

Migration rates for dunes ranged between 0.3-1.2-m/Earth year, with dune median heights of 6-17-m. Whereas median sand fluxes for sites ranged between 1-10-m3/m/yr over decadal-scale time periods, annual measurements may vary by an order of magnitude. The north polar erg dunes yield the highest rates despite being largely frozen and immobile during the northern autumn, winter, and spring. Here, the seasonal cap thickness and springtime defrost timing dictate how long winds can transport sand. There were notable sand flux maxima over the MY28-29 timestep and minima in MY34-35. The most notable events during these periods were the MY28 and MY34 global dust storms, which impacted the polar vortex, temperatures, and CO2 ice deposition. MARCI and HiRISE image mapping demonstrated that MY29 (early defrost) and MY35 (late) were endmembers in terms of spring defrosting. These events were attributed to the observed sand flux heterogeneity for some polar dune fields - see Chojnacki et al., 2024.

Equatorial or tropical latitude sites also showed significant deviations of sand transport rates, including during GDS years. Five dune fields showed reduced sand fluxes (33-49%) during the 2018/MY34 (~Ls 180-240°) GDS, relative to the prior year’s measurements. This reduction of nominal sand transport may be due to the depressed daytime surface temperatures or misaligned storm track directions (relative to nominal dune-forming winds) during the 2018 GDS, which were reported in the literature. In contrast, four dune fields were observed with increased fluxes (16-39%) in that GDS year. Elevated transport rates may relate to the alignment of dunes with dust storm corridors that experienced elevated wind shear or more localized factors. Finally, three sites showed no significant deviations in annual measurements, suggesting some bedforms may be in steady state in terms of sand transport. Climate factors such as global dust storms, seasonal ice cycles, and temperature variability appear to have a crucial role in sand availability and transport for Martian dunes; these factors demonstrate the complex interplay of boundary conditions on Mars.

How to cite: Chojnacki, M., Vaz, D., and Silvestro, S.: Interannual variability of sand dune fluxes and the influence of dust storms across Mars, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14513, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14513, 2026.

EGU26-15361 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Numerical assessment of celerity scaling laws for ice ripples in turbulent shear flows 

Diego Perissutti, Cristian Marchioli, and Alfredo Soldati
We investigate the morphodynamics of melting ice in turbulent shear flows using an interface-resolved numerical framework, with a focus on the formation and downstream propagation of quasi-2D scallops (ripples) on the ice–water interface. At high shear rates, these ripples enhance local melting and modify hydrodynamic drag [1], yet their dynamics remain unclear due to the complex coupling between turbulence, heat transfer, and melting-freezing. The ripple migration speed (celerity) provides a compact measure of the ice morphology evolution and reflects variations in heat flux, as well as in flow conditions [2]. Direct numerical simulations (DNS) are performed for a turbulent open-channel flow capped by an evolving ice–water interface. The incompressible Navier–Stokes equations are coupled with an energy equation and a phase-field formulation capable of describing melting and freezing. Simulations are carried out using a pseudo-spectral, parallel, GPU-accelerated solver [3], allowing for fully resolved turbulence and interface dynamics at high shear rates. A parametric study is conducted to assess the influence of thermal and hydrodynamic control parameters. Three Stefan numbers spanning two orders of magnitude are considered to examine the role of latent heat, while three shear Reynolds numbers (up to 1600) are simulated to quantify shear effects. The resulting ice morphologies are analyzed in terms of ripple celerity, roughness amplitude, and characteristic wavelength. The simulations reveal clear dependencies in ripple geometry and migration speed on both shear intensity and latent heat. Based on these results, we propose a scaling law for ripple celerity as a function of Reynolds and Stefan numbers. The proposed scaling is consistent with linear stability analysis [2], while extending its applicability beyond the small-amplitude limit and into low–Stefan-number regimes, providing new insights into ice morphodynamics in turbulent flows.

[1] Bushuk M., Orton P.M., Holland D.M., Stanton T.P., Stern A.A., Gray C., Laboratory observations of ice–water interface morphodynamics in turbulent shear flow, J. Fluid Mech., 841, 614–646, 2018.
[2] Hsu K.S., Locher F.A., Kennedy J.F., Forced-convection heat transfer from irregular melting wavy boundaries, J. Heat Transfer, 101(4), 598–602, 1979.
[3] Perissutti D., Marchioli C., Soldati A., Time and length scales of ice morphodynamics driven by subsurface shear turbulence, J. Fluid Mech., 1019, A34, 2025.

How to cite: Perissutti, D., Marchioli, C., and Soldati, A.: Numerical assessment of celerity scaling laws for ice ripples in turbulent shear flows, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15361, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15361, 2026.

EGU26-15988 | PICO | GM6.1

Schirmacher Oasis, Antarctica: An Earth Analog for Glaciofluvial Landforms and Process on Early Mars? 

Mohamed Ramy El-Maarry, Omar Aldhanhani, Yogesh Ray, and Aisha Alsuwaidi

 

Past studies of Martian-analogue landscapes in Antarctica have focused on the Dry Valleys [e.g., 1-3] with the goal of understanding the drivers and potential evolution of geomorphic features in predominantly “cold and dry” conditions. Here we present a new study of a Martian analogue-landscape from the seldom studied Schirmacher Oasis (SO, 70°45′30″S 11°38′40″E) which contains landlocked lakes, polygonal patterns attributed to seasonal thermal contraction and ice wedging, in addition to chloride surface deposits, and even desiccation features associated with the seasonal and long-term drying of the land-locked lakes [e.g, 4, 5]. The features of SO have been observed on Mars, including in terrains that have been dated to Early Mars (The Noachian Period, more than 3.6 Gya).

 We investigated a number of land locked lakes using drone surveys, onsite characterization, and sample collection (Figure. 1). Preliminary results indicate that Schirmacher Oasis indeed provides a potential analogy for specific terrain on Mars, namely those associated with chloride deposits in lacustrine setting. Specifically, we propose that at least a subset of these terrains on Mars may have experienced a similar evolutionary history to that observed in SO; a fluvial, lacustrine and periglacial activity in a previously glaciated area. Studying such regions could help provide new insights into the geological and climatic evolution of Mars, particularly on regional scale, and in periods of transient warming under prevalent cold/icy conditions.

Figure 1: [Top] Geomorphological map of SO adapted from [6]. The legend has been slightly modified to highlight only a few selected units that are of relevance to this study. [Bottom] Satellite view of SO from Google Earth showing the sites visited and sampled in this study.

Acknowledgments: This work was carried out under an MOU between the Indian National Center for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR) and the Emirates Polar Program (EPP). The scope of work and collected materials were approved under the research permit MoES/CAG-EP/2025/45-ISEAlP1/23 from the Indian Government’s Ministry of Earth Sciences in full compliance with the Antarctic Treaty. We are deeply indebted to the support throughout from NCPOR under the guidance of Dr. Thamban Meloth, including all logistical support before travel and “on the ground” by the NCPOR team and Goa and at Maitri Station.

References: [1] Marchant, D. R., & Head, J. W. (2007). Icarus, 192(1), 187–222. [2] Tamppari LK, et al. (2012). Antarctic Science. 2012;24(3):211-228.  [3] Heldmann, J. L. et al. (2013). Planetary and Space Science 85, 53-58. [4] Phartiyal, B., et al. (2011). Quaternary International 235,  128–136. [5] Dharwadkar, A., et al. (2018). Polar Science 18, 57–62. [7] Geological Survey of India (2006). Retrieved from: https://ncpor.res.in/files/40 Antarctic Exp/Schirmacher Oasis map.pdf. 

How to cite: El-Maarry, M. R., Aldhanhani, O., Ray, Y., and Alsuwaidi, A.: Schirmacher Oasis, Antarctica: An Earth Analog for Glaciofluvial Landforms and Process on Early Mars?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15988, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15988, 2026.

EGU26-18079 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Beyond Size Sorting - Shape segregation in aeolian megaripple 

lior saban, Itzhak Katra, and Hezi Yizhaq

Aeolian megaripples develop on bimodal sands and are stabilized by an armoring layer enriched in coarse grains that developed on the crest. While size-selective transport is central to the segregation mechanism involved in megaripple formation, recent field observations indicate that shape segregation may also contribute to megaripple formation (Saban et al, Geosci. Lett., 2025). Here, we quantify the shape contrast between fine and coarse fractions of megaripples across multiple sites worldwide and investigate the physical mechanism that may explain it. Additionally, we investigate how ripple formation is affected by shape segregation through controlled wind tunnel experiments.

We analyzed samples from megaripple crests at multiple sites. Each sample was divided into sub-samples of fine fraction (<355µm) and a coarse fraction (>710µm), which represent the bimodal grain size distribution (GSD) of all the samples. Grain shape was quantified using a Circularity index (isoperimetric quotient), computed from a 2D projected grain outline derived from microscopy images. Grain outlines were produced by automated segmentation and were manually validated to ensure accuracy. Mineralogical composition and GSD were also measured and used as proxies for mechanical durability and abrasion history contrasts between the size fractions.

Across most sites, the coarse fraction is more angular (less circular) than the fine fraction, indicating a robust shape contrast between size fractions. To explain this pattern, we used a physically motivated combined index that accounts for the size contrast and the quartz contrast between the fine and coarse fractions. Sites where the fine grains are both relatively finer and more quartz-rich compared to the coarse fraction show a stronger shape contrast (i.e., fines are more circular). This suggests that abrasion history and mechanical durability influence grain shape.

Finally, we designed a wind tunnel experiment to isolate the role of shape segregation in the formation of nascent megaripple. We used mixtures of angular natural sand and spherical glass beads with the same grain size. These mixtures were subjected to wind above the fluid threshold until ripple formation. Spatial distribution analysis of grain shape at the end of the experiments reveals clear sorting patterns, driven solely by shape segregation, where angular grains accumulate on the crest and form an armoring-like layer.

How to cite: saban, L., Katra, I., and Yizhaq, H.: Beyond Size Sorting - Shape segregation in aeolian megaripple, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18079, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18079, 2026.

EGU26-20367 | ECS | PICO | GM6.1

Investigating the formation conditions of glacier-like forms using Bayesian inversion.  

Mórrigan Jones, Lydia Sam, Donal Mullan, Brice Rea, and Anshuman Bhardwaj

Glacier-like forms (GLFs) are one subtype of glacial features found on the Martian surface. They are located within the mid-latitudes of Mars (30-60 degrees) in both hemispheres. These features having formed within the Amazonian period during a period of higher obliquity than Mars' is at today which allowed for the preferential accumulation of icy material in the mid-latitudes. While previous studies have investigated the geographic controls on GLF formation, their former extent, and their former dynamics (Souness, et. al., 2012; Brough, et. al. 2016, 2019), the boundary conditions under which GLFs formed remain poorly constrained, particularly on a local-scale.

Our primary aim is to improve our understanding of how Martian GLFs formed and evolved with respect to their climactic and geomorphological setting using terrestrial rock glaciers as analogues. As there is still ongoing debate as to the formation dynamics of rock glaciers on Earth, be they permafrost-derived or derived from debris-covered glaciers, with the issue being that both start points can adequately describe the end-state of palaeo rock glaciers, we need to take an approach which acknowledges this issue of equifinality. Bayesian inversion is one such method that can do this. We start with the assumption that these GLFs represent permafrost-derived ice bodies where ground-temperature is a key boundary-condition for their formation. With this method, we use observed glacier geomorphology to reconstruct the former extent, volume, and thickness of the GLF to compute a posterior probability distribution for ground temperatures that are physically consistent with the reconstructed geometry of the palaeo glacier. We also consider near-surface air temperature as a secondary factor in accumulation feasibility. 

Here we present our ongoing work in this effort. We manually demarcated the geomorphological constraints of multiple GLFs on Mars within GIS software based on identifiable geomorphology within the orthorectified imagery that mark the former maximum extent of the glacier, and extract morphometric data using the georeferenced HiRISE DEM. We then used the perfect-plasticity approximation to reconstruct palaeo ice-thicknesses and volume of the palaeo glacier. These morphometrics are then compared with modelled outputs for glacier deformation, employing Bayesian logic to constrain a boundary range of long-term mean ground temperature that would be compatible to produce the reconstructed glacier morphology. We also investigate several terrestrial rock glaciers in order to assess the accuracy and validity of our approach against measurable analogue examples, which further enables us to compare the dynamics of terrestrial and Martian glaciers.

References:

Brough, Stephen, Bryn Hubbard, and Alun Hubbard. 2016. “Former Extent of Glacier-Like Forms on Mars.”, Icarus 274 (August): 37–49. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2016.03.006.

Brough, S., Hubbard, B., & Hubbard, A. (2019, 02). Area and volume of mid latitude glacier-like forms on mars. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 507 , 10–20. Retrieved from https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0012821X18306903 doi: 10.1016/j.epsl.2018.11.031

Souness, Colin, Bryn Hubbard, Ralph E. Milliken, and Duncan Quincey. 2012. “An Inventory and Population-Scale Analysis of Martian Glacier-Like Forms.” Icarus 217 (1): 243–55. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2011.10.020.

How to cite: Jones, M., Sam, L., Mullan, D., Rea, B., and Bhardwaj, A.: Investigating the formation conditions of glacier-like forms using Bayesian inversion. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20367, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20367, 2026.

EGU26-1897 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

The Unreliable Narrator: LSTM Internal States Fluctuate with Software Environments Despite Robust Predictions 

Ryosuke Nagumo, Ross Woods, and Miguel Rico-Ramirez

Since the robust performance of Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks was established, their physics-awareness and interpretability have become central topics in hydrology. Seminal works (e.g., Lees et al. (2022)) have argued that LSTM internal states spontaneously capture hydrological concepts, and suggested that cell states can represent soil moisture dynamics despite not being explicitly trained on such data. Conversely, more recent studies (e.g., Fuente et al. (2024)) demonstrated that mathematical equifinality causes non-unique LSTM representations with different initialisations.

In this work, we report an arguably more systematic "bug" in the software environment that causes instability in internal states. We initially aimed to investigate how internal states behave differently when trained with or without historical observation data. We encountered this issue while reassembling a computational stack and attempting to replicate the initial results, as the original Docker environment was not preserved. While random seeds have been indicated to lead to different internal state trajectories, we found the computational backend (e.g., changing CUDA versions, PyTorch releases, or dependent libraries) also produces them. These are the findings:

  • In gauged catchments: Discharge predictions remained stable (in one catchment, NSE was 0.88 ± 0.01) across computational environments, yet the internal temporal variations (e.g., silhouette, mean, and std of cell states) fluctuated noticeably.
  • In pseudo-ungauged scenarios: The prediction performance itself became more reliant on the computational environment (in the same catchment, NSE dropped to 0.31 ± 0.15), yet the internal temporal variations of the cell states fluctuated only as much as they did during the gauged scenario.

These findings suggests that instability in the computational environment poses not only a risk of altering interpretability in training (by altering internal states) but also casts doubt on reliability in extrapolation (by altering outputs).

It is worth mentioning that we confirmed this is not a replicability issue; completely identical cell states and predictions are produced when the computational environment, seeds, and training data are held constant. We argue that such stability must be established as a standard benchmark before assigning physical meaning to deep learning internals.

How to cite: Nagumo, R., Woods, R., and Rico-Ramirez, M.: The Unreliable Narrator: LSTM Internal States Fluctuate with Software Environments Despite Robust Predictions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1897, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1897, 2026.

EGU26-2771 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

New EGU Manuscript Types: Limitations, Errors, Surprises, and Shortcomings as Opportunities for New Science (LESSONS) 

John Hillier, Ulrike Proske, Stefan Gaillard, Theresa Blume, and Eduardo Queiroz Alves

Moments or periods of struggle not only propel scientists forward, but sharing these experiences can also provide valuable lessons for others. Indeed, the current bias towards only publishing ‘positive’ results arguably impedes scientific progress as mistakes that are not learnt from are simply repeated. Here we present a new article type in EGU journals covering LESSONS learnt to help overcome this publishing bias. LESSONS articles describe the Limitations, Errors, Surprises, Shortcomings, and Opportunities for New Science emerging from the scientific process, including non-confirmatory and null results. Unforeseen complications in investigations, plausible methods that failed, and technical issues are also in scope. LESSONS thus fit the content of the BUGS session and can provide an outlet for articles based on session contributions. Importantly, a LESSONS Report will offer a substantial, valuable insight. LESSONS Reports are typically short (1,000-2,000 words) to help lower the barrier to journal publication, whilst LESSONS Posts (not peer-reviewed, but with a DOI on EGUsphere) can be as short as 500 words to allow early-stage reporting. LESSONS aim to destigmatise limitations, errors, surprises and shortcomings and to add these to the published literature as opportunities for new science – we invite you to share your LESSONS learnt.

 

Finally, a big thank you from this paper’s ‘core’ writing team to the wider group who have helped shape the LESSONS idea since EGU GA in 2025, including PubCom and in particular its Chair Barbara Ervens.

How to cite: Hillier, J., Proske, U., Gaillard, S., Blume, T., and Queiroz Alves, E.: New EGU Manuscript Types: Limitations, Errors, Surprises, and Shortcomings as Opportunities for New Science (LESSONS), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2771, 2026.

EGU26-3077 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

False Starts and Silver Linings: A Photocatalytic Journey with Layered Double Hydroxides 

Anna Jędras and Jakub Matusik

Photocatalysis is frequently presented in the literature as a straightforward route toward efficient degradation of pollutants, provided that the “right” material is selected. Layered double hydroxides (LDH) are often highlighted as promising photocatalysts due to their tunable composition and reported activity in dye degradation. Motivated by these claims, this study evaluated LDH as mineral analogs for photocatalytic water treatment, ultimately uncovering a series of unexpected limitations, methodological pitfalls, and productive surprises.

In the first stage, Zn/Cr, Co/Cr, Cu/Cr, and Ni/Cr LDHs were synthesized and tested for photocatalytic degradation of methylene blue (0.02 mM) and Acid Blue Dye 129 (0.3 mM). Contrary to expectations,1 photocatalytic performance was consistently low. After one hour of irradiation, concentration losses attributable to photocatalysis did not exceed 15%, while most dye removal resulted from adsorption. Despite extensive efforts to optimize synthesis protocols, catalyst composition, and experimental conditions, this discrepancy with previously published studies could not be resolved.

To overcome limitations related to particle dispersion, surface accessibility, and charge-carrier separation, a second strategy was pursued by incorporating clay minerals as supports.2 Zn/Cr LDH, identified as the most active composition in preliminary tests, was coprecipitated with kaolinite, halloysite, and montmorillonite. Experiments with methylene blue (0.1 mM) and Acid Blue 129 (0.3 mM) demonstrated enhanced adsorption capacities. However, photocatalytic degradation efficiencies remained poor, typically below 10% after one hour, indicating that apparent performance gains were largely adsorption-driven rather than photochemical.

This failure proved to be a turning point. Instead of abandoning LDH entirely, they were combined with graphitic carbon nitride (GCN) to form a heterostructure.3 This approach resulted in a dramatic improvement: after optimization of the synthesis protocol, 99.5% of 1 ppm estrone was degraded within one hour.4 Further modifications were explored by introducing Cu, Fe, and Ag into the LDH/GCN system. While Cu and Fe suppressed photocatalytic activity, silver, at an optimized loading, reduced estrone concentrations below the detection limit within 40 minutes.5

This contribution presents a full experimental arc - from promising hypotheses that failed, through misleading adsorption-driven “successes,” to an ultimately effective but non-intuitive solution - highlighting the value of negative results and surprises as drivers of scientific progress.

This research was funded by the AGH University of Krakow, grant number 16.16.140.315.

Literature:

1            N. Baliarsingh, K. M. Parida and G. C. Pradhan, Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., 2014, 53, 3834–3841.

2            A. Í. S. Morais, W. V. Oliveira, V. V. De Oliveira, L. M. C. Honorio, F. P. Araujo, R. D. S. Bezerra, P. B. A. Fechine, B. C. Viana, M. B. Furtini,
              E. C. Silva-Filho and J. A. Osajima, Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering, 2019, 7, 103431.

3            B. Song, Z. Zeng, G. Zeng, J. Gong, R. Xiao, S. Ye, M. Chen, C. Lai, P. Xu and X. Tang, Advances in Colloid and Interface Science, 2019, 272, 101999.

4            A. Jędras, J. Matusik, E. Dhanaraman, Y.-P. Fu and G. Cempura, Langmuir, 2024, 40, 18163–18175.

5            A. Jędras, J. Matusik, J. Kuncewicz and K. Sobańska, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2025, 15, 6792–6804.

How to cite: Jędras, A. and Matusik, J.: False Starts and Silver Linings: A Photocatalytic Journey with Layered Double Hydroxides, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3077, 2026.

EGU26-4074 | Orals | EOS4.4

Instructive surprises in the hydrological functioning of landscapes 

James Kirchner, Paolo Benettin, and Ilja van Meerveld

BUGS can arise in individual research projects, but also at the level of communities of researchers, leading to shifts in the scientific consensus.  These community-level BUGS typically arise from observations that are surprising to (or previously overlooked by) substantial fractions of the research community.  In this presentation, we summarize several community-level BUGS in our field: specifically, key surprises that have transformed the hydrological community's understanding of hillslope and catchment processes in recent decades.  

Here are some examples.  (1) Students used to learn (and some still do today) that storm runoff is dominated by overland flow.  But stable isotope tracers have convincingly shown instead that even during storm peaks, streamflow is composed mostly of water that has been stored in the landscape for weeks, months, or years.  (2) Maps, and most hydrological theories, have typically depicted streams as fixed features of the landscape.  But field mapping studies have shown that stream networks are surprisingly dynamic, with up to 80% of stream channels going dry sometime during the year.  (3) Textbooks have traditionally represented catchment storage as a well-mixed box.  But tracer time series show fractal scaling that cannot be generated by well-mixed boxes, forcing a re-think of our conceptualization of subsurface storage and mixing.  (4) Waters stored in aquifers, and the waters that drain from them, have traditionally been assumed to share the same age.  But tracers show that waters draining from aquifers are often much younger than the groundwaters that are left behind, and this was subsequently shown to be an inevitable result of aquifer heterogeneity. 

Several examples like these, and their implications, will be briefly discussed, with an eye to the question: how can we maximize the chances for future instructive surprises?

How to cite: Kirchner, J., Benettin, P., and van Meerveld, I.: Instructive surprises in the hydrological functioning of landscapes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4074, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4074, 2026.

Coming from geosciences, we hopefully know what we want to do. Coming from numerics, however, we often know quite well what we are able to do and look for a way to sell it to the community. A few years ago, deep-learning techniques brought new life into the glaciology community. These approaches  allowed for simulations of glacier dynamics at an unprecedented computational performance and motivated several researchers to tackle the numerous open questions about past and present glacier dynamics, particularly in alpine regions. From another point of view, however, it was also tempting to demonstrate that the human brain is still more powerful than artificial intelligence by developing a new classical numerical scheme that can compete with deep-learning techniques concerning its efficiency.

Starting point was, of course, the simplest approximation to the full 3-D Stokes equations, the so-called shallow ice approximation (SIA). Progress was fast and the numerical performance was even better than expected. The new numerical scheme enabled simulations with spatial resolutions of 25 m on a desktop PC, while previous schemes did not reach simulations below a few hundred meters.

However, the enthusiasm pushed the known limitations of the SIA a bit out of sight. Physically, the approximation is quite bad on rugged terrain, particularly in narrow valleys. So the previous computational limitations have been replaced by physical limitations since high resolutions are particularly useful for rugged topographies. In other words, a shabby house has a really good roof now.

What are the options in such a situation?

  • Accept that there is no free lunch and avoid contact to the glacialogy community in the future.
  • Continue the endless discussion about the reviewers' opinion that a spatial resolution of 1 km is better than 25 m.
  • Find a real-world data set that matches the results of the model and helps to talk the problems away.
  • Keep the roof and build a new house beneath. Practically, this would be developing a new approximation to the full 3-D Stokes equations that is compatible to the numerical scheme and reaches an accuracy similar to those of the existing approximations.
  • Take the roof and put it on one of the existing solid houses. Practically, this would be an extension of the numerical scheme towards more complicated systems of differential equations. Unfortunately, efficient numerical schemes are typically very specific. So the roof will not fit easily and it might leak.

The story is open-ended, but there will be at least a preliminary answer in the presentation.

 

How to cite: Hergarten, S.: How useful is a new roof on a shabby house? An example from glacier modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4196, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4196, 2026.

EGU26-4587 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

The importance of describing simple methods in climate sensitivity literature 

Anna Zehrung, Andrew King, Zebedee Nicholls, Mark Zelinka, and Malte Meinshausen

“Show your working!” – is the universal phrase drilled into science and maths students to show a clear demonstration of the steps and thought processes used to reach a solution (and to be awarded full marks on the exam). 

Beyond the classroom, “show your working” becomes the methods section on every scientific paper, and is critical for the transparency and replicability of the study. However, what happens if parts of the method are considered assumed knowledge, or cut in the interests of a word count? 

An inability to fully replicate the results of a study became the unexpected glitch at the start of my PhD. Eager to familiarise myself with global climate model datasets, I set out to replicate the results of a widely cited paper which calculates the equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) across 27 climate models. The ECS is the theoretical global mean temperature response to a doubling of atmospheric CO2 relative to preindustrial levels. A commonly used method to calculate the ECS is to apply an ordinary least squares regression to global annual mean temperature and radiative flux anomalies. 

Despite the simplicity of a linear regression between two variables, we obtained ECS estimates for some climate models that differed from those reported in the original study, even though we followed the described methodology. However, the methodology provided only limited detail on how the raw climate model output – available at regional and monthly scales – was processed to obtain global annual mean anomalies. Differences in these intermediate processing steps can, in turn, lead to differences in ECS estimates.

Limited reporting of data-processing steps is common in the ECS literature. Whether these steps are considered assumed knowledge or deemed too simple to warrant explicit description, we demonstrate that, for some models, they can materially affect the resulting ECS estimate. While the primary aim of our study is to recommend a standardised data-processing pathway for ECS calculations, a secondary aim is to highlight the lack of transparency in key methodological details across the literature. A central takeaway is the importance of clearly documenting all processing steps – effectively, to “show your working” – and to emphasise the critical role of a detailed methods section.

How to cite: Zehrung, A., King, A., Nicholls, Z., Zelinka, M., and Meinshausen, M.: The importance of describing simple methods in climate sensitivity literature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4587, 2026.

Observation of atmospheric constituents and processes is not easy. As atmospheric chemists, we use sensitive equipment, for example mass spectrometers, that we often set up in a (remote) location or on a moving platform for a few-weeks campaign to make in-situ observations. All this with the goal of explaining more and more atmospheric processes, and to verify and improve atmospheric models. However, glitches can happen anywhere in an experiment, be it in the experimental design, setup, or instrumental performance. Thus, complete data coverage during such a campaign is not always a given, resulting in gaps in (published) datasets. And the issue with air is that you can never go back and measure the exact same air again. Here, I would like to share some stories behind such gaps, and what we learned from them. This presentation aims to encourage early career researchers who might be struggling with feelings of failure when bugs, blunders and glitches happen in their experiments - you are not alone! I will share what we learned from these setbacks and how each of them improved our experimental approaches.

How to cite: Pfannerstill, E. Y.: Why are there gaps in your measurements? Sharing the stories behind the missing datapoints, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5494, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5494, 2026.

Over a 24-year research period, three successive experimental investigations led to three publications, each of which falsified the author’s preceding hypothesis and proposed a revised conceptual framework. Despite an initial confidence in having identified definitive solutions, subsequent experimental evidence consistently demonstrated the limitations and inaccuracies of earlier interpretations. This iterative process ultimately revealed that samples, in particular geological reference materials, sharing identical petrographic or mineralogical descriptions are not necessarily chemically equivalent and can exhibit markedly different behaviors during chemical digestion procedures. These findings underscore the critical importance of continuous hypothesis testing, self-falsification, and experimental verification in scientific research, particularly when working with reference materials assumed to be identical. I will be presenting data on the analysis of platinum group elements (PGE) and osmium isotopes in geological reference materials (chromitites, ultramafic rocks and basalts), which demonstrates the need for challenging matrices for method validation. 

How to cite: Meisel, T. C.: Self-falsification as a driver of scientific progress: Insights from long-term experimental research, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5771, 2026.

EGU26-6794 | ECS | Orals | EOS4.4

Back to square one (again and again): Finding a bug in a complex global atmospheric model   

Nadja Omanovic, Sylvaine Ferrachat, and Ulrike Lohmann

In atmospheric sciences, a central tool to test hypotheses are numerical models, which aim to represent (part of) our environment. One such model is the weather and climate model ICON [1], which solves the Navier-Stokes equation for capturing the dynamics and parameterizes subgrid-scale processes, such as radiation, cloud microphysics, and aerosol processes. Specifically, for the latter exists the so-called Hamburg Aerosol Module (HAM [2]), which is coupled to ICON [3] and predicts the evolution of aerosol populations using two moments (mass mixing ratio and number concentration). The high complexity of aerosols is reflected in the number of aerosol species (total of 5), number of modes (total of 4), and their mixing state and solubility. The module calculates aerosol composition and number concentration, their optical properties, their sources and sinks, and their interactions with clouds via microphysical processes. Aerosol emissions are sector-specific and based on global emission inventories or dynamically computed.

Within our work, we stumbled upon an interesting pattern occurrence in our simulations upon changing/turning off single emission sectors. If we, e.g., removed black carbon from aircraft emissions, the strongest changes emerged over the African continent, which is not the region where we were expecting to see the strongest response. Further investigations revealed that this pattern emerges independently of the emission sector as well as species, confirming our suspicion that we are facing a bug within HAM. Here, we want to present how we approached the challenge of identifying and tackling a bug within a complex module with several thousand lines of code.

 

[1] G. Zängl, D. Reinert, P. Ripodas, and M. Baldauf, “The ICON (ICOsahedral Non-hydrostatic) modelling framework of DWD and MPI-M: Description of the non-hydrostatic dynamical core,” Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, vol. 141, no. 687, pp. 563–579, 2015, ISSN: 1477-870X. DOI: 10.1002/qj.2378

[2] P. Stier, J. Feichter, S. Kinne, S. Kloster, E. Vignati, J. Wilson, L. Ganzeveld, I. Tegen, M. Werner, Y. Balkanski, M. Schulz, O. Boucher, A. Minikin, and A. Petzold, “The aerosol-climate model ECHAM5-HAM,” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2005. DOI: 10.5194/acp-5-1125-2005

[3] M. Salzmann, S. Ferrachat, C. Tully, S. M¨ unch, D. Watson-Parris, D. Neubauer, C. Siegenthaler-Le Drian, S. Rast, B. Heinold, T. Crueger, R. Brokopf, J. Mülmenstädt, J. Quaas, H. Wan, K. Zhang, U. Lohmann, P. Stier, and I. Tegen, “The Global Atmosphere-aerosol Model ICON-A-HAM2.3–Initial Model Evaluation and Effects of Radiation Balance Tuning on Aerosol Optical Thickness,” Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, vol. 14, no. 4,e2021MS002699, 2022, ISSN: 1942-2466. DOI: 10.1029/2021MS002699

How to cite: Omanovic, N., Ferrachat, S., and Lohmann, U.: Back to square one (again and again): Finding a bug in a complex global atmospheric model  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6794, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6794, 2026.

In situ cloud measurements are essential for understanding atmospheric processes and establishing a reliable ground truth. Obtaining these data is rarely straightforward. Challenges range from accessing clouds in the first place to ensuring that the instrument or environment does not bias the sample. This contribution explores several blunders and unexpected glitches encountered over fifteen years of field campaigns.

I will share stories of mountain top observations where blowing snow was measured instead of cloud ice crystals and the ambitious but failed attempt to use motorized paragliders for sampling. I also reflect on winter campaigns where the primary obstacles were flooding and mud rather than cold and snow. While these experiences were often frustrating, they frequently yielded useful data or led to new insights. One such example is the realization that drone icing is not just a crash risk but can also serve as a method for measuring liquid water content. By highlighting these setbacks and the successful data that emerged despite them, I aim to foster a discussion on the value of trial and error and persistence in atmospheric physics.

How to cite: Henneberger, J.: How Not to Measure a Cloud: Lessons from Fifteen Years of Fieldwork Failures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8228, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8228, 2026.

EGU26-8359 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Do trees save lives under climate change? It’s complicated  

Nils Hohmuth, Nora L. S. Fahrenbach (presenting), Yibiao Zou (presenting), Josephine Reek, Felix Specker, Tom Crowther, and Constantin M. Zohner

Forests are powerful climate regulators: Their CO2 uptake provides a global biogeochemical cooling effect, and in the tropics, this cooling is further strengthened by evapotranspiration. Given that temperature-related mortality is a relevant global health burden, which is expected to increase under climate change, we set out to test what we thought was a promising hypothesis: Can forests reduce human temperature-related mortality from climate change? 

To test this, we used simulated temperature changes to reforestation from six different Earth System Models (ESMs) under a future high-emission scenario, and paired them with age-specific population data and three methodologically different temperature-mortality frameworks (Cromar et al. 2022, Lee et al. 2019, and Carleton et al. 2022). We expected to find a plausible range of temperature-related mortality outcomes attributable to global future forests conservation efforts.

Instead, our idea ran head-first into a messy reality. Firstly, rather than showing a clear consensus, the ESMs produced a wide range of temperature responses to reforestation, varying both in magnitude and sign. This is likely due to the albedo effect, varying climatological tree cover and land use processes implemented by the models, in addition to internal variability which we could not reduce due to the existence of only one ensemble member per model. Consequently, the models disagreed in many regions on whether global forest conservation and reforestation would increase or decrease temperature by the end of the century.

The uncertainties deepened when we incorporated the mortality data. Mortality estimates varied by up to a factor of 10 depending on the ESM and mortality framework used. Therefore, in the end, the models could not even agree on whether forests increased or decreased temperature-related mortality. We found ourselves with a pipeline that amplified uncertainties of both the ESM and mortality datasets.

For now, the question remains wide open: Do trees save us from temperature-related deaths in a warming world, and if so, by how much?

 

* The first two authors contributed equally to this work.

How to cite: Hohmuth, N., Fahrenbach (presenting), N. L. S., Zou (presenting), Y., Reek, J., Specker, F., Crowther, T., and Zohner, C. M.: Do trees save lives under climate change? It’s complicated , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8359, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8359, 2026.

EGU26-10401 | ECS | Orals | EOS4.4

The empty mine: Why better tools do not help you find new diamonds 

Ralf Loritz, Alexander Dolich, and Benedikt Heudorfer

Hydrological modelling has long been shaped by a steady drive toward ever more sophisticated models. In the era of machine learning, this race has turned into a relentless pursuit of complexity: deeper networks and ever more elaborate architectures that often feel outdated by the time the ink on the paper is dry. Motivated by a genuine belief in methodological progress, I, like many others, spent considerable effort exploring this direction, driven by the assumption that finding the “right” architecture or model would inevitably lead to better performance. This talk is a reflection on that journey; you could say my own Leidensweg. Over several years, together with excellent collaborators, I explored a wide range of state-of-the-art deep-learning approaches for rainfall–runoff modelling and other hydrological modelling challenges. Yet, regardless of the architecture or training strategy, I repeatedly encountered the same performance ceiling. In parallel, the literature appeared to tell a different story, with “new” models regularly claiming improvements over established baselines. A closer inspection, however, revealed that rigorous and standardized benchmarking is far from common practice in hydrology, making it difficult to disentangle genuine progress from artefacts of experimental design. What initially felt like a failure to improve my models turned out to be a confrontation with reality. The limiting factor was not the architecture, but the problem itself. We have reached a point where predictive skill is increasingly bounded by the information content of our benchmark datasets and maybe more importantly by the way we frame our modelling challenges, rather than by model design. Like many others, I have come to believe that if we want to move beyond the current performance plateau, the next breakthroughs are unlikely to come from ever more complex models alone. Instead, as a community, we need well-designed model challenges, better benchmarks, and datasets that meaningfully expand the information available to our models to make model comparisons more informative.

How to cite: Loritz, R., Dolich, A., and Heudorfer, B.: The empty mine: Why better tools do not help you find new diamonds, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10401, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10401, 2026.

EGU26-13630 | ECS | Orals | EOS4.4

How NOT to identify streamflow events? 

Larisa Tarasova and Paul Astagneau

Examining catchment response to precipitation at event scale is useful for understanding how various hydrological systems store and release water. Many of such event scale characteristics, for example event runoff coefficient and event time scale are also important engineering metrics used for design. However, deriving these characteristics requires identification of discrete precipitation-streamflow events from continuous hydrometeorological time series.

Event identification is not at all a trivial task. It becomes even more challenging when working with very large datasets that encompass a wide range of spatial and temporal dynamics. Approaches range from visual expert judgement to baseflow-separation-based methods and objective methods based on the coupled dynamics of precipitation and streamflow. Here, we would like to present our experience in the quest to devise the “ideal” method for large datasets – and trust us, we tried, a lot. We demonstrate that expert-based methods can be seriously flawed simply by changing a few meta parameters, such as the length of displayed periods, baseflow-separation-based methods deliver completely opposite results when different underlying separation methods are selected, and objective methods suddenly fail when dynamics with different temporal scales are simultaneously present.

Ultimately, we realized that finding a one-size-fits-all method was not possible and that compromises had to be made to select sufficiently representative events across large datasets. Therefore, we advocate for pragmatic case-specific evaluation criteria and for transparency in event identification to make study results reproducible and fit for purpose, if not perfect.

How to cite: Tarasova, L. and Astagneau, P.: How NOT to identify streamflow events?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13630, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13630, 2026.

EGU26-14148 | Orals | EOS4.4 | Highlight

Buggy benefits of more fundamental climate models 

Bjorn Stevens, Marco Giorgetta, and Hans Segura

A defining attribute of global-storm resolving models is that modelling is replaced by simulation.  In addition to overloading the word “model”  this avails the developer of a much larger variety of tests, and brings about a richer interplay with their intuition.  This has proven helpful in identifying and correcting many mistakes in global-storm resolving models that traditional climate models find difficult to identify, and usually compensate by “tuning.”  It also means that storm-resolving models are built and tested in a fundamentally different way than are traditional climate models. In this talk I will review the development of ICON as a global storm resolving model to illustrate how this feature, of trying to simulate rather than model the climate system, has helped identify a large number of long-standing bugs in code bases inherited from traditional models; how this can support open development; and how sometimes these advantages also prove to be buggy.

How to cite: Stevens, B., Giorgetta, M., and Segura, H.: Buggy benefits of more fundamental climate models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14148, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14148, 2026.

EGU26-14374 | Orals | EOS4.4

The dangerous temptation of optimality in hydrological and water resources modelling 

Thorsten Wagener and Francesca Pianosi

Hydrological and water systems modelling has long been driven by the search for better models. We do so by searching for models or at least parameter combinations that provide the best fit to given observations. We ourselves have contributed to this effort by developing new methods and by publishing diverse case studies. However, we repeatedly find that searching for and finding an optimal model is highly fraught in the presence of unclear signal-to-noise ratios in our observations, of incomplete models and of highly imbalanced databases. We present examples of our own work through which we have realized that achieving optimality was possible but futile unless we give equal consideration to issues of consistency, robustness and problem framing. We argue here that the strong focus on optimality continues to be a hindrance for advancing hydrologic science and for transferring research achievements into practice – probably more so than in other areas of the geosciences.

How to cite: Wagener, T. and Pianosi, F.: The dangerous temptation of optimality in hydrological and water resources modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14374, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14374, 2026.

Among soil physical analyses, determination of the soil particle-size distribution (PSD) is arguably the most fundamental. The standard methodology combines sieve analysis for sand fractions with sedimentation-based techniques for silt and clay. Established sedimentation methods include the pipette and hydrometer techniques. More recently, the Integral Suspension Pressure (ISP) method has become available, which derives PSD by inverse modeling of the temporal evolution of suspension pressure measured at a fixed depth in a sedimentation cylinder. Since ISP is based on the same physical principles as the pipette and hydrometer methods, their results should, in principle, agree.

The ISP methodology has been implemented in the commercial instrument PARIO (METER Group, Munich). While elegant, the method relies on pressure change measurements with a resolution of 0.1 Pa (equivalent to 0.01 mm of water column). Consequently, the PARIO manual strongly advises avoiding any mechanical disturbance such as thumping, bumping, clapping, vibration, or other shock events. This warning is essentially precautionary, because to date no systematic experimental investigation of such disturbances has been reported.

To explore this issue, we prepared a single 30 g soil sample following standard PSD procedures and subjected it to 26 PARIO repeated measurement runs over a period of five months, each run lasting 12 h. Between runs, the suspension was remixed but otherwise not altered. The first ten runs (over ten days) were conducted without intentional disturbance to establish baseline repeatability. This was followed by eight runs with deliberately imposed and timed disturbances that generated single or repeated vibrations (“rocking and shocking”). After approximately two and five months, we conducted additional sets of five and three undisturbed runs, respectively.

We report how these mechanical disturbances, along with temperature variations during measurement and the time elapsed since sample pre-treatment, affected the derived PSD. The results provide a first quantitative assessment of how fragile—or robust—the ISP method and PARIO system really are when reality refuses to sit perfectly still.

 

How to cite: Nemes, A. and Durner, W.: Rocking and Shocking the PARIOTM: How Sensitive Is ISP-Based Particle-Size Analysis to Mechanical Disturbance?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14763, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14763, 2026.

EGU26-14852 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Some Norwegian soils behave differently: is it an inheritance from marine sedimentation? 

Attila Nemes, Pietro Bazzocchi, Sinja Weiland, and Martine van der Ploeg

Predicting soil hydraulic behavior is necessary for the modeling of catchments and agricultural planning, particularly for a country like Norway where only 3% of land is suitable for farming. Soil texture is an important and easily accessible parameter for the prediction of soil hydraulic behavior. However, some Norwegian farmland soils, which formed as glacio-marine sediments and are characterized by a medium texture, have shown the hydraulic behavior of heavy textured soils. Coined by the theory behind well-established sedimentation-enhancing technology used in waste water treatment, we hypothesized that sedimentation under marine conditions may result in specific particle sorting and as a result specific pore system characteristics. To test this, we designed four custom-built devices to produce artificially re-sedimented columns of soil material to help characterize the influence of sedimentation conditions. We successfully produced column samples of the same homogeneous mixture of fine-sand, silt, and clay particles obtained by physically crushing and sieving (< 200 µm) subsoil material collected at the Skuterud catchment in South-East Norway, differing only in sedimentation conditions (deionized water vs 35 g per liter NaCl solution). Then, the inability of standard laboratory methods to measure the saturated hydraulic conductivity of such fine material, led us to “MacGyver” (design and custom-build) two alternative methodologies to measure that property, i.e. i) by adapting a pressure plate extractor for a constant head measurement and ii) by building a 10 m tall pipe-system in a common open area of the office, in order to increase the hydraulic head on the samples. There was a learning curve with both of those methods, but we have found that the salt-water re-sedimented columns were about five times more permeable than the freshwater ones, which was the complete opposite of our expectations. However, an unexpected blunder in the conservation of our samples suggests that our hypothesis should be further explored rather than dismissed. These contributions hint about the mechanisms that may underlie the anomalous hydraulic behaviour of certain Norwegian soils and raise new questions on the formation of marine clays, improving knowledge available for land managers and modellers.

 

How to cite: Nemes, A., Bazzocchi, P., Weiland, S., and van der Ploeg, M.: Some Norwegian soils behave differently: is it an inheritance from marine sedimentation?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14852, 2026.

EGU26-16619 | Orals | EOS4.4

The unknown knowns – the inconvenient knowledge in hydrogeology we do not like to use 

Okke Batelaan, Joost Herweijer, Steven Young, and Phil Hayes

“It is in the tentative stage that the affections enter with their blinding influence. Love was long since represented as blind…The moment one has offered an original explanation for a phenomenon which seems satisfactory, that moment affection for his intellectual child springs into existence…To guard against this, the method of multiple working hypotheses is urged. … The effort is to bring up into view every rational explanation of new phenomena, and to develop every tenable hypothesis respecting their cause and history. The investigator thus becomes the parent of a family of hypothesis: and, by his parental relation to all, he is forbidden to fasten his affections unduly upon any one” (Chamberlin, 1890).

The MADE (macro-dispersion) natural-gradient tracer field experiments were conducted more than 35 years ago. It aimed to determine field-scale dispersion parameters based on detailed hydraulic conductivity measurements to support transport simulation. A decade of field experiments produced a 30-year paper trail of modelling studies with no clear resolution of a successful simulation approach for practical use in transport problems.  As a result, accurately simulating contaminant transport in the subsurface remains a formidable challenge in hydrogeology.

What went awry, and why do we often miss the mark?

Herweijer et al. (2026) conducted a ‘back to basics’ review of the original MADE reports and concluded that there are significant inconvenient and unexplored issues that influenced the migration of the tracer plume and or biased observations. These issues include unreliable measurement of hydraulic conductivity, biased tracer concentrations, and underestimation of sedimentological heterogeneity and non-stationarity of the flow field. Many studies simulating the tracer plumes appeared to have ignored, sidestepped, or been unaware of these issues, raising doubts about the validity of the results.

Our analysis shows that there is a persistent drive among researchers to conceptually oversimplify natural complexity to enable testing of single-method modelling, mostly driven by parametric stochastic approaches. Researchers tend to be anchored to a specialised, numerically driven methodology and have difficulty in unearthing highly relevant information from ‘unknown known’ data or applying approaches outside their own specialised scientific sub-discipline. Another important aspect of these ‘unkowns knowns’ is the tendency to accept published data verbatim. Too often, there is no rigorous investigation of the original measurement methods and reporting, and, if need be, additional testing to examine the root cause of data issues.

Following the good old advice of Chamberlin (1890), we used a knowledge framework to systematically assess knowns, unknowns, and associated confidence levels, yielding a set of multi-conceptual models. Based on identified 'unknowns', these multi-models can be tested against reliable 'knowns' such as piezometric data and mass balance calculations.  

Chamberlin, T.C., 1890, The method of multiple working hypotheses. Science 15(366): 92-96. doi:10.1126/science.ns-15.366.92.

Herweijer J.C., S. C Young, P. Hayes, and O. Batelaan, 2026, A multi-conceptual model approach to untangling the MADE experiment, Accepted for Publication in Groundwater.

How to cite: Batelaan, O., Herweijer, J., Young, S., and Hayes, P.: The unknown knowns – the inconvenient knowledge in hydrogeology we do not like to use, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16619, 2026.

EGU26-17373 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

The Hidden Propagator: How Free-Slip Boundaries Corrupt 3D Simulations 

Laetitia Le Pourhiet

Free-slip boundary conditions are routinely used in 3D geodynamic modelling because they reduce computational cost, avoid artificial shear zones at domain edges, and simplify the implementation of large-scale kinematic forcing. However, despite their apparent neutrality, our experiments show that free-slip boundaries systematically generate first-order artefacts that propagate deep into the model interior and can severely distort the interpretation of continental rifting simulations.

Here we present a set of 3D visco-plastic models inspired by the South China Sea (SCS) that were originally designed to study the effect of steady-state thermal inheritance and pluton-controlled crustal weakening. Unexpectedly, in all simulations except those with a very particular inverted rheological profile (POLC), the free-slip boundary on the “Vietnam side” of the domain generated a persistent secondary propagator, producing unrealistic amounts of lithospheric thinning in the southwest corner. This artefact appeared irrespective of crustal rheology, seeding strategy, or the presence of thermal heterogeneities.

We identify three systematic behaviours induced by free-slip boundaries in 3D:
(1) forced rift nucleation at boundary-adjacent thermal gradients,
(2) artificial propagator formation that competes with the intended first-order rifting, and
(3) rotation or shearing of micro-blocks not predicted by tectonic reconstructions.

These artefacts originate from the inability of free-slip boundaries to transmit shear traction, which artificially channels deformation parallel to the boundary when lateral thermal or mechanical contrasts exist. In 3D, unlike in 2D, the combination of oblique extension and boundary-parallel velocity freedom leads to emergent pseudo-transform behaviour that is entirely numerical.

Our results highlight a key negative outcome: free-slip boundaries cannot be assumed neutral in 3D rift models, especially when studying localisation, obliquity, multi-propagator dynamics, or the competition between structural and thermal inheritance. We argue that many published 3D rift models may unknowingly include such artefacts.

 

How to cite: Le Pourhiet, L.: The Hidden Propagator: How Free-Slip Boundaries Corrupt 3D Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17373, 2026.

EGU26-18600 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Data Disaster to Data Resilience: Lessons from CEDA’s Data Recovery  

Edward Williamson, Matt Pritchard, Alan Iwi, Sam Pepler, and Graham Parton

On 18 November 2025, a small error during internal data migration of between storage systems of the JASMIN data analysis platform in the UK led to a substantial part of the CEDA Archive being made temporarily unavailable online (but not lost!). The unfortunate incident caused serious disruption to a large community of users (and additional workload and stress for the team), it provided important learning points for the team in terms of:  

  • enhancing data security,  
  • importance of mutual support among professional colleagues,  
  • the value of clear and transparent communications with your users 
  • a unique opportunity to showcase the capabilities of a cutting-edge digital research infrastructure in the recovery and return to service with this “unscheduled disaster recovery exercise”. 

 

We report on the circumstances leading to the incident, the lessons learned, and the technical capabilities employed in the recovery. One example shows, nearly 800 Terabytes of data transferred from a partner institution in the USA in just over 27 hours, at a rate of over 8 Gigabytes per second using Globus. The ability to orchestrate such a transfer is the result of many years of international collaboration to support large-scale environmental science, and highlights the benefits of a federated, replicated data infrastructure built on well-engineered technologies.

How to cite: Williamson, E., Pritchard, M., Iwi, A., Pepler, S., and Parton, G.: Data Disaster to Data Resilience: Lessons from CEDA’s Data Recovery , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18600, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18600, 2026.

EGU26-19755 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Opposite cloud responses to extreme Arctic pollution: sensitivity to cloud microphysics, or a bug? 

Rémy Lapere, Ruth Price, Louis Marelle, Lucas Bastien, and Jennie Thomas

Aerosol-cloud interactions remain one of the largest uncertainties in global climate modelling. This uncertainty arises because of the dependence of aerosol-cloud interactions on many tightly coupled atmospheric processes; the non-linear response of clouds to aerosol perturbations across different regimes; and the challenge of extracting robust signals from noisy meteorological observations. The problem is particularly acute in the Arctic, where sparse observational coverage limits model constraints, pristine conditions can lead to unexpected behaviour, and key processes remain poorly understood.

A common way to tackle the challenge of uncertainties arising from aerosol-cloud interactions in climate simulations is to conduct sensitivity experiments using cloud and aerosol microphysics schemes based on different assumptions and parameterisations. By comparing these experiments, key results can be constrained by sampling the range of unavoidable structural uncertainties in the models. Here, we apply this approach to a case study of an extreme, polluted warm air mass in the Arctic that was measured during the MOSAiC Arctic expedition in 2020. We simulated the event in the WRF-Chem-Polar regional climate model both with and without the anthropogenic aerosols from the strong pollution event to study the response of clouds and surface radiative balance. To understand the sensitivity of our results to the choice of model configuration, we tested two distinct, widely-used cloud microphysics schemes.

Initial results showed that the two schemes simulated opposite cloud responses: one predicted a surface cooling from the pollution that was reasonably in line with our expectations of the event, while the other predicted the opposite behaviour in the cloud response and an associated surface warming. These opposing effects seemed to suggest that structural uncertainties in the two schemes relating to clean, Arctic conditions was so strong that it even obscured our ability to understand the overall sign of the surface radiative response to the pollution.

However, since significant model development was required to couple these two cloud microphysics schemes to the aerosol fields in our model, there was another explanation that we couldn’t rule out: a bug in the scheme that was producing the more unexpected results. In this talk, we will explore the challenges of simulating the Arctic climate with a state-of-the-art chemistry-climate model and highlight how examples like this underscore the value of our recent efforts to align our collaborative model development with software engineering principles and Open Science best practices.

How to cite: Lapere, R., Price, R., Marelle, L., Bastien, L., and Thomas, J.: Opposite cloud responses to extreme Arctic pollution: sensitivity to cloud microphysics, or a bug?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19755, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19755, 2026.

All statistical tools come with assumptions. Yet many scientists treat statistics like a collection of black-box methods without learning the assumptions. Here I illustrate this problem using dozens of studies that claim to show that solar variability is a dominant driver of climate. I find that linear regression approaches are widely misused among these studies. In particular, they often violate the assumption of ‘no autocorrelation’ of the time series used, though it is common for studies to violate several or all of the assumptions of linear regression. The misuse of statistical tools has been a common problem across all fields of science for decades. This presentation serves as an important cautionary tale for the Earth Sciences and highlights the need for better statistical education and for statistical software that automatically checks input data for assumptions.

How to cite: Steiger, N.: Pervasive violation of statistical assumptions in studies linking solar variability to climate, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19776, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19776, 2026.

EGU26-20122 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Developing Matrix-Matched Empirical Calibrations for EDXRF Analysis of Peat-Alternative Growth Media 

Thulani De Silva, Carmela Tupaz, Maame Croffie, Karen Daly, Michael Gaffney, Michael Stock, and Eoghan Corbett

A key reason for the widespread use of peat-based growth media in horticulture is their reliable nutrient availability when supplemented with fertilisers. However, due to environmental concerns over continued peat-extraction and use, peat-alternatives (e.g., coir, wood fibre, composted bark, biochar) are increasingly being used commercially. These alternative media often blend multiple materials, making it crucial to understand elemental composition and nutrient interactions between components. This study evaluates whether benchtop Energy Dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (EDXRF) can provide a rapid method for determining the elemental composition of peat-alternative components.

Representative growing media components (peat, coir, wood fibre, composted bark, biochar, horticultural lime, perlite, slow-release fertilisers, and trace-element fertiliser) were blended in different ratios to generate industry-representative mixes. Individual components and prepared mixes were dried and milled to ≤80 μm. An industry-representative mix (QC-50: 50% peat, 30% wood fibre, 10% composted bark, 10% coir, with fertiliser and lime additions) and 100% peat were analysed by EDXRF (Rigaku NEX-CG) for P, K, Mg, Ca, S, Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu and Mo, and compared against ICP-OES reference measurements. The instrument’s fundamental parameters (FP) method using a plant-based organic materials library showed large discrepancies relative to ICP-OES (relative differences: 268–390 084%) for most elements in both QC-50 and peat, with the exception of Ca in QC-50 (11%). These results confirm that the FP approach combined with loose-powder preparation is unsuitable for accurate elemental analysis of organic growing media.

An empirical calibration was subsequently developed using 18 matrix-matched standards (CRMs, in-house growing media and individual component standards). Matrix matching is challenging because mixes are mostly organic by volume, yet variable inorganic amendments (e.g., lime, fertilisers, and sometimes perlite) can strongly influence XRF absorption/enhancement effects. Calibration performance was optimised iteratively using QC-50 as the validation sample, until relative differences were <15% for all elements. When applied to 100% peat, agreement with ICP-OES results improved substantially for some macro-elements (e.g. Mg 10%, Ca 1%, S 19%) but remained poor for most trace elements (28–96%), demonstrating limited transferability of this calibration method across different elements and matrices tested.

Overall, these results demonstrate that loose powder preparation does not provide sufficiently robust accuracy for EDXRF analysis of organic growing media even with meticulous empirical matrix-matched calibration. We are therefore developing a pressed pellet method using a low-cost wax binder to improve sample homogeneity (packing density) and calibration transferability. Twenty unknown mixes will be analysed using both loose powder and pressed-pellet calibrations, and agreement with reference data (ICP-OES) will confirm method validation, supporting the development of EDXRF as a novel approach for growing media analysis.

How to cite: De Silva, T., Tupaz, C., Croffie, M., Daly, K., Gaffney, M., Stock, M., and Corbett, E.: Developing Matrix-Matched Empirical Calibrations for EDXRF Analysis of Peat-Alternative Growth Media, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20122, 2026.

EGU26-20375 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

From Field to File: challenges and recommendations for handling hydrological data 

Karin Bremer, Maria Staudinger, Jan Seibert, and Ilja van Meerveld

In catchment hydrology, long-term data collection often starts as part of a (doctoral) research project. In some cases, the data collection continues on a limited budget, often using the field protocol and data management plan designed for the initial short-term project. Challenges and issues with the continued data collection are likely to arise, especially when there are multiple changes in the people involved. It is especially difficult for researchers who were not directly involved in the fieldwork to understand the data and must therefore rely on field notes and archived data. They then often encounter issues related to inconsistent metadata, such as inconsistent date-time formats and inconsistent or missing units, missing calibration files, and unclear file and processing script organization.

While the specific issues may sound very case-dependent, based on our own and other’s experiences from various research projects, it appears that many issues recur more frequently than one might expect (or be willing to admit). In this presentation, we will share our experiences with bringing spatially distributed groundwater level data collected in Sweden and Switzerland from the field to ready-to-use files. Additionally, we provide recommendations for overcoming the challenges during field data collection, data organization, documentation, and data processing using scripts. These include having a clear, detailed protocol for in the fieldwork and the data processing steps, and ensuring it is followed. Although protocols are often used, they are frequently not detailed enough or are not used as designed. The protocols might also not take into account the further use of the data, such as for hydrological modelling, beyond field collection. 

How to cite: Bremer, K., Staudinger, M., Seibert, J., and van Meerveld, I.: From Field to File: challenges and recommendations for handling hydrological data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20375, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20375, 2026.

In 2014 we developed the Wageningen Lowland Runoff Simulator (WALRUS), a conceptual rainfall-runoff model for catchments with shallow groundwater. Water managers and consultants were involved in model development. In addition, they sponsored the steps necessary for application: making an R package, user manual and tutorial, publishing these on GitHub and organising user days. WALRUS is now used operationally by several Dutch water authorities and for scientific studies in the Netherlands and abroad. When developing the model, we made certain design choices. Now, after twelve years of application in water management, science and education, we re-evaluate the consequences of those choices.

The lessons can be divided into things we learned about the model’s functioning and things we learned from how people use the model. Concerning the model’s functioning, we found that keeping the model representation close to reality has advantages and disadvantages. It makes it easy to understand what happens and why, but it also causes unrealistic expectations. Certain physically based relations hampered model performance because they contained thresholds, and deriving parameter values from field observations resulted in uncertainty and discussions about spatial representativeness.

Concerning the practical use, we found that the easy-to-use, open source R package with manual was indispensable for new users. Nearly all users preferred default options over the implemented user-defined functions to allow tailor-made solutions. Parameter calibration was more difficult than expected because the feedbacks necessary to simulate the hydrological processes in lowlands increase the risk of equifinality. In addition, lack of suitable discharge data for calibration prompted the request for default parameter values. Finally, the model was subject to unintended model use, sometimes violating basic assumptions and sometimes showing unique opportunities we had not thought of ourselves.

C.C. Brauer, A.J. Teuling, P.J.J.F. Torfs, R. Uijlenhoet (2014): The Wageningen Lowland Runoff Simulator (WALRUS): a lumped rainfall-runoff model for catchments with shallow groundwater, Geosci. Model Dev., 7, 2313-2332, doi:10.5194/gmd-7-2313-2014

How to cite: Brauer, C.: Re-evaluating the WALRUS rainfall-runoff model design after twelve years of application, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21915, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21915, 2026.

The end-Guadalupian (Middle Permian) mass extinction represents a pivotal yet enigmatic event in Earth's history. Its drivers, often attributed to the emplacement of the Emeishan Large Igneous Province, are intensely debated, with proposed mechanisms ranging from volcanic outgassing to sea-level fluctuations and widespread marine anoxia. However, a critical lack of high-resolution, multi-proxy records from key paleo-tropical regions has hindered a unified model. This study presents a fully integrated dataset combining field sedimentology, microfacies analysis, and a comprehensive suite of major, trace, and rare earth element geochemistry from the Wordian carbonates of the Salt Range, Pakistan, a classic Neotethyan margin. Our data reveal a pronounced transgressive systems tract, marked by a shift from peritidal cycles to deeper-water carbonates. Crucially, geochemical proxies (e.g., Sr/Ca, Mn/Sr) confirm this sea-level rise was accompanied by a shift in oceanic chemical budgets. More significantly, we identify a pre-extinction perturbation in redox-sensitive trace elements (e.g., V/Cr, U/Th, Mo enrichment) and nutrient tracers (P, Ba), indicating a trend towards deoxygenation and increased nutrient loading in the Tethyan ocean during the Wordian. We interpret this coupled sedimentological-geochemical signal as a direct record of eustatic rise-driven oceanographic stagnation. The transgression likely flooded vast continental shelves, enhancing organic matter burial and fostering the development of stratified, anoxic water masses on a near-global scale. The synchronicity of this event with the onset of Emeishan volcanism suggests a powerful feedback mechanism: sea-level rise created the environmental context in which the effects of volcanism (e.g., nutrient runoff, greenhouse warming) were dramatically amplified. By providing a high-resolution record from the Tethyan gateway, this research places the Wordian of the Salt Range as a vital recorder of pre-extinction environmental deterioration. Our findings demonstrate that the stage for the end-Guadalupian catastrophe was set several million years earlier by oceanographic upheaval, forcing a re-evaluation of the extinction's triggers and providing a critical ancient analogue for modern sea-level rise and ocean deoxygenation.

How to cite: Wadood, B.: Pre-Extinction Stress in the Salt Range: Wordian Eustasy and its Role in the End-Guadalupian Crisis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-546, 2026.

On the modern Earth, oxidative weathering of continental crust constitutes the dominant source of most nutrient elements to the ocean that ultimately sustains the biosphere over geological timescales. However, continental crust exposed above sealevel may have been scarce on the early Earth, and oxidation was limited prior to the rise of atmospheric O2 at ca. 2.4-2.3 billion years ago (Ga). Several experimental and modelling studies have therefore suggested that anoxic seafloor weathering and hydrothermal alteration provided the major sources of bioessential elements such as phosphate and transition metals. Here, these datasets are reviewed, and new supportive evidence is presented from the Paleoarchean North Star and Mount Ada basalts (3.5-3.47 Ga) in the Pilbara craton, Western Australia. Alteration gradients reveal depletion in key nutrients, supporting the idea that this process contributed to sustaining microbial ecosystems at that time. Direct evidence of a Paleoarchean seafloor biosphere is preserved in the form of microbialites found in an offshore marine setting with no evidence of felsic material influx. Collectively, these findings show that life could be maintained on an ocean-dominated planet; however, continental emergence was perhaps important for biological diversification and innovation over the later course of Earth’s history.

How to cite: Stüeken, E.: Exploring seafloor alteration as a viable mechanism to sustain Earth’s earliest biosphere, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2631, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2631, 2026.

EGU26-2702 | Posters on site | CL4.16

 Banded Iron Formations as archives for ca. 3.5 Ga old marine environments: Insights from REE and Hf-Nd isotope signatures 

Sebastian Viehmann, Johanna Krayer, Jaganmoy Jodder, Josua Pakulla, Carsten Münker, Axel Hofmann, Toni Schulz, Christian Koeberl, and Stefan Weyer

Banded Iron Formations (BIFs) are authigenic marine sedimentary rocks that record the composition of Precambrian seawater and provide key insights into early marine environments. The Paleoarchean Algoma-type Tomka BIF from the Daitari Greenstone Belt (India) is considered to be ~3.37–3.50 Ga old and to have experienced only greenschist-facies metamorphism, in contrast to many Eo- to Paleoarchean BIFs that were metamorphosed under much higher amphibolite-facies conditions. Despite this relatively low metamorphic overprint, the potential of the Tomka BIF as a reliable archive of ancient seawater chemistry has not yet been evaluated. Still, this location may be crucial to better understand the evolution of Palaeoarchean marine habitats and their interactions with early landmasses and the atmosphere.

To better constrain both the depositional age and the paleoenvironmental conditions of the Tomka BIF, we analysed major and trace element abundances together with radiogenic Hf–Nd isotope compositions of individual Fe- and Si-rich BIF layers, as well as an associated shale. Tomka BIF samples lacking detrital contamination and post-depositional alteration display typical Archean, shale-normalised seawater-like rare earth and yttrium (REYSN​) patterns. These include positive LaSN, EuSN​, and GdSN​ anomalies, superchondritic Y/Ho ratios, the absence of negative CeSN​ anomalies, and enrichment of heavy relative to light REYSN​. Collectively, these signatures indicate deposition in an anoxic marine environment influenced by high-temperature submarine hydrothermal activity.

BIF samples preserving pristine Hf–Nd isotope compositions define coherent trends along the 176Lu–176Hf and 147Sm–143Nd reference isochrons corresponding to the inferred depositional age of 3.37–3.50 Ga. Initial εNd values (+0.1 to +5.3) indicate a juvenile source contribution to Tomka seawater, while the associated shale (εNd = -0.3 to +1.1) reflects a similarly juvenile provenance for the detrital component. In contrast, initial εHf​ values of the BIFs (-4.8 to +145) are strongly decoupled from the Nd isotope system and from the so-called terrestrial array, which reflects the coupled behaviour of Hf-Nd in magmatic systems. A Hf-Nd isotope decoupling in low-temperature systems, however, is related to incongruent Hf weathering, as described by the so-called zircon effect. Applied to the Daitari BIFs, this decoupling likely reflects the emergence and weathering of a zircon-bearing crust in the proto-Singhbhum Craton, which influenced Archean seawater chemistry by at least 3.37 Ga.

How to cite: Viehmann, S., Krayer, J., Jodder, J., Pakulla, J., Münker, C., Hofmann, A., Schulz, T., Koeberl, C., and Weyer, S.:  Banded Iron Formations as archives for ca. 3.5 Ga old marine environments: Insights from REE and Hf-Nd isotope signatures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2702, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2702, 2026.

EGU26-2744 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

A reconstruction of Lower Danube-Black Sea climate history. First insights from novel loess-paleosol sequences. 

Andrew Trott, Daniel Veres, Diana Jordanova, and Guido Wiesenberg

Loess–paleosol sequences (LPS) constitute continuous terrestrial archives of Quaternary climate change, recording both local environmental conditions and large-scale atmospheric dynamics. While LPS have been extensively studied worldwide, those of the Lower Danube–Black Sea (LDBS) region of Romania and Bulgaria remain comparatively underexplored. Situated at the nexus of Mediterranean, central European, and continental western Asian air masses, the LDBS region offers a unique opportunity to investigate large-scale climate shifts and their associated environmental responses.

The LOEs-CLIMBE project, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) through the Multilateral Academic Projects (MAPS) scheme with support from the Romanian (UEFSCDI) and Bulgarian funding agencies, addresses this gap through a high-resolution, multi-proxy investigation of two key LPS sites: Urluia (Romania) and Kolobar (Bulgaria). Spanning the last ~800 ka, with particular focus on the Mid-Brunhes Event onwards (MBE), the project integrates elemental composition, stable isotope records, and molecular biomarkers within a newly established chronological framework. These proxies support reconstructions of vegetation dynamics, climate variability, and pedogenic processes across multiple glacial–interglacial cycles.

Here, we present preliminary results from both LPS. The site at Urluia, located in southeastern Romania, is a former quarry exposing a >20 m thick, continuous LPS. The sequence comprises multiple complex palaeosols (S1–S5), interpreted as interglacial soils, interbedded with massive loess units deposited during glacial periods.

Near the village of Kolobar, situated in northeastern Bulgaria and distal from both the Danube and the Black Sea, is an active quarry. Here, a ~25 m thick LPS is exposed with ~1.1 m of modern soil on top. Approximately seven major palaeosols (S1–S7) extend back to ~800 ka. Field observations identify a marked stratigraphic shift at S4, from thick loess units with thin palaeosols above to massive palaeosols with thinner loess below. This transition coincides with an increase in bulk density from ~1.41 to 1.61 g cm⁻³ and is interpreted as the onset of the MBE, a transition not represented at Urluia. Carbonate precipitation is observed in all palaeosols above the S7, while loess dolls occur in the L1 and L2. Bioturbation, including crotovinas from mammals and earthworm burrows as well as root traces, is widespread throughout the whole sequence. However, this is present at different depths in different assemblages. Altogether, these field observations argue for an apparent grass steppe vegetation with fluctuating populations of burrowing organisms throughout the last 800 ka, while hydrological and sedimentary conditions have changed considerably between periods with predominant loess sedimentation and stronger soil formation. We will present these first findings and support them with elemental and stable isotope composition alongside organic matter composition gained from infrared spectroscopy measurements.

How to cite: Trott, A., Veres, D., Jordanova, D., and Wiesenberg, G.: A reconstruction of Lower Danube-Black Sea climate history. First insights from novel loess-paleosol sequences., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2744, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2744, 2026.

EGU26-3482 | Orals | CL4.16

Water-Induced Mantle Overturns Leading to the Oxidation of Archean Upper Mantle 

Zhongqing Wu, Xing Deng, and Jian Song

As a consequence of the evolution of the water-bearing basal magma ocean (MO), water-induced mantle overturn can well account for many puzzling observations in the early Earth, such as the formation of the Archean continents, the Archean–Proterozoic boundary, and high Archean paleomagnetic field (Wu et al., 2023; Wang and Wu 2026). The early Earth may have experienced a deep-water cycle totally different from the current. High pressure studies suggest that the whole-mantle MO evolved into an outer MO and a basal MO. With the solidification, water in the basal MO moved toward the core-mantle boundary and the basal MO eventually became gravitationally unstable because of the enrichment of water (Fig.1). The instability triggered the massive mantle overturns and resulted in the major pulses of the thick SCLM and continental crust generations in the Neoarchean. The mantle overturns eventually got rid of the whole basal MO and the mechanism which generated the Archean-type SCLM and continents likely no more worked after the overturns. Thus, water-induced mantle overturns can account for why Archean-type SCLM and continents basically occurred in the Archean (Wu et al., 2023). The mantle overturn can substantially accelerate the cooling of the core and strengthen the geomagnetic field, which explains well the high paleointensity records from ~3.5–2.5 Ga (Wang and Wu 2026).

Besides the enrichment of water, the basal MO was enriched with ferric iron. This study shows that the ascent of ferric-rich basal MO and its mixing with the upper mantle could account for the observed shift in the redox state of the upper mantle during the Archean. Both the redox state shift and the generation of Archean continents result from these mantle overturns. Therefore, it is expected that the shift in mantle fO2 aligns with the timing of continental generation, which is supported by the observations. The mantle overturns are rare with age > ~ 3.6 Ga, but their frequency increases with age < ~3.6 Ga and reaches the maximum in the Neoarchean. The combined effects of the ascent of the deep oxidized material, the emergence of continents, and oxygenic photosynthesis generated the broader First Redox Revolution of the Earth system, ultimately initiating the GOE shortly after the end of the Archean.

 

Wu, Z., Song, J., Zhao, G., and Pan, Z. (2023). Water-induced mantle overturns leading to the origins of Archean continents and subcontinental lithospheric mantle. Geophysical Research Letters, 50, e2023GL105178. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL105178

Wu, Z., and Wang, D. (2026) Water-Induced Mantle Overturn Explains High Archean Paleointensities. National Science Review. https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwaf578

Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the water-induced mantle overturns (superplumes). The waterdrop is used to describe the hydrous silicate melts although hydrogen mainly exists as hydroxyls in silicate melts. (a) The solidification of a whole mantle magma ocean (MO) at the mid mantle forms an outer MO and a basal MO. (b) The basal MO eventually becomes gravity unstable and generates mantle overturns because of the enrichment of water

How to cite: Wu, Z., Deng, X., and Song, J.: Water-Induced Mantle Overturns Leading to the Oxidation of Archean Upper Mantle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3482, 2026.

EGU26-5038 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

Paleoenvironmental and Paleoclimate Changes in the Gulf of Edremit (Northern Aegean Sea) during the Holocene based on Sedimentological and Geochemical Multi-Proxy Records 

Zeynep Duru Vurmuş, İrem Erol, Demet Biltekin, Kürşad Kadir Eriş, Hakan Atabay, Eren Özsu, Ömer Faruk Çiftbudak, Leyla Gamze Tolun, Onur Akyol, Süheyla Kanbur, Beyza Ustaoğlu, Derya Evrim Koç, Gülsen Uçarkuş, and Georg Johannes Schwamborn

Understanding the dynamics between past global climate events and their impact on marine ecosystems and paleoclimate is essential for the estimation of potential future changes. Accordingly, sedimentary archives accumulating on the seafloor provide crucial information on climate-driven environmental variability during the late Quaternary. Sediment cores were taken from the Gulf of Edremit, which is located in the northern Aegean Sea. We aimed to provide a preliminary, multi-proxy parameters, including sedimentological and geochemical records during the Holocene. During the marine survey with the R/V TÜBİTAK MARMARA Research Vessel, three sediment cores (E-01, E-02, and E-03A) obtained from different water depths across the gulf were investigated. Lithological observations from all cores indicate a sedimentation pattern dominated by fine-grained clay- and silt-sized deposits. However, locally occurring black laminae and FeS bands reflect depositional conditions sensitive to variations in bottom-water oxygenation. Fluctuations in the density and magnetic susceptibility measured by MSCL further support variability in sediment input and depositional processes at the sea floor. TOC data from core E-02 (at a water depth of 86 m) show low values (0.8–1.0 wt%) in the lower part, indicating low productivity and/or poor preservation of organic matter. TOC then rises to ~1.0–1.5 wt% further up the core, suggesting improved productivity or preservation. The highest values (1.5–2.0 wt%) in the uppermost 0–10 cm may reflect the presence of sapropelic material. XRF data from core E-03A reveal a Sr/Ca peak at 40–50 cm, which indicates increased salinity during drier periods. At 140–150 cm, the Sr/Ca ratio decreases while the Ca/Ti ratio increases, suggesting enhanced carbonate deposition relative to detrital input. In core E-01, a Mn/Fe peak at 10–15 cm reflects changes in redox and oxygen conditions. There is strong variability in Ca/Ti and Sr/Ca at 45–50 cm: higher Sr/Ca above this depth indicates greater carbonate production, while lower Ca/Ti implies reduced clastic input. Below 65 cm, falling Sr/Ca and rising Ca/Ti suggest diminished carbonate production and a return to lithogenic dominance. As a conclusion, sedimentation in the Gulf of Edremit appears to be highly sensitive to climate and carbon cycle changes.

This study was granted and supported by the TÜBİTAK (The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye) with Project number 123Y108.

Keywords: Gulf of Edremit, Holocene, multi-proxy analysis, TOC, XRF.

How to cite: Vurmuş, Z. D., Erol, İ., Biltekin, D., Eriş, K. K., Atabay, H., Özsu, E., Çiftbudak, Ö. F., Tolun, L. G., Akyol, O., Kanbur, S., Ustaoğlu, B., Koç, D. E., Uçarkuş, G., and Schwamborn, G. J.: Paleoenvironmental and Paleoclimate Changes in the Gulf of Edremit (Northern Aegean Sea) during the Holocene based on Sedimentological and Geochemical Multi-Proxy Records, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5038, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5038, 2026.

EGU26-5153 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

Tracking phosphorus redox speciation in microbial carbonates through Earth’s history and beyond 

Marialina Tsinidis and Eva Stueeken

Phosphorous availability is required for biological productivity, nutrient cycling and oxygenation. Over recent years, reduced phosphorous (phosphite) has moved into focus as a potentially new proxy that can provide information about environmental conditions and biogeochemical cycles in deep time. Phosphite can be generated by a range of biological and abiotic processes, but its distribution and implications are so far poorly understood.

To address this knowledge gap, we investigated phosphate and phosphite concentrations in stromatolites spanning from the Archean to the modern. Stromatolites are among the oldest life forms found on Earth, preserved in the fossil record, dating back to 3500 million years ago. They are formed in shallow water, mostly by the metabolic activity of a diverse microbial ecosystem. They are composed of carbonate minerals, which can trap both phosphate and phosphite in their crystal lattice. 

We measured phosphorus speciation with Ion Chromatography and Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The data reveal that carbonate-associated phosphate and phosphite date back to the early Precambrian, presenting the first record of phosphite in carbonate rocks of low metamorphic grade. The phosphite may be of biogenic origin, but also non-biological sources such as meteorite impacts, hydrothermal activity or weathering of high-grade metamorphic rocks are plausible. These abiotic sources could potentially be more important on Mars, whose mantle has a lower oxygen fugacity, and where impact debris is well-preserved near the surface. Our study reveals that carbonate records can be used to reconstruct the history of phosphorus redox speciation on Earth and perhaps early Mars.

 

 

How to cite: Tsinidis, M. and Stueeken, E.: Tracking phosphorus redox speciation in microbial carbonates through Earth’s history and beyond, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5153, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5153, 2026.

EGU26-5244 | Posters on site | CL4.16

Stable isotope composition of precipitation and temperature seasonal distribution from the South Carpathians: insights for climate variations in the interval 2012 to 2025 

Ana-Voica Bojar, Stanisław Chmiel, Hans-Peter Bojar, Andrzej Pelc, and Florin Vaida

Isotope distribution in precipitation along with climate monitoring data such as amount of precipitation, temperature and relative humidity were collected from a region characterized by a high continentality index, region situated in the external sector of the Southern Carpathians. Stable isotope composition of hydrogen and oxygen in precipitation were collected monthly from 2012 to 2025, with climate monitoring measured automatically each 30 minutes. The isotope and temperature signals were split in two groups including October to April and May to September, variations over an interval of 14 years being statistical presented. For the intervals considered, the LMWL show the effect of secondary evaporation of falling raindrops with lower slope for the warm season. The data support significant relationships between d18O and d D values and average air temperatures with r2 = 0.7, n = 150. Deuterium excess values over the year are compatible with seasonal variations for the origin of moisture, with high values during wintertime, possible resulting from the input of seasonal related Mediterranean moisture during November to February. The strong seasonal distribution of precipitation amount combined with elevated temperature peaks during July have a strong impact on the clastic multi-layered aquifers situated in the Lower Quaternary deposits, driving during the last years to complete evaporation of the highest aquifer.

How to cite: Bojar, A.-V., Chmiel, S., Bojar, H.-P., Pelc, A., and Vaida, F.: Stable isotope composition of precipitation and temperature seasonal distribution from the South Carpathians: insights for climate variations in the interval 2012 to 2025, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5244, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5244, 2026.

EGU26-7126 | ECS | Orals | CL4.16

Reconstructing marine redox conditions during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event constrained by combined U-Mo isotopes in black shales 

Viona Klamt, François-Nicolas Krencker, Thomas Mann, Andreas Kaufmann, Gernot Arp, Bas van de Schootbrugge, Sebastian Viehmann, and Stefan Weyer

Oceanic anoxic events represent major perturbations of marine redox conditions with varying spatial extents of ocean deoxygenation through Earth’s history. The isotopic composition of redox-sensitive elements, preserved in sedimentary archives, particularly molybdenum (Mo) and uranium (U) isotopes, are powerful proxies for reconstructing past ocean oxygenation. However, Mo and U isotope compositions can be influenced by both global ocean anoxia and local depositional conditions. Both isotope systems show opposite isotope fractionation behavior under variable local redox conditions but are expected to be shifted in the same direction (towards lower values) at a global expansion of seafloor anoxia, allowing combined U-Mo isotope analyses to discriminate between local and global redox signals. The Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE; ~183 Ma) represents an Early Jurassic interval of marine deoxygenation and environmental perturbation, but it remains incompletely understood whether ocean anoxia was globally extensive or locally restricted.

Here, we present combined U-Mo isotope data from black shales deposited during and after the T-OAE at two locations within the European Epicontinental Sea (Schandelah, North German Basin, and Metzingen, South German Basin). During the T-OAE, all sections are characterized by light Mo and U isotope compositions, reaching values as low as 0.61-0.73 ‰ for δ⁹⁸Mo and -0.19 to -0.13 ‰ for δ²³⁸U. Following the T-OAE, both isotope systems show an increase towards heavier δ⁹⁸Mo values between 1.66 and 1.73 ‰ and δ²³⁸U values between 0.12 and 0.19 ‰ across both sites. This observed positive correlation between Mo and U isotope compositions is consistent with a global expansion of seafloor anoxia. To further exclude potential local effects, we used redox- and salinity-sensitive proxies, such as Fe/Al, Sr/Ba, B/Ga, and TS/TOC ratios. These proxies show no significant variations across the T-OAE interval and beyond, indicating stable depositional conditions at both localities. Therefore, the U-Mo isotope shifts in the black shales likely reflect a global expansion of seafloor anoxia during the T-OAE.

How to cite: Klamt, V., Krencker, F.-N., Mann, T., Kaufmann, A., Arp, G., van de Schootbrugge, B., Viehmann, S., and Weyer, S.: Reconstructing marine redox conditions during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event constrained by combined U-Mo isotopes in black shales, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7126, 2026.

EGU26-7400 | Orals | CL4.16

Reconstructing climate dynamics on terrestrial environment using the stable isotope composition of earthworm calcite granule: An experimental approach 

Charlotte Prud homme, Thomas Rigaudier, Apolline Auclerc, and Mathieu Daëron

Reconstructing past climate dynamics on terrestrial environment remains a major challenge in paleoclimate research. Improving our understanding of how continental ecosystems responded to abrupt climate oscillations is essential for assessing future climate impacts on terrestrial environments and human societies. While ice-core and marine archives document large-scale and rapid climate variability, the links between climate and continental surface processes remain poorly constrained. Identifying robust climate proxies in continental sedimentary records is therefore crucial.

Fossil earthworm calcite granules preserved in loess–paleosol sequences have recently emerged as promising archives of past climate conditions, providing insights into temperature and precipitation during the last glacial period in Western Europe. However, the climatic interpretation of these proxies requires a robust calibration based on modern earthworm calcite granules to better constrain the environmental and biological parameters controlling granule formation, such as temperature, soil moisture, and litter composition.

Here, we present an experimental calibration approach using modern earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris) reared under controlled environmental conditions. Soil temperature and food sources were systematically varied to assess their influence on granule production and isotopic signatures. Calcite granules were analysed for δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C, while δ¹³C was also measured in soil organic matter and litter. For the first time, clumped isotope (Δ₄₇) measurements were performed on earthworm calcite granules, allowing direct temperature estimates independent of past soil-water δ¹⁸O.

This experimental approach provides new constraints on vital effects and isotopic fractionation in earthworm calcite granules and improves their use as quantitative paleoclimate proxies. Our results complement previously established empirical relationships between (i) the oxygen isotopic composition of meteoric water, granules, and temperature, and (ii) the δ¹³C of litter and the δ¹³C of granules, strengthening the potential of earthworm calcite granules for reconstructing past terrestrial climate dynamics.

How to cite: Prud homme, C., Rigaudier, T., Auclerc, A., and Daëron, M.: Reconstructing climate dynamics on terrestrial environment using the stable isotope composition of earthworm calcite granule: An experimental approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7400, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7400, 2026.

EGU26-7765 | Orals | CL4.16

 A regional scale data–model comparison of modern oxygen stable isotopes in precipitation (Swabian Alb, southwest Germany)  

Armelle Ballian, Muriel Racky, Markus Maisch, Valdir Novello, Desirée Lo Triglia, and Kira Rehfeld

The analysis of isotopic composition (δ18O and δ2H) in precipitation is a powerful approach for investigating (paleo)climatic processes within the hydrological cycle. Variations in δ18O and δ2H in precipitation result from successive isotopic fractionation processes during atmospheric transport and are observed across both spatial and temporal scales. While modern isotopic records are extensively documented, e.g., through the IAEA/WMO network, European datasets are largely limited to monthly resolution and remain sparse at the regional scale. This is particularly the case for the Swabian Alb (or Swabian Jura) in southwestern Germany, a karst plateau south of Stuttgart, approximately 220 km long and 40 km wide, with mean elevations around 500 m and peaks reaching 1110 m. The Swabian Alb holds international significance as a UNESCO Global Geopark and includes six caves designated as UNESCO World Heritage sites. The region constitutes a natural divide between two significant European basins: the Rhine and the Danube. The oxygen isotopic composition of meteoric water from the Swabian Alb provides key insights into modern moisture sources and, when preserved in paleoclimate archives such as speleothems, offers valuable information on past atmospheric circulation and hydroclimate.

Here, we compare measured δ18O and δ2H in meteoric water with simulations of isotope-enabled climate model (ECHAM6-wiso) to investigate spatial and temporal variabilities, and identify climatic factors influencing regional isotopic patterns. We present δ18O and δ2H records of weekly to monthly sampled rainwater across the Swabian Alb from October 2023 to present-day. We examine simulated and observed interannual changes in precipitation, teleconnections, and seasonality patterns. In addition, we fill a gap by providing daily δ18O and δ2H values of meteoric water collected at a weather station located in Tübingen.

Investigating variations in modern water isotope records across the Swabian Alb is essential for regional paleoclimate research and allows the validation of isotope-enabled climate models on the local scale. Our results show the first model–data comparison for the Swabian Alb and pave the way towards regional climatic reconstructions e.g., paleoclimate of the last glacial period, when modern humans occupied caves of the Swabian Alb.

How to cite: Ballian, A., Racky, M., Maisch, M., Novello, V., Lo Triglia, D., and Rehfeld, K.:  A regional scale data–model comparison of modern oxygen stable isotopes in precipitation (Swabian Alb, southwest Germany) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7765, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7765, 2026.

EGU26-7870 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

A not so tranquil basin: recording of the west-European geodynamics amidst marine incursions and retreats in the Paris Basin. 

Mathilde Beernaert, Laurence Le Callonnec, Fabrice Minoletti, Hugues Bauer, and Florence Quesnel

Around the Late Priabonian-Early Rupelian, the Paris Basin is characterized by an incomplete succession of sediments deposited at the marine-continent interface. In the overall marine record, this interval is marked by the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (EOT), characterized by a climate deterioration and a significant sea level drop, associated with the permanent establishment of the Antarctic ice cap. Nevertheless, the EOT is poorly documented and understood in terrestrial areas.

Located between the active tectonic regions of the Pyrenean and Alpine orogens and the West-European Cenozoic Rift Systems, the lagoon to lacustrine deposits of the Paris Basin therefore enable to acutely record both global and local processes (glacio-eustasy, climate, tectonic). A detailed stratigraphic framework is consequently necessary to estimate the contribution of each of these controls. This study is based on: 1) a large-scale correlation of boreholes in order to study the 3D organization of deposits and their lateral and vertical variations, and 2) an elementary and isotopic geochemical, mineralogical, and paleontological study to clarify the depositional environments and the causes of the observed variations (sea level, tectonic and hydrological changes). The analyzed sites are located around tectonic structures (the Bray, Beynes-Meudon, and Remarde anticlines and the Saint-Denis syncline) and in various areas, ranging from the edges to the center of the Paris Basin.

We established a correlation between lagoon-marine deposits of the center of the basin and lacustrine deposits of its southern and eastern edges. Detailed sedimentological studies of the sites reveal a two-steps evolution. The first step is marked by marls deposited during the latest Priabonian. Their mineralogical and chemical composition indicates a deposition evolving from a clastic to a chemical-dominated system in a wetter to drier climate. The second step, during Early Rupelian times, shows the return to detrital deposition in a wetter climate. More specifically, the sections show a mineralogical, chemical and environmental separations. The Priabonian cycle is influenced by sea level variations (marine incursion, then confinement of the basin) and a climate changing from wetter to drier. The Rupelian cycle shows a global transgression in a wetter climate, briefly interrupted by a confinement of the basin, but above all the reactivation of tectonic structures linked to the Pyrenean compression, which caused palustrine deposits on the anticlines and marine deposits in the synclines.

The Paris Basin shows to a lesser extent the same record of the EOT as several marine sites. The major regression is only illustrated by the confinement and partial emersion of the basin in the latest Priabonian; the cooling seems to be recorded by the progressive increase in oxygen isotope values, and the aridification by mineralogical proxies and the known floral evolution. The basin also reflects the west-European regional geodynamics with the recurrence of tectonic structures in the Early Rupelian associated with the African-Eurasian convergence, illustrated for instance as well by the inversion of the Cotentin and Hampshire basins, further north of the Paris Basin. 

How to cite: Beernaert, M., Le Callonnec, L., Minoletti, F., Bauer, H., and Quesnel, F.: A not so tranquil basin: recording of the west-European geodynamics amidst marine incursions and retreats in the Paris Basin., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7870, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7870, 2026.

EGU26-10177 | Posters on site | CL4.16

Carbon isotope excursions during the Oxfordian: multi-proxy constraints on carbon cycle dynamics 

François-Nicolas Krencker, Johanna Hansen, Malte Rudolph, Simon Andrieu, Martin Blumenberg, Thomas Mann, and Ulrich Heimhofer

The Oxfordian interval is characterized by a long-term (~6 Myr) increase in carbon isotope values, punctuated by several short-lived (<1 Myr) positive carbon isotope excursions (CIEs) occurring in the lower Oxfordian, and in the middle Oxfordian. These excursions have only been recognized in a limited number of sections and their spatial extent, stratigraphic reproducibility, and paleoenvironmental significance remain poorly constrained, and their potential relationship to oceanic anoxic events (OAEs) remains uncertain.

Here, we present a high-resolution, multi-proxy chemostratigraphic dataset from shallow-marine Oxfordian successions of northwestern Europe, integrating inorganic and organic carbon isotopes (δ13Cinorg and δ13Corg), palynofacies analysis, and Rock-Eval pyrolysis. The dataset combines subsurface data from the Konrad #101 borehole (southeastern Lower Saxony Basin, northern Germany) with new outcrop data from the northern Paris Basin (Normandy, France). Both successions are constrained by robust biostratigraphic frameworks, enabling detailed intra- and interbasinal correlations.

Our results reveal pronounced and reproducible carbon isotope trends, including a ~3.0‰ positive CIE recorded in both δ13Cinorg and δ13Corg within the lower to middle Oxfordian interval. Comparison with available records from Europe, western Asia, and the Gulf of Mexico suggests that these excursions may reflect regionally synchronous perturbations of the exogenic carbon cycle, although the degree of global synchronicity remains equivocal. The integration of geochemical and palynofacies data provides new insights into the paleoenvironmental context of these events by demonstrating that the observed carbon isotope fluctuations are not driven by changes in organic matter preservation or mixing of organic matter sources (e.g., marine versus terrestrial inputs). This multi-proxy approach allows a critical assessment of whether Oxfordian CIEs constitute robust chemostratigraphic markers and whether they can be plausibly linked to episodes of widespread marine oxygen depletion.

How to cite: Krencker, F.-N., Hansen, J., Rudolph, M., Andrieu, S., Blumenberg, M., Mann, T., and Heimhofer, U.: Carbon isotope excursions during the Oxfordian: multi-proxy constraints on carbon cycle dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10177, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10177, 2026.

EGU26-10242 | Orals | CL4.16

Ultra-low background gamma-ray spectrometry, SEM-EDX and XRD investigation of a fragment of the Mundrabilla (Australia) iron meteorite. Rare cosmogenic 26Al and 60Co radioisotopes evidenced 

Delia-Georgeta Dumitras, Cristiana Radulescu, Romul Mircea Margineanu, Calin Ricman, Ana-Maria Blebea-Apostu, Claudia Gomoiu, Ioana-Daniela Dulama, Claudia Stihi, Ion-Alin Bucurica, Octavian G. Duliu, Stefan Marincea, and Doina Smaranda Sirbu-Radaseanu

The Mundrabilla meteorite can be classified as a medium octahedrite nickel-iron type, the kamacite being the dominant mineral. The meteorite was discovered in 1911 in Mundrabilla (Australia), the most important fragments weighing between 3.5 kg and 24 tons.

To get more information concerning the structure and composition of a 1.5 kg fragment of the Mundrabilla meteorite existing in the collection of the National Geological Museum, Bucharest, a small fragment was extracted using a water jet cutter. More analytic techniques, such as XRD, SEM-EDX, and ultra-low background gamma ray spectrometry, were used to analyse it.

A detailed investigation performed by XRD evidenced the presence of the α-FeNi phase, identified as kamacite. Its crystal chemical formula, calculated based on SEM-EDX analysis, was Fe0.937Ni0.063. The cell parameters of kamacite, as determined by least squares refinement of the X-ray powder data, are: a = 2.8717(7) Å and V = 23.68 Å3. On the diffraction pattern, minor peaks were observed, which could be attributed to γ-FeNi taenite.

The geochemical composition determined by SEM-EDX investigation is typical of iron-bearing meteorites. XRD indicates as main phase kamacite, but traces of other elements reflect the presence of other minor mineral phases. The presence of quite abundant C and minor Si fits with the presence as minor phases of moissanite (SiC) and cohenite (Fe,Ni)3C. The S content could be related to traces of troilite (FeS) or pyrrhotite (Fe1-xS), while the presence of minor P could be attributed to rhabdite (Fe, Ni)P.

The gamma-ray spectroscopy performed in the ultra-low background laboratory at the Slanic (Prahova) salt mine evidenced the presence of 26Al and 60Co, two cosmogenic radionuclides produced by cosmic neutrons through the spallation of 28Si or resulting from the β-decay of 60Fe, which is also generated by the neutron activation of the stable 28Fe. Both 26Al and 60Fe are long-lived isotopes with half-life times of 0.747 and 2.62 My, respectively, which explain their presence in meteorites.

How to cite: Dumitras, D.-G., Radulescu, C., Margineanu, R. M., Ricman, C., Blebea-Apostu, A.-M., Gomoiu, C., Dulama, I.-D., Stihi, C., Bucurica, I.-A., Duliu, O. G., Marincea, S., and Sirbu-Radaseanu, D. S.: Ultra-low background gamma-ray spectrometry, SEM-EDX and XRD investigation of a fragment of the Mundrabilla (Australia) iron meteorite. Rare cosmogenic 26Al and 60Co radioisotopes evidenced, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10242, 2026.

Lead (Pb) and its isotopes are known to be released incongruently during early chemical weathering in continental settings. Incongruent weathering implies that a chemical weathering induced continental runoff trace metal isotope signature is not identical to bulk rock isotopic compositions. The incongruent release of Pb can mostly be ascribed to preferential chemical weathering of less weathering resistant accessory uranium and thorium-rich mineral phases present that are most abundant in differentiated continental crust. If this continental crust is ancient, these accessory mineral phases contain present-day Pb isotopic signatures that are in places extremely radiogenic, as well as substantially different from bulk rock Pb isotopic compositions. Several studies that investigated the Pb isotopic runoff evolution in the Labrador Sea, NW Atlantic and Arctic Beaufort Sea already reported very radiogenic Pb isotopic runoff signatures in these marine basins bordering the Laurentide Ice Sheet (LIS) during key time intervals of the last deglaciation. These earlier results require the existence of very radiogenic Pb isotopic freshwater signatures inland North America that were generated during incipient post-glacial chemical weathering reactions in response to the retreat of the LIS during the last deglaciation.

We targeted subarctic Lake Melville in central Labrador aiming to resolve how the Pb specific chemical weathering signature changed in response to deglacial warming, in an initially subglacial setting that transitioned to completely ice-free conditions in the early Holocene. Lake Melville is a fjord‑like subarctic estuary in central Labrador that receives most of its freshwater and sediment from the Churchill River and other major tributaries draining a large early to mid-Proterozoic shield. We analysed two sediment cores from central Lake Melville that together archived the ambient dissolved Pb isotope signature over the past 13 ka. Our authigenic Pb isotope records are complemented by associated bulk detrital Pb isotope compositions, enabling us to compare the dissolved Pb isotope signature in the lake with corresponding sedimentary signatures. The lake was covered by the LIS until about 10.3 ka BP, yet still located in an ice-proximal setting until 8.5 ka BP. The region Labrador-Québec was ice free after ca. 5.7 ka BP.

The most striking result of our record is the observation of (i) very radiogenic authigenic Pb isotope compositions throughout that are (ii) much elevated relative to the associated detrital compositions, which are rather unradiogenic. Very invariant Pb isotopic signatures observed until 10.5 ka BP confirm the suggested subglacial lacustrine sedimentary setting in the oldest section. The subsequent deglaciation witnessed most variable compositions, with most radiogenic compositions seen at ~8.2 ka BP. The record becomes substantially smoother after ~6 ka BP when the catchment area was no longer influenced by direct glacial runoff. While the detrital compositions suggest some geographic variability in sediment sourcing, the authigenic Pb isotopic compositions are not following these detrital signatures. Our results highlight the unique geological setting that make authigenic Pb isotopes in proximal North American sediment cores a sensitive proxy for for the detection of elevated deglacial runoff fluxes in circum-North American marine basins.   

How to cite: Gutjahr, M., Thomsen, S., Hallmaier, M., Gebhardt, C., and Ohlendorf, C.: Continental runoff lead isotopic signatures released during incongruent chemical weathering in subarctic Lake Melville associated with the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet over the past 14 ka, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10274, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10274, 2026.

This presentation examines recent developments in the application of oxygen stable isotope analyses to lacustrine invertebrate remains (e.g. chironomids) within palaeoenvironmental science. We explore improvements to instrumentation and measurement, and the opportunities that this presents for a more nuanced palaeoenvironmental approach. The improvements to the existing methodology of δ18Ochitin measurements now allow the possibility of taxon specific δ18Ochitin reconstructions and thus the potential to enhance our understanding of paleoclimate dynamics. Opportunities to reduce the sample size required have come from improvements to instrumentation, through more sensitive Thermal Conversion Elemental Analyser isotope ratio mass spectrometry (TC/EA-IRMS). We discuss the considerations needed to assess the sample size measured and avoid systematic bias. Is smallest always best or does this lead to a biased environmental reconstruction? Further, it is also unclear what between-taxa offsets exist for different chironomid morphotypes and whether δ18Ochitin offsets between taxa are stationary across large climate transitions, and the extent to which changing vital effects play a role. We present new data on taxon-specific trends from the robustly dated late-glacial sediment record from Lake Llangorse, UK. This will allow us to determine whether temperature is the main driver of the δ18Ochitin signal of each taxon, or if vital effects play a role.

How to cite: Lamb, A. and Engels, S.: Stable isotope analyses of lacustrine chitinous invertebrate remains: analytical advances, challenges and potential., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10452, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10452, 2026.

EGU26-11051 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

An evaluation of phases in banded iron formation of the 3.25 Ga Fig Tree Group (Barberton Greenstone Belt) suitable as a seawater archive  

Vanessa Winkler, Johanna Krayer, Axel Hofmann, Stefan Weyer, and Sebastian Viehmann

Banded iron formations (BIFs) are authigenic marine sedimentary rocks that formed in Precambrian oceans. They may record the chemical composition of the ambient seawater and are thus important archives for reconstructing ancient marine environments. The ca. 3.25 Ga Algoma-type BIF of the Fig Tree Group in the Barberton Greenstone Belt, South Africa, provides insights into the Palaeoarchaean marine environments and seawater chemistry during the early development of the Kaapvaal Craton [1,2]. However, it remains incompletely understood, which mineral phases within this BIF most reliably preserve primary seawater-derived signatures and therefore represent the most suitable archives for palaeo-environmental reconstructions.

We present trace and major element concentrations of 28 individual layers of Fig Tree Group BIF. These layers are dominated by either magnetite, chert, or siderite. In addition, mudstones intercalated with BIF were also analysed. All samples originate from the BARB 4 drill core and were digested using HF–HNO₃–HCl digestion combined with ICP-MS and OES analyses to investigate the geochemical composition of the different mineral phases and their reliability as archive for ancient seawater chemistry.

Immobile element (Zr, Th) concentrations are in the ppb to ppm level range and vary over four orders of magnitude between the BIF samples. Samples with the highest immobile element concentrations show non-seawater-like shale-normalised (subscript SN) rare earth element and yttrium (REY) patterns and a positive correlation of REY and immobile element concentrations (e.g. Zr), in indicating detrital contamination. However, cherts and five of the magnetite samples with the lowest immobile element concentrations show typical Archaean seawater-like signatures with positive LaSN GdSN, and YSN anomalies as well as a depletion of light REY relative to heavy REYSN, indicating a seawater-derived origin. Positive EuSN anomalies indicate contributions of high-temperature hydrothermal fluids. The lack of negative CeSN anomalies indicates anoxic depositional conditions with respect to the Ce3+-Ce4+ redox couple. The chert layers, however, show Th/U fractionation compared to the value of the continental crust, suggesting redox-dependent uranium mobilization, indicative of slightly oxic conditions.

We identified chert and magnetite, if devoid of detrital contamination, to be the most suitable phases in Fig Tree Group BIF for obtaining information to reconstruct their depositional environment. The remaining layers, on the contrary, do not reflect pure seawater precipitates and have to be excluded for interpretations regarding ancient seawater chemistry.

 

[1] Hofmann, 2005, Precambrian Res. 143, 23-49

[2] Satkoski et al., 2015, EPSL 430, 43-53

How to cite: Winkler, V., Krayer, J., Hofmann, A., Weyer, S., and Viehmann, S.: An evaluation of phases in banded iron formation of the 3.25 Ga Fig Tree Group (Barberton Greenstone Belt) suitable as a seawater archive , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11051, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11051, 2026.

EGU26-11598 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

Investigating the controlling factors of nucleoside bacteriohopanepolyol abundances in soils 

Olga Novik, Stefan Schouten, Yufei Chen, Melissa Berke, Gerd Gleixner, Helen Mackay, Marcel van der Meer, Ellen Hopmans, and Darci Rush

There is a growing need within the paleoclimate community for robust soil paleoproxies capable of reconstructing past terrestrial environments with high precision. Existing proxies for past mean annual air temperature (MAT), such as branched GDGTs (1) and chironomids (2), suffer from large uncertainties (i.e., ≥ 4°C error on these land temperature reconstructions), which limit their applicability.

Bacteriohopanepolyols (BHPs) are pentacyclic triterpenoid membrane lipids produced by bacteria that are ubiquitous in terrestrial and aquatic environments (3). Functionalized BHPs have a large structural diversity both in the rings and head groups. They have been detected in sedimentary archives extending back 1.2 Myr (4), underscoring their considerable potential as tools for reconstructing past climatic conditions.

BHPs with nucleoside (adenosyl and inosyl) head groups (Nu-BHPs) have been widely used as indicators of terrestrial organic matter input into marine systems (Rsoil) (5). Recently, a large range of previously unknown Nu-BHPs were identified thanks to a newly developed method using Ultra High Performance Liquid Chromatography – high resolution Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry (6). The relative abundances of several Nu-BHPs found in Alaskan soils were shown to correlate with pH and temperature and thus are potential paleotemperature proxies (7). To validate these correlations on a global scale, we present Nu-BHP abundances analyzed across 89 globally distributed surface soil samples. These include soils previously used to calibrate branched GDGTs (1), as well as soils from Northern Norway and Finland and Brazil, to complete coverage from the Arctic to the tropics. Complementary analyses included six soil environmental variables (pH, latitude, total organic carbon (TOC), C/N, δ¹³C, δ¹⁵N) and four climate parameters (mean annual and warmest quarter air temperature, obtained from CHELSA climatological data (8), annual and wettest quarter precipitation, retrieved from the Copernicus Climate Change Service (9)).

Forty-eight Nu-BHPs were identified in soils with a pH range of 3.3-8.1 and total organic carbon (TOC) range of 0.2 and 48.4%. The most dominant compound in the dataset is adenosylhopane with 0 methylations. Of the forty-eight Nu-BHPs, thirty compounds were present in trace amounts (less than 1% of total relative abundances). The remaining eighteen Nu-BHPs were further used to investigate climatic controls on Nu-BHP abundances.

This showed that only a few Nu-BHPs showed a good correlation with pH (R2 ~0.65), while temperature did not appear to influence Nu-BHP distributions. Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis was conducted on relative abundance of these eighteen Nu-BHPs, along with the soil environmental variables and climate parameters (Fig. 1).  This revealed that none of the measured parameters measured fully explains the variability in Nu-BHP distributions. We hypothesize that the main control factors instead are related to nutrient availability and/or bacterial community diversity. Future work includes investigating these variables using samples with strong nutrient and pH gradients; and known bacterial community abundances.

 References

  • Weijers et al., 2007.
  • Brooks et al., 2001. 
  • Cooke et al., 2009. 
  • Zhu et al., 2011.
  • Talbot et al., 2014. 
  • Hopmans et al., 2021. 
  • O’Connor, 2025. 
  • Krager et al., 2017. 
  • Dorigo et al., Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) Climate Data Store (CDS).

How to cite: Novik, O., Schouten, S., Chen, Y., Berke, M., Gleixner, G., Mackay, H., van der Meer, M., Hopmans, E., and Rush, D.: Investigating the controlling factors of nucleoside bacteriohopanepolyol abundances in soils, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11598, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11598, 2026.

EGU26-12194 | Posters on site | CL4.16

Effect of pH and temperature on oxygen and carbon isotope fractionation during ACC transformation to crystalline carbonates. 

Aurélie Pace, Michael Pettauer, Martin Dietzel, Gerald Auer, and Maria P. Asta

Carbonates are widely used as paleoenvironmental archives because they record past environmental conditions through their chemical and isotopic signatures. However, primary crystallization processes and subsequent diagenetic alterations can modify these signatures, potentially affecting their reliability as paleoenvironmental proxies.

 

This study investigates isotopic changes during the precipitation of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) into crystalline CaCO₃ under variable pH and temperature (T) conditions, in order to better constrain the role of ACC in calcification processes and its influence on the final isotopic composition of the crystalline carbonate polymorphs. ACC was synthesized by automated titration of an equimolar CaCl₂ solution into NaHCO₃ (+NaOH) solutions. A first set of experiments was conducted over a pH range of 8–11 and at temperatures of 10, 20, and 30 °C. A second set was performed at pH 8 and T of 10, 20, and 30 °C in the presence of polyaspartic acid (pASP) to simulate biomineralization effects on ACC metastability and its transformation to crystalline CaCO3 polymorphs. Precipitates were characterized using scanning electron microscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction and in-situ Raman; oxygen and carbon isotope ratios were measured by isotope-ratio mass spectrometry.

The onset of vaterite precipitation from ACC occurs rapidly at all investigated pH and T conditions, with transformation times less than 1 min. In the presence of pASP, ACC is stabilized and crystalline phase precipitation is delayed to 5 min. The transformation of ACC into calcite is strongly T dependent, with shorter transformation time periods at higher T for all pH conditions. Spherulitic ACC size is strongly controlled by pH and T, decreasing from ~0.25 µm at pH 8 and 10 °C to ~0.10 µm at pH 11 and 30 °C.

 

For all investigated temperatures and pH conditions, oxygen isotope values of the initial ACC (e.g. at 10 °C and pH 8: δ¹8OVPDB = –4.94 ‰) decrease during CaCO₃ precipitation, reaching lower values in the resulting calcite (e.g. δ¹8OVPDB = –6.10 ‰), with values systematically decreasing with increasing T and pH. In contrast, carbon isotope values are comparatively more constant, showing only limited differences between ACC and crystalline phases (e.g. at 10 °C and pH 8, δ¹³CVPDB= –3.99 ‰ for ACC and –4.95 ‰ for calcite). This relative stability reflects the weaker temperature dependence of carbon isotope fractionation and the dominant control exerted by pH on dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) speciation, sensitive to pH variations.

Oxygen and carbon isotope equilibrium between carbonate phases and the initial reactive water is variably approached depending on pH, T, and mineral phase. At high pH (≥10) and elevated T, isotopic equilibrium is not reached for ACC and the resulting crystalline phases due to rapid precipitation and transformation kinetics that limit isotope exchange with the aqueous phase. Lower pH and moderate T favor closer approach to equilibrium, whereas low water/solid ratios and the presence of pASP promote isotopic disequilibrium by limiting recrystallization-driven exchange.

These results highlight the potential for kinetically controlled isotopic signatures in carbonates formed via amorphous precursors, with implications for paleoenvironmental interpretations.

How to cite: Pace, A., Pettauer, M., Dietzel, M., Auer, G., and Asta, M. P.: Effect of pH and temperature on oxygen and carbon isotope fractionation during ACC transformation to crystalline carbonates., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12194, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12194, 2026.

Constraining the weathering history of the British Isles in the Cenozoic is limited by the sparse distribution of terrestrial rock units of appropriate age.  This has prompted many workers to rely on examination of the regional marine record to make inferences about terrestrial weathering and climate in this era.  We have begun a project to date supergene mineral deposits across the region to provide direct temporal information about the timing and extent of weathering processes.  We show first results of dating with the 40Ar/39Ar technique on cryptomelane (KMn8O16) from Scotland, suggesting a late Miocene age.  A full sample suite from across Great Britain and Ireland is currently being analysed.

In addition to dating of cryptomelane and other Hollandite group minerals, the NEIF argon isotope laboratory at SUERC has developed the capability of dating difficult hydrous sulphate minerals alunite and jarosite that occur across the region and will be the subject of future weathering studies. Sample preparation remains a challenging aspect of dating supergene minerals.  This is because of the fine-grained nature of the material coupled with the intergrowth of potentially complicating phases such as clay, feldspar or quartz.  HF leaching of materials to remove silicate impurities have shown promise, suggesting a reduction in the budget of trapped atmospheric argon, and reproducible ages have been obtained for samples as young as Pleistocene.  Attempts at micro-sampling, for example, growth layers in cryptomelane using microdrill techniques, have met with limited success.  Future work will look at laser micro-sampling coupled with high precision and high sensitivity 40Ar/39Ar analysis on the next-generation THERMO ARGUS VI mass spectrometer.

How to cite: Barfod, D. and Pickersgill, A.: Progress on supergene mineral dating utilising the 40Ar/39Ar technique and terrestrial weathering in Great Britain & Ireland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12719, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12719, 2026.

EGU26-14831 | Orals | CL4.16

Evidence and significance of the oldest Paleoarchean to Mesoproterozoic evaporites 

Barbara Kremer and Maciej Bąbel

Evaporites are rarely recorded in the Precambrian. In the oldest rocks they are known mostly from pseudomorphs of salt minerals, or can be inferred from other sedimentary and geochemical features. Only in some younger rocks are they present as salt minerals.

About 50 inferred or definitive occurrences of evaporites in Archean through Mesoproterozoic rocks were compiled. These data allow characterisation of the mineralogy and sedimentary environments of the earliest evaporite sediments and insight into their evolution over time.

The earliest documented evaporites are from the Archean eon, with about 15 occurring mostly in the Paleoarchean (3.6–3.2 Ga) and Neoarchean era (2.8–2.5 Ga). 

The earliest Paleoarchean deposits considered as „evaporitic” in origin are bottom-grown barite crystals, formerly interpreted as pseudomorphs after gypsum, and silica pseudomorphs after radiating splays of aragonite in North Pool Chert of the Dresser Formation (3.48 Ga old), Australia. Barite and aragonite presumably crystallized in a volcanic caldera evaporitic basin from brine of both hydrothermal and seawater derivation. However barite, unlike aragonite, cannot be classified as an evaporite mineral due its very low solubility. The other Palaeoarchean evaporites are represented mostly by enigmatic pseudomorphs (after possible gypsum, aragonite, nahcolite, halite, and others). The Archean evaporite crystals are interpreted as precipitated in both marine and non-marine environments, including soils or weathering zones where they could represent terrestrial or pedogenic evaporites.

In the Proterozoic eon the most frequent occurrences are from the Paleoproterozoic (Rhyacyan, Orosirian and Statherian; 2.3–1.6 Ga). Their appearance directly follows the beginning of the Great Oxidation Event in Siderian at about 2.4 Ga. The first abundant evaporites, with mineralogy similar to the present-day marine evaporites (carbonates, Ca-sulphates, halite, and KMg sulphates), appear in the Mesoproterozoic and include several saline giants (evaporites with volume ≥ 1000 km3). The oldest ones are: a) 2.31 Ga old Gordon Lake Formation, Canada, and Kona Dolomite, USA, b) ca 2.0 Ga old Tulomozero Formation, Onega Basin, Karelian craton, Russia (with preserved KMg salts), c) 2.1 Ga old Juderina Formation, Yilgarn craton, Australia. They strongly suggest appearance of marine water very similar to the modern ocean water.

Information about evaporite minerals from the Archean era is uncertain and ambiguous, coming from enigmatic pseudomorphs and geochemical signals. This evidence originates from sedimentary environments that are not widely recognised, including marine, terrestrial, hydrothermal and/or lacustrine environments. Such evidence does not provide a basis for unambiguously characterising the composition of Archean seawater.

How to cite: Kremer, B. and Bąbel, M.: Evidence and significance of the oldest Paleoarchean to Mesoproterozoic evaporites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14831, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14831, 2026.

EGU26-16562 | Orals | CL4.16

Timing the Cambrian Sauk Transgression in the Southeastern Arabian Plate: Evidence from Radiogenic Strontium of Early Calcite Cement 

Mohamed El-Ghali, Mohamed Moustafa, Iftikhar Ahmed Abbasi, Olga Shelukhina, Osman Salad Hersi, and Arshad Ali

The Cambrian Sauk transgression marks one of the most extensive episodes of marine inundation in Earth’s geological record. Despite its importance, accurately constraining its timing remains problematic in many regions because of limited biostratigraphic indicators and the scarcity of robust chronometric tools. In this study, we introduce an integrated petrographic, geochemical, and geochronological framework to constrain the age of the Sauk transgression on the southeastern Arabian Plate. This is achieved through analysis of trace-fossil burrows developed along the Cambrian maximum flooding surface (Cm20 MFS) within the middle Miqrat Formation of central Oman. Microscopic examination shows that calcite cement infilling the burrows is characterized by a drusy crystal fabric and occupies loosely arranged framework grains, indicating early cementation under near-surface conditions soon after sediment deposition. This interpretation is corroborated by clumped isotope (Δ47) data, which indicate calcite precipitation temperatures between 33.8°C and 36.4°C, with a mean value of approximately 34.8°C. These temperatures align well with independently estimated middle Cambrian sea-surface conditions. Measured Sr87/86 ratios of the burrow-filling calcite range from 0.7088456 to 0.7090134 (mean 0.7089270), yielding an inferred age of approximately 508.20–509.86 Ma, with an average age of 509.26 Ma. This age assignment falls within the middle Cambrian and is marginally younger than the maximum depositional age of ~511 Ma obtained from detrital zircon analyses. The ages reported here represent the first direct numerical constraints on the Sauk transgression from the southeastern Arabian Plate and demonstrate consistency with equivalent ages documented from the northern and northwestern parts of the plate. Overall, the results highlight the effectiveness of Sr87/86 isotope analysis of early diagenetic calcite as a chronostratigraphic tool. Because such calcite precipitates from marine-derived fluids shortly after deposition, it faithfully records the seawater isotopic composition at the time of cementation, allowing reliable dating of sedimentary successions.

How to cite: El-Ghali, M., Moustafa, M., Ahmed Abbasi, I., Shelukhina, O., Salad Hersi, O., and Ali, A.: Timing the Cambrian Sauk Transgression in the Southeastern Arabian Plate: Evidence from Radiogenic Strontium of Early Calcite Cement, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16562, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16562, 2026.

The geochemical signatures of clastic sedimentary sequences are determined by the parent rocks, weathering intensity, and the complex processes of transport and deposition. These variables define the mineralogical and chemical attributes of the basin fill, offering significant insights into the prevailing geodynamic settings and paleoclimatic conditions. The Upper Cretaceous deposits in the Lesser Caucasus are widely distributed and represent a vital geological archive for studying the region’s history. To reconstruct the paleogeographic and depositional conditions of the northeastern slope of the Lesser Caucasus, Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS) was employed for high-precision elemental analysis, while X-ray diffraction (XRD) was utilized to determine the mineralogical composition of the sequences. The terrigenous sequences of the region comprise the diverse lithological assemblages, primarily categorized as shales, iron-rich shales (Fe-shales), and greywackes. These rocks exhibit low compositional and mineralogical maturity, indicating accumulation in high-energy environments with a significant influx of fresh volcaniclastic material. Geochemical proxies for chemical weathering reveal a transition from intensive to moderate alteration. This low maturity is further substantiated by the preservation of primary silicates, which is characteristic of rapid sediment burial. Elemental analysis indicates that the detrital material was predominantly derived from first-cycle mafic and ultramafic magmatic sources, reflecting the significant erosion of ophiolitic and associated sequences. Geochemical indicators confirm a first-cycle sedimentary regime with minimal recycling and limited hydraulic sorting. Tectonic discrimination functions identify an oceanic island arc setting, where volcaniclastic and terrigenous debris accumulated in basins governed by active subduction and convergence processes. These findings are consistent with semi-humid and semi-arid paleoclimatic conditions that prevailed during the Late Cretaceous. Collectively, these indicators elucidate the geodynamic setting of the region and emphasize the interplay between arc volcanism and the regional tectonic framework in shaping the Mesozoic sedimentary record.

How to cite: Guliyev, E. and Aliyeva, E.: Geodynamic and paleogeographic settings of the Upper Cretaceous terrigenous successions, northeastern slope of the Lesser Caucasus: Geochemical and mineralogical constraints , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16974, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16974, 2026.

EGU26-18474 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

Late Miocene to Pleistocene deep water Productivity in the Southeast Atlantic: Evidence from Benthic Foraminiferal Assemblages 

Rudra Narayan Mohanty, Anil Kumar Gupta, and Jeet Majumder

Benthic foraminifera are widely considered as marker proxy for past changes in surface and deep water productivity, organic matter flux, bottom water oxygenation, and deep water circulation. This study presents benthic foraminiferal relative abundance records from ODP Site 1087 (31°27.9137’S, 15°18.6541’E, water depth 1374m), located in the southeast Atlantic Ocean beneath the productive Benguela Upwelling System (BUS). The main objective is to assess long-term productivity and oceanographic variability in the region from the Late Miocene to Pleistocene. Our results indicate a major shift in regional oceanographic conditions at ~10 Ma. A distinct increase in the relative abundance of Bulimina striata, a dysoxic, infaunal species associated with elevated flux of organic matter, suggests enhanced surface productivity and marks the emergence of the BUS. This timing closely matches with the onset of the BUS as inferred from multiple independent proxy records. The late Miocene–early Pliocene biogenic bloom (~ 8–5 Ma), characterised by sustained and widespread high productivity across the Indian, Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, is often indicated by higher relative abundance of Uvigerina proboscidea, a suboxic, infaunal species associated with high delivery rates of organic matter to the seafloor. A similarly higher relative abundance of U. proboscidea is clearly recorded in our benthic assemblages, pointing to intensified export productivity during this interval. Additionally, an increased relative abundances of the opportunistic species Epistominella exigua during ~8 to 6 Ma and ~3.7 to 3.0 Ma indicate seasonal input of phytodetritus from the surface waters due to extensive phytoplankton blooms associated with the strengthening of the upwelling. The early Pliocene interval between ~5 and 3.7 Ma is marked by the co-occurrence of Globocassidulina subglobosa, U. proboscidea, and B. striata. This assemblage reflects alternating oxic and suboxic–dysoxic benthic environments, which might be linked to oligotrophic and eutrophic surface conditions, respectively. Decreased surface productivity related to reduced upwelling and enhanced oxygenation of bottom waters favoured oxic species, but the continued presence of dysoxic-suboxic species indicate a continuous nutrient supply, perhaps related to Agulhas Leakage. A rapid increase in U. proboscidea and Uvigerina peregrina during the Plio–Pleistocene cooling reflects re-intensification of BUS-related productivity. Overall, benthic foraminiferal assemblages at ODP Site 1087 provide a robust record of productivity and associated oceanographic changes in the Southeast Atlantic Ocean between the Late Miocene and Pleistocene.

How to cite: Mohanty, R. N., Gupta, A. K., and Majumder, J.: Late Miocene to Pleistocene deep water Productivity in the Southeast Atlantic: Evidence from Benthic Foraminiferal Assemblages, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18474, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18474, 2026.

EGU26-18713 | ECS | Posters on site | CL4.16

Zr/Hf ratios in Banded Iron Formations as tracers of Early Ocean evolution  

Johanna Krayer, Arathy Ravindran, Josua J. Pakulla, Carsten Münker, Stefan Weyer, and Sebastian Viehmann

The Zr/Hf ratio of modern seawater (150-3001) is significantly fractionated relative to the chondritic value (32.7-34.22) and magmatic systems. This deviation is driven by the higher particle reactivity of Hf relative to Zr in low-temperature, aqueous systems, resulting in preferential sorption of Hf onto (particle) surfaces. The Zr/Hf ratio of aqueous systems increases from the continents towards the open oceans, varies with water depth and water mass age, making it a powerful tool for tracing water masses. While reasonably well constrained in modern aquatic systems, the Zr/Hf composition of ancient seawater remains poorly understood, but may provide unique insights into the circulation of water masses.

To investigate the Zr/Hf evolution of the seawater throughout Earth’s history, banded iron formations (BIFs) represent a viable archive for the Precambrian seawater chemistry because they are chemical sedimentary rocks and reflect the chemistry of the seawater from which they precipitated. Here, we present new high-precision Zr–Hf data from Precambrian BIFs, complemented by available literature data, to evaluate the Zr/Hf ratio as a paleoceanographic tracer of ancient water masses.

Archean BIFs predominantly display near-chondritic Zr/Hf ratios, with ratios not exceeding 75. The first super-chondritic Zr/Hf ratios occur in individual BIF-layers at ~2.51 Ga, and the formation showing overall super-chondritic Zr/Hf ratios is the ca. 2.4 Ga Hotazel Formation, indicating widespread Zr/Hf fractionation in marine environments. Formation-scale averages largely remain near-chondritic until ~2.0 Ga, while younger BIFs show predominantly super-chondritic ratios. This secular trend from chondritic towards super-chondritic Zr/Hf ratios in the early to mid Proterozoic likely reflects changing seawater conditions that enabled widespread Zr–Hf fractionation. The increasing availability of Fe–Mn(oxide) particles, based on increasing atmospheric oxygenation but also the progressive development of modern-style estuarine and shelf environments, may have led to global Zr-Hf fractionation in marine systems by that time. Within individual formations, Zr/Hf ratios correlate with Mn/Fe ratios, indicating a link between Zr-Hf fractionation and the redox-evolution of the Earth. Moreover, regional differences among coeval BIFs suggest variable depositional settings and distinct water-mass circulation patterns already in the Neo-archean. Thus, our results highlight the potential of Zr/Hf ratios in BIFs and other chemical sedimentary rocks to trace the redox-evolution of the Earth with the appearance and spatial heterogeneity of oxygenated water masses in Early Earth oceans.

 1Godfrey et al., 1996, GCA 60

 2Münker et al., 2025, GPL 36

How to cite: Krayer, J., Ravindran, A., Pakulla, J. J., Münker, C., Weyer, S., and Viehmann, S.: Zr/Hf ratios in Banded Iron Formations as tracers of Early Ocean evolution , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18713, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18713, 2026.

In many carbonate archives, Δ47 signatures appear to be primarily driven by crystallization temperatures, with little evidence for other influencing factors, implying that 13C and 18O isotopes are effectively (re)distributed among carbonate isotoplogues in accordance with thermodynamic stability during or just before mineralization. This is not the case for all types of carbonates, but appears to hold true for biocarbonates such as bivalves, gastropods, or planktic foraminifera. For historical reasons, things are not as clear-cut when it comes to benthic foraminifera, a particularly important source of information on past marine environments at the scale of the Cenozoic and beyond. In hope of fostering productive discussions, we revisit this issue with a focus on the following questions:

  • What is the current body of evidence from modern/recent observations?
  • How much do the various Δ47 calibrations currently applied to foraminifera differ?
  • Is there any practical difference between Δ47 calibrations based exclusively on modern/recent foraminifera and "composite" calibrations based on many different types of carbonates?
  • What should be the foraminifer Δ47 community's next steps to try and resolve these issues?

How to cite: Daëron, M. and Gray, W.: Does it matter whether benthic foraminifera achieve clumped-isotope thermodynamic equilibrium?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19790, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19790, 2026.

EGU26-20576 | Orals | CL4.16

Rare Earth Elements as tracers for past ocean chemistry 

Patrick Blaser, Ricardo Monedero-Contreras, Florian Scholz, Samuel L. Jaccard, and Martin Frank

The rare earth elements (REE) are transported and transformed coherently in the environment, yet subtle differences in their chemical properties cause variable fractionation patterns. In the ocean, their relatively long residence times (centuries to millennia) allow REE to be advected across basins while recording fractionation processes en route. Scavenging onto sinking particles – especially metal oxides and organic matter – leads to their burial on the seafloor, where their abundances can be further modified by early diagenetic processes. The fraction of REE preserved in sediments enters the geological record where it can be used to reconstruct past ocean chemistry provided their marine geochemical cycling is understood well enough.

Here we present REE concentration data from authigenic phases of a global suite of marine sediments. We assess which environmental parameters they predominantly relate with, how early diagenesis affects the archived REE, and whether authigenic REE can be used to reconstruct past ocean chemistry and particle fluxes.

How to cite: Blaser, P., Monedero-Contreras, R., Scholz, F., Jaccard, S. L., and Frank, M.: Rare Earth Elements as tracers for past ocean chemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20576, 2026.

EGU26-21375 | Orals | CL4.16

Elemental mapping and stable isotope analyses of cryogenic cave carbonates from Scărișoara Ice Cave, Romania 

Cristina Montana Pușcaș, Ciprian Cosmin Stremțan, Aurel Perșoiu, and Lukas Schlatt

Cryogenic cave calcite is a relatively rare type of cave deposit formed in periglacial environments by drip water freezing and discharging its soluble components in form of mostly calcium carbonates. While cryogenic calcite formation as a phenomenon was recognized early on by researchers (see [1,2] for references), most studies to date have focused on the morphological characteristics of these deposits or their stable isotope composition.

In this contribution we investigate the elemental and stable isotopic composition of cryogenic cave carbonate deposits (pearls) from the Scărișoara Ice Cave, Romania. The pearls were collected from within the cave at locations where active drip water was present. Samples (millimeters to centimeters in diameter) were embedded in epoxy resin, cut in half and the exposed surface was analyzed. Laser ablation inductively coupled mass spectrometry (LA ICP TOF MS) was used to identify the qualitative distribution of trace elements that can we expected to reach the cave from atmospheric deposition above the cave, rather that from the bedrock. A Teledyne Photon Machine 193 nm wavelength excimer laser Iridia was used in conjunction with Nu Instruments Vitesse time-of-flight ICP MS for elemental mapping. Stable isotopic (δ13C and δ 18O) composition was explored using laser ablation isotope ratio mass spectrometry (Photon Machines Fusions CO2 laser coupled to a Sercon HS2022 IRMS).

Elemental data shows highly zoned structures in the studied deposits. Layers of clear detrital input (characterized by high 89Y and low 48Ca+/28Si+) alternate with layers with monotonous chemical composition. Furthermore, the layers of detrital input are often characterized by the presence of 3–5 micron Au-containing particles. We believe those particles to be anthropogenic pollutants windblown from areas with historically intense Au mining located in relative proximity of the cave. 

[1] I.D. Clark, B. Lauriol, Kinetic enrichment of stable isotopes in cryogenic calcites, Chem. Geol. 102 (1992) 217–228.

[2] K. Žák, B.P. Onac, A. Perşoiu, Cryogenic carbonates in cave environments: A review, Quat. Int. 187 (2008) 84–96.

How to cite: Pușcaș, C. M., Stremțan, C. C., Perșoiu, A., and Schlatt, L.: Elemental mapping and stable isotope analyses of cryogenic cave carbonates from Scărișoara Ice Cave, Romania, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21375, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21375, 2026.

The mechanisms that allowed the oxygenation of the Earth’s atmosphere to occur at the end of the Archean, an event known as the Great Oxidation Event (GOE), remain unclear. For the GOE to occur, two conditions must be met: first, oxygenic photosynthesis must evolve; second, the net production of dioxygen by photosynthesizers (i.e. the imbalance between carbon fixation and respiration corresponding to burial of organic matter), must exceed oxygen sinks such as reduced volcanic gases. Evidence points toward oxygenic photosynthesis evolving long before the traces of the GOE appear in the geological record. Thus, the oxygenation of Earth’s atmosphere may have been triggered by a combination of an increase in the burial flux of organic carbon (net O2 source) or a decreased O2 sink (e.g. via a decrease in the volcanic emissions of reduced gases). However, the drivers and dynamics of each of these processes are complex, and leveraging the geological record (e.g. stable carbon isotope record) to draw mechanistic conclusions about geochemical cycling at the time of the GOE remains challenging.

Recent modeling studies have highlighted the role of ecological competition for nutrient between anoxygenic and oxygenic photosyntheses as a potential driver for a delayed oxygenation of the atmosphere following the emergence of oxygenic photosynthesis (Ozaki et al 2019; Olejarz et al 2021). Here, I use adaptive dynamics theory (Metz et al., 1992) to rigorously and efficiently model the outcome of ecological competition in the upper layer of the Archean ocean as a function of boundary conditions set by the compositions of the deep ocean and of the atmosphere. Using a separation of timescales assumption, I then use the steady-state outcome of this ecological model as a boundary condition in a simplified geochemical model of phosphorous and iron cycling, and atmospheric oxygen.

The model shows how small perturbations in the delivery rate of iron or phosphorous to the deep ocean can trigger reversible or irreversible global oxygenation events. I examine a scenario where the upper ocean is initially phosphorous-limited and photoferrotrophs (anoxygenic photosynthesis where the electron donor is soluble iron) competitively exclude oxygenic photosynthesis. Then I assume that delivery rates of iron and phosphorus evolve or are perturbed such that the upper ocean transitions to conditions where photoferrotrophs would be iron-limited, giving oxygenic photosynthesis a fitness advantage (owing to its use of abundant water as an electron donor). In this scenario, an initially rare variant performing oxygenic photosynthesis may take come to dominate phototrophic primary production while the total remains constant, if local oxidation of soluble iron by dioxygen is fast enough (i.e. if the pH is high enough). The model demonstrates that coexistence between anoxygenic and oxygenic photosyntheses may not prevent oxygenation of the atmosphere, if the total productivity is high enough, and determines conditions where small perturbation in the geochemical system can trigger reversible or irreversible atmospheric oxygenations.

How to cite: Affholder, A.: Eco-Evolutionary dynamics of oxygenic and anoxygenic photosyntheses in the late Archean., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21473, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21473, 2026.

Banded Iron Formations (BIFs) are important archives of early Earth's history, offering critical geochemical insights on Archaean oceanic and atmospheric chemistry. BIFs provide critical constraints on ancient seawater conditions, temperature, pH, nutrient cycles, redox processes and the evolution of microbial metabolisms, which are fundamental to understanding early planetary habitability. In the Singhbhum Craton of India, their immense economic importance has made BIFs a primary research target for decades.

But so far, the different BIF units exposed within the Singhbhum Craton remain yet to be dated and characterized. Numerous BIF units are distributed within the Singhbhum Craton, which holds immense potential to unravel deep insights into not only seawater chemistry but also conditions related to the emergence of the craton and/or presence of terrestrial landmass. Recent studies have placed BIFs exposed in the southern part of the Singhbhum Craton amongst some of the oldest BIFs with evidence for terrestrial inputs around ca. 3.37 Ga. Here, we report ancient BIFs of the Gorumahisani Greenstone Belt that are well exposed near the mining town of Gorumahisani, with alternate banding of Si- and Fe-rich bands and intercalated with cherts. To date, the age of this critical iron formation within the Gorumahisani greenstone sequence remains poorly known. We dated an intrusive granitoid within the BIF sequence. U-Pb dating of zircon crystals recovered from the intrusive granitoid provided a 207Pb/206Pb age of 3286 ± 10 Ma. The emplacement age of this granitoid brackets the minimum age for the Gorumahisani greenstones, and on the other hand, it is identified as part of the Singhbhum Granitoid Complex (i.e., the Singhbhum Suite). Field and geochronological evidence confirms the presence of Palaeoarchaean BIFs in the Gorumahisani belt, establishing a critical foundation for future studies to determine precise depositional constraints and unravel details of early Earth surface processes.

 

How to cite: Jodder, J. and Elburg, M.: Banded Iron Formation of the Gorumahisani Greenstone Belt, Singhbhum Craton, India: Insights into Archaean surface processes., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21888, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21888, 2026.

The Azores Front marks the boundary between subtropical and
subpolar water in the North Atlantic. Its position during glacial periods
is debated, tracing it would improve our understanding of glacial ocean
circulation. Neodymium (Nd) isotopes are an important tracer for past and
current water mass mixing. They are however subject to overprinting on
local scales by processes including erosion and volcanic activity.
Cold-water corals incorporate Nd into their skeletons without
fractionation, making them valuable archives. In this work, the epsilon-Nd
of corals from several locations close to the Azores Islands was measured.
The corals were previously dated by U/Th measurements, which revealed ages
between 0.458 and 22.14 ka. The epsilon-Nd measurements found a range of
values between -12.07 and -1.26. The results reveal clear
evidence of radiogenic overprinting, which occurs on decadal timescales
and can most likely be attributed to volcanic activity. The extent and
frequency at which this overprinting occurs does not depend on climate
phases. A part of the samples may represent unaltered seawater values,
these show no evidence of a change in water mass mixing over the last 20
ka.'

How to cite: Schöfer, C. and Frank, N.: Epsilon-Nd-Signatures and Radiogenic Overprinting in Cold-Water Corals near the Azores, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22506, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22506, 2026.

EGU26-316 | ECS | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Pollution history and colonial-induced increase in the transport of mercury from Australia to Sub-Antarctic islands: using mercury isotopes to trace the source 

Margot Schneider, Larissa Schneider, Krystyna Saunders, James Latimer, Stephen Roberts, David Child, Stewart Fallon, Simon Haberle, and Ruoyu Sun

Mercury (Hg) is a volatile toxic metal with strong atmospheric mobility, making its biogeochemical cycle highly sensitive to climate change. A key challenge is distinguishing natural climate-driven variability from anthropogenic impacts. This study examines how colonisation and climate change have shaped Hg contamination across the Australia–Pacific region. Previous work shows increasing Hg deposition in remote environments since the colonial era. Here, we apply a multi-proxy framework—combining Hg isotopes, geochemistry, and robust chronologies derived from radiocarbon, lead-210, and plutonium dating—to lake sediments from southern Australia and sub-Antarctic islands (Macquarie and Campbell). These records allow us to separate long-range transport, anthropogenic emissions, invasive animal disturbance, and climate drivers such as the southern hemisphere westerly winds. By integrating isotopic, geochemical, and age-model data, we quantify Hg sources and accumulation rates, providing new insights into Hg cycling in lacustrine ecosystems under changing climate conditions.

How to cite: Schneider, M., Schneider, L., Saunders, K., Latimer, J., Roberts, S., Child, D., Fallon, S., Haberle, S., and Sun, R.: Pollution history and colonial-induced increase in the transport of mercury from Australia to Sub-Antarctic islands: using mercury isotopes to trace the source, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-316, 2026.

The past century of increases in human population and resource consumption has produced some undesirable effects, ranging from environmental degradation to political unrest. We are accustomed to seeing these dependent variables charted with time on the x-axis. But this study presents metrics of biodiversity, consumption, and pollution and their extremely strong correlations when charted against human population size. Then we suggest that a more rapid yet non-coercive lowering of global Total Fertility Rates to 1.75 by 2050, and holding there, will produce many benefits for current and future generations of our own species and for nature. Among these benefits are reduced CO2 emissions, habitat recovery, protection of wild species, reduction of poverty, and reduced conflict over scarce resources.

How to cite: Keegan, M.: Gently easing population to 4 billion by 2200 would help people and nature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1998, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1998, 2026.

What Could Geosociology Be? Preliminary Considerations on the Sociology of the Earth

Geosociology represents a fundamental shift in sociological inquiry, moving away from treating nature as an extra-social entity to viewing the Earth and society as a single, entangled reality. This "Sociology of the Earth" is increasingly necessary considering the planetary crises called ‘Anthropocene’, which reveal that social life is deeply embedded in planetary dynamics that shape the atmosphere, continents and oceans. What were exogenous drivers in the Holocene become endogenous processes in the Anthropocene. 

The presentation portrays sociology as a methodological science, drawing a parallel to geology. Much as a geologist observes physical strata, a sociologist observes the "layered" realities of social institutions. This comparison facilitates a dialogue between the two fields as epistemic equals, establishing a foundation for an interdisciplinary field.

Central to this perspective is the anthropological shift. Drawing on Bruno Latour, the text argues that humans must be understood as "terrestrials" or "earthlings." This rejects the modern illusion of human autonomy and acknowledges that social achievements—like urbanisation—are essentially geo-social arrangements. It further builds upon classical schools of thought, for example, Ibn Khaldun, who in his Muqaddimah (1377) observed how specific landscapes and resource availability (such as the contrast between desert and hill dwellers) shape social organisation.

The proposed epistemology of Geosociology navigates the space between social construction and material reality. While Berger and Luckmann famously defined reality as a social construct, Geosociology suggests that geological knowledge is a hybrid: it is mediated by human frameworks but anchored in the independent expedition into the telluric.

The presentation also addresses the linguistic dimension, specifically the use of geological metaphors (e.g., "social tectonics") to convey broader concepts, such as ‘deep time’. While these tools help visualise complexity, Geosociology insists on critical reflection on whether they illuminate realities or merely aestheticize social matters. As Markus Schroer (2022) suggests, sociology must venture beyond the humanities into biology and geology to go beyond such metaphors and learn how to keep constant contact with reality.

The multifaceted notion of the Anthropocene serves as the pivotal diagnostic tool, demonstrating that human activity has become peers with geological forces. This realisation challenges Ludwig Wittgenstein’s notion of the world as "everything that is the case" by asking whether the Earth's facticity carries ethical weight.

Finally, inspired by Auguste Comte’s dictum that science leads to foresight, Geosociology looks toward the future. It even touches on "extraterrestrial sociology," citing Cixin Liu’s novel The Dark Forest, which posits that, as civilisations grow, the quantity of matter remains constant. Hence, ultimately, the recently coined neologism Geosociology integrates deep-time perspectives with social action, for intra- and extra-terrestrial Earthlings.

 

Literature:

Berger / Luckmann: The Social Construction of Reality, 1991

Cixin Liu: The Dark Forest, 2015

Comte: Cours de philosophie positive, 1830

Grutzpalk: Strong Metaphors for Invisible Actants, 2016

Ibn Khaldun: Al Muqaddimah, 1377

Latour: Où suis-je ?: Leçons du confinement à l'usage des terrestres, 2021

Schroer: Geosoziologie, 2022

Wallenhorst / Wulf: Encyclopedia of the Anthropocene, 2024

Wittgenstein: Tractatus logico-philosophicus, 1921

How to cite: Grutzpalk, J. and Bohle, M.: What Could Geosociology Be? Preliminary Considerations on the Sociology of the Earth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3965, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3965, 2026.

EGU26-4590 | Orals | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

An updated Earth System Impact metric for bridging sub-global pressures and planetary boundaries 

C. Kendra Gotangco Gonzales, Steven Lade, Aryanie Amellina, Nitin Chuadhary, Beatrice Crona, Ingo Fetzer, Tanya Fiedler, Dario Marone, Giorgio Parlato, Juan Rocha, Lan Wang Erlandsson, and Hannah Zoller

The planetary boundaries (PBs) represent key Earth system processes and their safe limits to maintain planetary resilience and stability. The 2023 assessment reflects that the Earth has transgressed six of nine boundaries while the 2025 Planetary Health Check indicates that a seventh has been breached. Given that human pressures are driving these transgressions, guidance is needed for translating planetary-scale limits into decision-relevant inputs for local actors. Sustainability reporting standards provide business organizations with guidelines for disclosing their impacts but often do not require benchmarking against the PBs. Interactions across disclosure categories are also not captured in target-setting. Tools are needed to help organizations assess their performance while bridging local pressures to planetary impacts.

To this end, Lade et al. (2021) formulated a prototype Earth System Impact (ESI) metric which enables evaluations of an organization’s systemic impacts on climate, land, and water in relation to the 2015 PBs translated into sub-global guardrails. Interaction strengths for climate, land and water at the sub-global scale were derived from 1901-2013 simulations from a dynamic global vegetation model, LPJmL4. Feedback modeling was applied to estimate the impacts of pressures given these interaction strengths and to determine the extent to which pressure in one component of the Earth system is amplified into impacts in other components. Final ESI scores were produced by weighting impacts on climate, land and water with current state as of 2013 to account for existing degradation.

We present an update to the ESI which uses LPJmL5 simulations from 1901-2023 to estimate interaction strengths. Sub-global clusters were updated to include dominantly barren land types in additions to forests and grasses. We then draw from both the 2023 PBs and the 2025 Earth Commission safe and just Earth-system boundaries to develop sub-global guardrails. For water, we set guardrails for both wet and dry deviations from a preindustrial baseline. Current conditions are updated to 2023.

Overall, amplification of impacts increased compared to the prototype, largely due to how all runoff deviations are considered adverse. Notably, the effects of deforestation on the earth system are doubled to tripled. Most barren land experienced no net amplification except in Australia and Africa (~39% and 65%, respectively) where surface water scarcity is aggravated.  The final ESI metrics were higher in smaller areas (e.g. C3 grass ecosystems in Africa), indicative of the sensitivity of smaller ecosystems to anthropogenic pressures compared to the relative resilience of larger intact land with greater surface water availability. Insights from the ESI metrics can aid businesses, investors, and potentially the public sector in planning future developments by providing a basis for comparing impacts of assets in different sites globally beyond just carbon emissions. The ESI can help with setting site-specific targets for environmental performance that are aligned with sub-global guardrails, and, in this way, facilitate a shift towards a “business within boundaries” paradigm that supports sustainability transformations.

Lade, S. J., Fetzer, I., Cornell, S. E., & Crona, B. (2021). A prototype Earth system impact metric that accounts for cross-scale interactions. Environmental Research Letters, 16(11), 115005.

How to cite: Gotangco Gonzales, C. K., Lade, S., Amellina, A., Chuadhary, N., Crona, B., Fetzer, I., Fiedler, T., Marone, D., Parlato, G., Rocha, J., Wang Erlandsson, L., and Zoller, H.: An updated Earth System Impact metric for bridging sub-global pressures and planetary boundaries, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4590, 2026.

In the early 2000s, the Anthropocene was proposed by Paul J. Crutzen, Nobel Prize winner in chemistry and Earth system scientist, as a new geological epoch dominated by human activities and a new noosphere yet to come (Crutzen et Stoermer 2000; Crutzen 2002). In this sense, the Anthropocene Working Group was created in 2009 to try to get the Anthropocene officially recognized within the geological time scale. (Zalasiewicz et al. 2008; 2019). Since then, controversy surrounding its work has continued to grow within the natural and social sciences, culminating in its rejection by geological institutions in March 2024 (International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) 2024). 

What should be done with this concept, given its rejection? What research review can be drawn from the debates on the subject? And how can we continue to foster dialogue between disciplines in order to meet the vital challenges of this new epoch?

The aim of this proposal is to show that the Anthropocene requires a new transdisciplinary field of research, which could be called “Anthropocenology.” Far from being based on nothing, this new field could draw on research in Earth system sciences (Steffen et al. 2018), geological sciences (Zalasiewicz et al. 2021), and social sciences (Latour 2017), which accompanied the debates on the Anthropocene. Its ambition would be to continue creating new knowledge networks around the Anthropocene. (Thomas, Williams, et Zalasiewicz 2020), in order to better cope with the disruptions currently occurring from the Holocene Epoch (Wallenhorst et Wulf 2023). More specifically, the latest research on the Anthropocene has made the Great Acceleration a pivotal moment in the trajectory of human civilizations (Head et al. 2022; Syvitski et al. 2020), particularly in terms of the overall transformation of the relationship between science, technology, and society (STS). 

In this sense, this proposal will draw on the latest online debates surrounding the Anthropocene to identify emerging knowledge on the subject. In terms of data, the focus will be on a qualitative and quantitative analysis of several thousand scientific websites and articles, following the methodology of controversy mapping. (Latour et al. 2012; Venturini et Munk 2021). On a theoretical level, the aim will be to identify knowledge, both online and in society, that will enable us to open up a new trajectory and reflexivity within the Anthropocene (Thomas et al. 2020; Wallenhorst et Wulf 2023; Renn 2020; Leinfelder 2024).  

 

How to cite: Colombo, F.: Toward an Anthropocenology: foresting new networks of knowledge within the Anthropocene., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5770, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5770, 2026.

EGU26-5854 | ECS | Orals | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Global Technogeochemical Flows of Iron from Lithosphere to Technosphere 

Abdullah Al Faisal, Maxwell Kaye, and Eric Galbraith

Anthropogenic material fluxes have reached magnitudes comparable to natural biological and geological processes, yet they are rarely addressed within integrated Earth system frameworks. Iron, the most abundantly extracted metal from Earth’s lithosphere, is primarily used for steel production and constitutes a fundamental material basis of modern infrastructure and societal development worldwide. However, data on iron extraction, production, and use remain fragmented across national inventories and are rarely spatially linked to end-use sectors, limiting our ability to assess its role in the Anthropocene Earth system.

Here, we present a new approach based on global technogeochemical flows and apply it to the approximately 2 Gt yr⁻¹ anthropogenic flows of iron. We synthesize disparate datasets using the SESAME gridding tools to demonstrate how iron extracted from a limited number of locations, about 2.3% of global land grid cells, is transformed through a similarly concentrated set of steel production sites, about 2.7% of land grid cells, before accumulating in widely distributed in-use stocks. Using a spatiotemporal, grid-based material flow analysis combined with a tariff-weighted gravity model, we link iron extraction and steel production to end-use sectors at the full planetary scale.

Our results show that Eastern Asia functions as the dominant global locus of iron flows from extraction to in-use, accounting for over 50% of global crude steel production and nearly 44% of total in-use stock accumulation between 2000 and 2016. At the global scale, the network flow models indicate that approximately 2/3 of total mass displacement occur between iron source locations and steel production sites, about 10.4 Tt·km, while 1/3 occurs between steel production and in-use locations, about 5.2 Tt·km. This combined displacement exceeds the total mobility of all human beings by a factor of four.

By explicitly resolving the spatial and temporal interconnections of iron flows, this work advances a systems-based understanding of how industrial economic processes are physically embedded within the Earth system. The approach highlights the uneven spatial distribution of societal pressures and material dependencies that underpin sustainability challenges in the Anthropocene. More broadly, this spatiotemporal framework can be extended to other critical minerals, offering a pathway toward integrative and transformative research on Earth and societies.

How to cite: Faisal, A. A., Kaye, M., and Galbraith, E.: Global Technogeochemical Flows of Iron from Lithosphere to Technosphere, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5854, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5854, 2026.

EGU26-6990 | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

The taphonomy of sedaDNA, cultural biodiversity and catchment ecological restoration in North West Europe  

Antony G. Brown, Ying Liu, Andreas Lang, Tulug Ataman, Helena Hamerow, Ondrej Mottl, Nathalie Dubois, and Inger Alsos

The restoration or ‘rewilding’ of rivers and catchments, which generally involves manipulating biotic drivers, has traditionally used several palaeoecological techniques including plant macrofossils, microfauna and pollen. However, these have well known limitations due to both taxonomic level and indeterminate source-areas. SedaDNA potentially offers partial answers to both of these limitations as well as expanding the organism groups substantially to animals, fish and invertebrates. But in order to fully utilize this new approach we need to understand the taphonomy of sedaDNA so that biases can be assessed and allowed for in any baseline reconstruction. Taphonomy here includes aspects of transport, preservation and bioturbation in the sedaDNA record. In this paper we resolve the spatial input of sedaDNA into a small lake within a small Boreal-zone catchment and the influence of the methodological approach. The taphonomic biases can theoretically come from spatial factors, such variations in sediment connectivity, local environmental factors such as pollution loading, and longer-term variations in sedimentation and land-use. One of the advantages of sedaDNA is that it can record aspects of taphonomy such as the appearance of bioturbating organisms. Notwithstanding this, with comprehensive taxonomic data that is spatially constrained it becomes possible to investigate biotic interactions as well as construct past food webs and ecological dynamics. In this paper we show how sedaDNA metabarcoding can be used to provide an ecological history of key-stone and functionally critical organisms, from a variety of ecosystems and organism groups. These include upland and lowland pasture systems, aquatic plants, mammals, amphibians and fish all of which are part of culturally mediated ecological systems.

This approach is being rolled-out in a new pan-European project on the Molecular Ecology of Medieval European Landscapes (MEMELAND) which aims to provide a 2 millennia evidence based for biocultural restoration in NW Europe from The Arctic Circle to the Alps. The approach utilized here is highly relevant today as it can provide and evidence-base for environmental policies that seek to restore former catchment conditions, promote resilient ecological dynamics and biodiversity.

How to cite: Brown, A. G., Liu, Y., Lang, A., Ataman, T., Hamerow, H., Mottl, O., Dubois, N., and Alsos, I.: The taphonomy of sedaDNA, cultural biodiversity and catchment ecological restoration in North West Europe , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6990, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6990, 2026.

The Anthropocene is not only a human-driven geological epoch, as argued by the Earth System Sciences, but also a multi-faceted discourse on socio-ecological relations, as analysed by the social sciences and humanities. Within the Anthropocene discourse, several grand narratives compete for hegemony: The dominant ‘naturalist narrative’ claims that the human species has inadvertently altered the Earth system at a geological scale. The ‘post-nature narrative’ claims that nature is socially constructed and, thus, appropriate technology might tackle the planetary crisis. The ‘eco-catastrophist narrative’ highlights the unsustainable mode of production and consumption that drives the transgression of planetary boundaries towards tipping points. The ‘eco-Marxist narrative’ argues that capitalist elites in the core countries of the world-system accumulated profit and power through unequal economic and ecological exchange with the peripheries, where the resulting social and ecological costs undermine (non-)human habitability. Such highly abstract and complex notions of the Anthropocene can be assessed in a more concrete and simplified manner through the lens of commodities. By following a commodity across time and space, we can gain a broader and deeper understanding of the dynamics of the Anthropocene. As an example, the more-than-human network around soy has gained a broad and deep planetary footprint in the ‘Great Acceleration’ and its aftermaths. A soy-focused history of the Anthropocene – or ‘Soyacene’ – is relevant not only in academic research but also in public debates on the current polycrisis. By highlighting the socio-natural dynamics behind the Earth’s Anthropocene trajectory from a historical perspective, the soy lens gains useful insights for navigating the planetary crisis.

How to cite: Langthaler, E.: Navigating the Anthropocene through a Commodity Lens, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7299, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7299, 2026.

EGU26-7554 | ECS | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Past Landscape Dynamics as a Guide for Conservation Interventions in Bardia National Park, Nepal 

Zoë Kleijwegt, Kevin Nota, Benjamin Vernot, Gözde Atag, and Annegret Larsen

The Terai Arc Landscape is a unique subtropical landscape at the foot of the Himalayas, that sustains many keystone species, including the continental tiger (Panthera tigris). Conservation efforts have led to an increase of this species, increasing human-wildlife conflict significantly. To optimize the habitat suitability and reduce conflict, conservationists aim to implement various interventions in Bardia District. However, this ecologically and geomorphologically complex landscape is understudied, making it difficult to estimate the potential impact of different interventions.

Therefore, this study aims to reconstruct past ecosystem states and drivers of  the Bardia landscape to help estimate the outcomes of conservation measures. To achieve this, sediment cores were collected and analyzed for sedimentary ancient DNA, combining shotgun sequencing with mitochondrial mammalian capture, providing a vegetation- and land use history. In addition, the fluvial history of the sampling sites was investigated using grainsize analysis and x-ray fluorescence.

The results from these cores indicate consistent, low-intensity human land use over the last centuries. Only in the last few decades, does the intensity increase, likely due to a confirmed migration wave of people from the hill regions of Nepal to the lowlands after the eradication of Malaria. However, before this, changes in vegetation composition appear more so due to geomorphological change. Namely, one lake is an oxbow lake that was shaped from a past channel of the Karnali river. The combination of past vegetation and fluvial history shows how the severing of the meander from the river led to a fairly fast transition of riverine grassland and forest to a wetland-environment with denser vegetation.

This finding is particularly relevant for Bardia National Park, as the river branch that currently determines its western boundary, the Geruwa, appears to be undergoing a process of disconnection from the Karnali and thus becoming ephemeral or even drying up. Our outcomes show that such a transition can rather quickly affect the presence of riverine grasslands, which are seen as crucial for the tiger, thus affecting habitat suitability. A potential outcome of such a habitat change could be the movement of tigers towards other riverine grasslands nearby, which have a higher human population density, thus increasing the risk of human-wildlife conflict.

One of the interventions proposed by park managers is to artificially keep the Geruwa branch of the Karnali open by removing gravel from blocked channels. This study demonstrates that although this is a somewhat controversial measure, it could actually be desirable in terms of maintaining the tiger population within the National park rather than outside of it. This highlights how assessing past environments can meaningfully contribute to making optimal conservation decisions in challenging contexts.  

How to cite: Kleijwegt, Z., Nota, K., Vernot, B., Atag, G., and Larsen, A.: Past Landscape Dynamics as a Guide for Conservation Interventions in Bardia National Park, Nepal, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7554, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7554, 2026.

EGU26-9328 | ECS | Orals | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Air pollution as Earth and societies interlinkage: A systematic literature review on emerging themes, conceptualisations, and important gaps 

Honey Dawn Alas, Maheshwaran Govender, Marion Glaser, Gioia Marcovecchio, Urs Schaefer-Rolffs, Matthias Birkicht, Hans-Peter Grossart, Dennis Abel, Andreas Macke, and Jochen Schanze

Air pollution is one of the most serious challenges at the interface between the Earth system and societies, linking atmospheric processes, climate dynamics, human health, and social vulnerability. While advances in atmospheric and Earth system sciences have substantially improved the understanding of pollutant sources, transport, and threats, integration of societal dimensions into air pollution research remains uneven and conceptually fragmented. Here, we present a systematic literature review that examines how air pollution as interlinkage between Earth system and societies is conceptualised, operationalised, and addressed across interdisciplinary research. Following the PRISMA framework, we screened 1,297 peer-reviewed publications retrieved from the SCOPUS database using a structured search string spanning Earth system sciences, air pollution, and societal dimensions. A combination of a Large Language Model-assisted abstract screening, topic modelling, and full-text qualitative synthesis resulted in the final references of 104 interdisciplinary studies. We analyse temporal and geographic trends, emergent research themes, conceptual framings, and persistent barriers to integration. The literature is dominated by health impacts and air quality monitoring, while governance, equity, and justice perspectives remain marginal. We identify five main operationalisations of the air pollution as Earth system and societies interlinkage: (1) Emissions-to-exposure pathways, (2) Capacity to adapt to atmospheric load, (3) Monitoring and decision infrastructures, (4) Societal interventions as levers of change, and (5) Institutions, commons, and justice framings. Most studies treat societal systems as external drivers or endpoints, rather than as constitutive elements of coupled Earth and societies dynamics. Across the references, recurring barriers include data and monitoring gaps, methodological and scale mismatches between natural and social sciences, weak institutional coordination, and the limited integration of participatory and justice-oriented approaches. We argue that advancing air pollution research as Earth and societies interlinkages requires moving beyond additive interdisciplinarity toward integrative and interdisciplinary co-produced frameworks that embed e.g., social institutions, power relations, and equity and justice to identify key research needs. Strengthening this integration is critical for developing effective, legitimate and equitable air quality intervention measures towards sustainability within planetary boundaries.

How to cite: Alas, H. D., Govender, M., Glaser, M., Marcovecchio, G., Schaefer-Rolffs, U., Birkicht, M., Grossart, H.-P., Abel, D., Macke, A., and Schanze, J.: Air pollution as Earth and societies interlinkage: A systematic literature review on emerging themes, conceptualisations, and important gaps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9328, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9328, 2026.

This contribution examines the applicability of the Doughnut Economics framework as a systemic and ethically grounded analytical tool for navigating socio-ecological challenges of the Anthropocene. Focusing on a comparative analysis of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia, and Austria, the paper develops a regional Doughnut model that captures both national performance and relational interdependencies across ecological ceilings and social foundations. By situating these four countries within a shared socio-ecological system, the analysis highlights asymmetries, spillover effects, and structural interconnections that are often obscured in single-country sustainability assessments. Methodologically, the study builds on the transformative model developed by the Institute for Political Ecology (IPE) in Zagreb and further advances it through an integrated indicator framework that combines Doughnut Economics, selected Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and a relational, colour-coded diagnostic logic. This approach enables a systemic reading of the Anthropocene as a condition marked not only by biophysical limits but also by socio-economic inequalities, governance failures, and uneven responsibility for ecological overshoot. Beyond diagnosis, the paper engages directly with key ethical and political questions raised by the Anthropocene concept: how to communicate systemic limits without foreclosing future imaginaries; how to use scientific frameworks to challenge public policy without technocratic determinism; and how to translate structural diagnosis into actionable yet hopeful transformation pathways. By comparing countries across different development trajectories and governance regimes, the study demonstrates that the Doughnut Economy can function as more than a sustainability narrative; it can operate as a replicable scientific methodology that supports reflexive governance, informs public debate, and fosters ethically grounded responses to Anthropocene conditions. The findings contribute to interdisciplinary discussions on how systemic concepts of the Anthropocene can be operationalised in ways that retain both analytical rigour and transformative potential.

How to cite: Safet, K.: Comparing Pathways through the Anthropocene and semi periphery perspective:A Doughnut Economics Assessment of Four European States , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9905, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9905, 2026.

EGU26-12481 | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Nature’s enchantment, lost but not forgotten: A way forward in the Anthropocene 

Kyle Nichols and Bina Gogineni

The Anthropocene debates are rooted in epistemological differences. Geologists seek temporal metrics of spatially-even anthropogenic impact. Thus, they favor geologic data that fit this category. Humanists and social scientists, on the other hand, tend to focus on the negative effects of spatial unevenness. Without linking the Anthropocene’s temporal and spatial components, the intention for it to be useful for wider segments of society will be futile. By recognizing threshold moments in human history, the uneven spatial distributions of anthropogenic damage can be traced to specific events, thus actualizing the predictive value of geology.  We argue that the Anthropocene started in the 17th century with a shift in worldview that resulted in removing the “spirit” from nature and thus it could be rendered, as Newton put it, “brute,” and it could consequently be viewed as a natural resource readily available for extractive economies.  By removing the spiritual value--or enchantment--from nature, the notion of protecting nature for its own good was lost to extracting profit for the benefit of the economic elites.

Acknowledging such a worldview shift makes more legible two fundamental dynamics between human and natural trajectories: the intensification of global inequity coterminous with the intensification of natural damage; and humanity’s ever more audacious attempts to control the environment. This ethos, wielded as the prime justification for taking over that which belonged to cultures not espousing it, has resulted in anthropogenic damage disproportionately affecting the most economically and historically vulnerable peoples. However, their alternative modes of coping with the damages—an ineluctable responsiveness to, rather than control over, environment—enables them to survive.  Often, the indigenous or traditional knowledge of these cultures sees nature as infused with spirit, i.e. enchanted.  As such, they could lead the way through the Anthropocene, modeling adaptation and mitigation strategies, and obviating the global North’s unsound hope for a technological solution.  By expanding the data beyond the stratigraphic, coordinated interdisciplinary research can measure variegated effects of––and responses to––the Anthropocene, thus better equipping humanity to adapt to and/or mitigate climate change and to eschew unsustainable practices.

How to cite: Nichols, K. and Gogineni, B.: Nature’s enchantment, lost but not forgotten: A way forward in the Anthropocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12481, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12481, 2026.

EGU26-13361 | ECS | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

An idealized model of the coupled human-technosphere-Earth system and hindcast from 1900 

Yan Su and Eric Galbraith

Integrating the human components into the Earth system framework can help fill the existing gap between the science of the natural world and society, thereby deepening our understanding of socio-environmental relationship. In the Anthropocene, these human-Earth interactions have intensified, particularly driven by the acceleration of resource-use since the Industrial Revolution. The growth of the technosphere, which refers to the global assemblage of non-food human-creations including machineries, infrastructure, and buildings, has played a central mechanistic role in this acceleration.

Here, we present an idealized model to couple the dynamics of the technosphere with other Earth spheres and to capture its interaction with human activities. The key driver of the numerical model is a dynamic time allocation of the human population to food provision, technosphere construction, or services, based on a competition of state-dependent motivations. The products of the activities computed from the labour and efficiency, together with Earth system feedbacks, thereby impact the motivations during the next time step. The mass of the technosphere contributes to the efficiency of human activities. We compare model outputs with historical data and find that the simulation reproduces trends in the global food supply, technosphere mass accumulation, and their feedback on the change of the sectoral labour distribution since 1900. The study establishes a novel integrated framework for advancing systemic human–Earth coupling, paving the way for country-level and grid-scale analyses in the future.

How to cite: Su, Y. and Galbraith, E.: An idealized model of the coupled human-technosphere-Earth system and hindcast from 1900, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13361, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13361, 2026.

EGU26-15538 | ECS | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Beyond Extractivism: Humanity Entering the Post-Anthropocene 

Marvin Best and Joachim H. Spangenberg

The effects of decades of human action have led to the crossing of multiple planetary boundaries, yet humanity's structures remain built on extractivist logics that further constitute the loss of biocultural capital.

The anthropogenic changes in Earth’s geo-ecological systems are unprecedented for anything any historical society had to face. While early human ecologies were characterized by local feedbacks and gradual natural change, the globalized world assimilates and synchronizes crises far more rapidly than both human and non-human adaptation measures can keep up with. Synchronizing implies no geographical escapes as formerly regional problems tend to become connected by globalization and telecoupling. Following this asymmetry, the gap between the resilience of socio-ecological systems and the ongoing escalation widens.

In contrast to any other epoch, the Anthropocene is marked by the dominance of a single species and a specific way of living within the diversity of lifestyles. The capacity of local ecosystems, and even of the entirety of planet Earth, is eroded. In geological understanding, humanity leaves traces of the systemic failures of the present.

In the current discussion about the Anthropocene, two core readings of the new era prevail. One claims that now that humans are dominating global processes, they have the right, and the responsibility to take full control and manage the Earth system, with technical means and based on existing patterns. Visions of post-human economic systems, run by new forms of AI solving all problems, belong to this category. The other core narrative is not based on rights but on responsibility, in particular to respect the planetary boundaries of the Earth system to give it time to recover (albeit in a modified way – some changes are irreversible).

We hold that moving “beyond extractivism” is at the core of the second, responsibility-driven Post-Anthropocene horizon and a necessary prerequisite for: a humanistic, not a post-human future, with resilient societies providing the chance for a dignified life to its members. However, the disturbances of global systems the Anthropocene-humanity has set in motion will have lasting effects, which cannot be stopped or reversed (almost impossible in complex evolving systems) on human timescales. Hence, there are no (technical or other) ways out of the crisis humans created – we must find pathways towards a humane Post-Anthropocene under the given and emerging conditions. This will require more than mere adaptation to external (e.g. climate) changes; it calls for a co-evolutionary process of human societies with their (no longer really natural) environment. Resilient societies in a resource-constrained future will need to decouple human flourishing from planetary degradation – a future beyond the Anthropocene patterns of production and consumption, and a modification of the value systems driving the permanent escalation of human impacts. Such a vision offers evidence-based hope for future generations, who necessarily must be part of the solution.

Aiming to link the geological dimension of the Anthropocene to future outlooks based on current and historical human nature, this concept can support the mobilization of communities by giving back agency, informed by state-of-the-art research.

How to cite: Best, M. and Spangenberg, J. H.: Beyond Extractivism: Humanity Entering the Post-Anthropocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15538, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15538, 2026.

EGU26-15664 | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Developing an NbS potential map with an ESG–ecosystem services framework: integrating InVEST carbon storage in Taiwan 

Yi-Hsuan Wu, Jie-Ying Wu, Zueng-Sang Chen, and Ming-Kuang Chung

Nature-based Solutions (NbS) are increasingly highlighted in climate adaptation policy, yet spatial planning still lacks operational tools to identify where NbS are most feasible and desirable. This contribution develops an NbS potential mapping framework that combines an ESG perspective with ecosystem-service modelling, and illustrates its first implementation in Taiwan using InVEST carbon storage as a prototype for the Environmental/Ecosystem (E) dimension.

We reinterpret ESG as Ecosystem (services)–Social–Governance and organise the framework into three stages: Identification, Assessment, and Retrospective Validation. In the Identification stage, national land-use data are reclassified into nine categories (forests and conservation areas, agricultural land, residential areas, industrial and commercial zones, infrastructure and utilities, coastal and marine areas, water bodies and river systems, urban green and recreational spaces, and mixed/special use zones). Each category is assigned initial qualitative E, S and G attributes based on environmental sensitivity, social exposure, and governance conditions relevant to climate risk and adaptation.

To move from qualitative “environment” toward quantified natural capital, we implement the E dimension using the InVEST Carbon Storage model. Carbon stocks are estimated for different land-use types and normalised to produce an E indicator that is applied as an additional constraint on the initial E category: within each land-use class, areas with higher carbon storage are flagged as high natural capital. We test this ESG–ecosystem services framework in two contrasting Taiwanese landscapes—a coastal wetland–aquaculture system and a mountain catchment affected by landslide-related hazards—to generate NbS potential maps that highlight combinations of high natural capital, high climate risk, and feasible governance conditions.

For retrospective validation, we compare our ESG land-use definitions and the spatial pattern of NbS potential with published ESG-based environmental scoring and NbS selection studies in similar land-use contexts, to check whether our classification logic and prioritisation are consistent with independent frameworks. Rather than delivering a full national ecosystem-service assessment, this work focuses on the structure of the ESG–ecosystem services framework and a first, carbon-based NbS potential map, designed to be progressively enriched with additional quantified ecosystem services. In future work we plan to refine the framework through structured expert feedback (e.g. a Delphi process), and invite interested researchers to contribute to this co-development.

How to cite: Wu, Y.-H., Wu, J.-Y., Chen, Z.-S., and Chung, M.-K.: Developing an NbS potential map with an ESG–ecosystem services framework: integrating InVEST carbon storage in Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15664, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15664, 2026.

EGU26-18296 | ECS | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Environmental Education and the Anthropocene: Convergences, Distances, and Contemporary Challenges 

Samuel Pinheiro, Raizza Lopes, and Maxime Bordes

We live in the Anthropocene (Crutzen & Stoermer, 2000) or, in Stengers’ (2015) terms, in the time of catastrophes, a period marked by the intensification of interdependencies between socio-environmental crises. Scientific literature on the Anthropocene has produced increasingly consistent diagnoses of ongoing biogeophysical transformations, grounded primarily in contributions from the Earth System Sciences (Steffen et al., 2018) and the Geological Sciences (Zalasiewicz et al., 2021), which are extensively systematised in the works of Wallenhorst (2020; 2025). These studies provide a robust framework for understanding planetary boundaries, dynamics of acceleration, and systemic risks associated with transformations driven by the capitalist mode of production. In parallel, the concept of the Anthropocene has been further developed by scholars working at the interface between Earth sciences and the humanities, incorporating economic, historical and political dimensions into the understanding of the contemporary crisis. In this regard, contributions by Veiga (2019; 2023; 2025) and Latour (2017; 2021) shift the debate beyond a strictly biogeophysical perspective, interrogating models of development, forms of social organisation and regimes of knowledge production that sustain socio-environmental collapse, while offering occasional reflections on the role of education. It is within this context that a central question emerges, guiding this proposal: in the face of the gravity of the Anthropocene, is what we lack a deeper knowledge of the urgency of the times in which we live, or do existing bodies of knowledge rather collide with political, economic and institutional interests that hinder their translation into social transformation? The aim of this article is to address this question from the perspective of Environmental Education (EE), exploring its analytical contributions to understanding the relationships between science, power and socio-environmental inequalities. EE is here understood as a field in permanent (re)foundation in response to socio-environmental transformations. As noted by Reigota (2004), EE emerged as a response to environmental issues produced by a predatory and unsustainable capitalist economic model, gaining international visibility from the Stockholm Conference (1972) onwards. However, as indicated by Leite Lopes (2004) and Carvalho (2001), some early approaches adopted a conservationist and normative character, centred on individual responsibility and avoiding a critical interrogation of the social structures that produce environmental degradation. Over recent decades, authors such as Layrargues (2012) and Carvalho (2014) have deepened the critical foundations of EE, highlighting it as a field traversed by epistemological, ethical and political disputes. Methodologically, this proposal is based on a bibliographic review of scientific productions from the Earth sciences, the humanities and Environmental Education, with an emphasis on articulations between the Anthropocene, scientific knowledge, politics and socio-environmental justice. In dialogue with Carvalho and Ortega (2024), we argue that the dimension of catastrophes should not be understood solely as collapse, but also as an opportunity to reinvent ways of doing science, educating and inhabiting the world, reaffirming the centrality of Environmental Education in the construction of socially just responses to the Anthropocene.

 

How to cite: Pinheiro, S., Lopes, R., and Bordes, M.: Environmental Education and the Anthropocene: Convergences, Distances, and Contemporary Challenges, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18296, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18296, 2026.

EGU26-20091 | ECS | Orals | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

Integrative and Transformative Research on Earth and Societies and its specificity for Freshwater  

Raghid Shehayeb, Jochen Schanze, Dieter Gerten, Miriam Prys-Hansen, Dörthe Tetzlaff, Dennis Abel, Maren Dubbert, Doris Düthmann, Christiane Fröhlich, Marion Glaser, Detlef Gronenborn, Olaf Jöris, Nils Moosdorf, and Hans-Peter Grossart

Current observations of the climate, ocean, biodiversity, soils, and freshwater indicate that the Earth system is undergoing rapid change that exceeds natural variability. The environmental sciences regard this development as a defining characteristic of the Anthropocene. The Earth system change, in turn, results in increasing societal impacts and risks due to resource depletion and deterioration, as well as global warming with more severe and frequent extreme events. While research in the earth, environmental, and social sciences has expanded in response, the complexity and scale of the phenomena require deeper integration combined with a focus on sustainability transformations.

This research identifies critical gaps in current Anthropocene research and proposes an approach for Integrative and Transformative Research on Earth and Societies. It emphasises three core areas: (i) multi-system approaches for Earth and societies to deal with the heterogeneity and dynamics of main interlinkages; (ii) system-based scientific rationales for societal agreement on planetary boundaries and societal goals for basic needs; and (iii) systemic innovations fostering transformations to reduce societal pressures on the environment and build resilience to Earth system impacts and risks according to planetary boundaries and societal goals, taking into account levers, perceptions and capacities.

The interface between the freshwater compartment of the Earth system and societies is used to explain the novel approach. This encompasses main water-related interlinkages, planetary boundaries relevant for freshwater change and societal goals for basic water needs; and innovations for reducing societal pressures on freshwater and strengthening resilience to water extremes.

How to cite: Shehayeb, R., Schanze, J., Gerten, D., Prys-Hansen, M., Tetzlaff, D., Abel, D., Dubbert, M., Düthmann, D., Fröhlich, C., Glaser, M., Gronenborn, D., Jöris, O., Moosdorf, N., and Grossart, H.-P.: Integrative and Transformative Research on Earth and Societies and its specificity for Freshwater , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20091, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20091, 2026.

EGU26-20277 | Posters on site | ITS3.2/SSP1.8

The Baltic Seafloor in the Anthropocene: from societal pressures to sustainability transformations 

Jacob Geersen, Miriam von Thenen, Peter Feldens, Jérôme Kaiser, and Heiko Stuckas

The Baltic Sea has a long history of anthropogenic disturbance, that started earlier than in most other coastal oceans and marginal seas. Especially in regions where shallow depths and limited space constrain the area that is available for anthropogenic use, conflicts of interest arise from the rising demand of multiple socio-economic players such as offshore wind, nature conservation, shipping, coastal protection, fishing, military, tourism and many more. The intensive use over many centuries has left long-lasting and partly irreversible traces on the seafloor and the benthic ecosystem. We aim to make the traces of different seafloor modulating processes such as bottom trawling, ship anchoring, propeller wake erosion, seabed constructions or material dumping visible using marine geophysical data of different resolution and spatial coverage. From this data, we can derive the spatial distribution and intensity of anthropogenic disturbances in the Baltic Sea and subsequently evaluate the pressures that they exert in certain areas. This approach is exemplified for propeller wakes that are generated by commercial ships, and that are not yet included in cumulative impact assessments. The results outline how single processes can exert pressures on the entire vertical sea, from the ocean-atmosphere boundary down to the seafloor and below, with likely impacts on ecosystem functioning and marine biodiversity. For propeller wakes, the broad spectrum of direct consequences suggests that the challenges associated with this anthropogenic stressor can only be met and moderated through intensive interdisciplinary research.

How to cite: Geersen, J., von Thenen, M., Feldens, P., Kaiser, J., and Stuckas, H.: The Baltic Seafloor in the Anthropocene: from societal pressures to sustainability transformations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20277, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20277, 2026.

This is a review paper discerning: 1. Three broad and deep transitions (the energy transition, current use of space, and the total greenhouse emissions of the food system), and 2. A call for transformation that is supported by a multi- to inter- to transdisciplinary theory of the Anthropocene. Is the theoretical transformation (2) needed to support the practical transformations (1)? How can disciplines become overarching, supporting to each other and contribute to potential solutions? Anthropocene examples and discussions from social science, humanities and science domains are presented: Is the Anthropocene driven by force majeure? Can humans develop from weak and strong forces towards an emphatic society? The composite model of the Anthropocene is presented with the anthromes/Nature Relationship Index [1), the commons transition [2] and the convivial society [3] as an integrated concept/theory. Through self-domestication and non-violent cooperation the paper stimulates a thoughtful call on theoretical and practical transformations to local to global communities.

1.  Ellis EC, Malhi Y, Ritchie H et al (2025) An aspirational approach to planetary futures. Nature 642, 889–899. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09080-

2.  Bauwens M, Kostakis V and Pazaitis A (2019) A Commons Transition Strategy. In: Peer to Peer: The Commons Manifesto Vol. 10: pp. 55–70. Available at:  http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvfc53qf.11

3.  Second Convivialist Manifesto (2020) Towards a Post-Neoliberal World. Convivialist International. Civic Sociology (2020) 1 (1): 12721. https://doi.org/10.1525/001c.12721

 

How to cite: van der Linde, L., Lont, J., and Kluiving, S.: Towards a Multi- to Inter- to Transdisciplinary Theory of the Anthropocene - Review of overarching disciplines and research on overstepped planetary boundaries and social and humanitarian crises, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22330, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22330, 2026.

EGU26-632 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Paleoclimate-driven depositional dynamics of Western Gondwana Endorheic Basins during the Middle to Late Permian. 

Monica Manna, Manoela Bállico, Claiton Scherer, Christopher Scotese, Amanda Feitosa, and Ana Victória Franqueira

The sedimentation patterns within endorheic basins are primarily controlled by climate. These basins are sensitive to atmospheric circulation patterns that influence the distribution of moist and dry air masses. During the Middle to Late Permian period, Western Gondwana underwent continentalization, during which fluvial, lacustrine, and aeolian deposits formed the stratigraphic framework of several basins. Field data from the Rio do Rasto Formation of the Paraná Basin in southern Brazil reveal a highly complex depositional architecture within this broad endorheic basin. By analyzing vertical facies succession and paleocurrent patterns, we identified two distinct catchments that feed distributive fluvial systems (DFS) anchored in different source areas within a large paleogeographic depositional area. The Rio do Rasto Formation's stratigraphic framework reveals the intercalation of medial-to-distal DFS deposits that form tens of meters of progradational cycles. These cycles consist of basal deltaic lobes and lacustrine deposits. Ephemeral fluvial channels, aeolian deposits, and red beds are recognized toward the top. Additionally, linking paleocurrent data with facies associations suggests that the two distinct catchments were influenced by different atmospheric circulation mechanisms. The more perennial basal deposits were supplied with sediment and water from southern and southeastern African terrains. In contrast, ephemeral streams and arid-related deposits were fed by west-northwestern catchments associated with the Asunción Arch. When analyzing the vertical patterns of facies in progradational cycles, ephemeral deposits tend to dominate perennial ones toward the top. This indicates an increasing trend of aridization in the Late Permian. Comparative sedimentological and paleontological data from the Karoo Basin reveal similar depositional patterns, with basal deposits influenced by a moisture-rich center. Paleoclimatic models from the Middle to Late Permian suggest that the moisture center migrated southward. This migration caused an intensification of arid conditions and a decrease in precipitation in southern Africa. Consequently, this climatic shift likely diminished the supply of water and sediment to fluvial and deltaic systems in the northern Paraná Basin, reinforcing an aridification trend across western Gondwana on a regional scale. High discharge variability in western and northwestern catchments may have been exacerbated by orographic barriers producing rain shadows. The Asunción Arch and the volcanic belt along the western margin of South America, associated with the Sierras Pampeanas, further restricted moisture-bearing air masses from reaching the continental interior. Observed stratigraphic patterns reflect endorheic basins' sensitivity to shifts in atmospheric circulation and hydrological regimes. The increasing aridity recorded in the upper portions of the Rio do Rasto Formation aligns with global climatic trends recognized in other Permian basins. Such widespread aridization may have contributed to the paleoenvironmental instability preceding the End-Permian mass extinction. This highlights the broader significance of basin-scale sedimentary records in reconstructing climatic and ecological change.

How to cite: Manna, M., Bállico, M., Scherer, C., Scotese, C., Feitosa, A., and Franqueira, A. V.: Paleoclimate-driven depositional dynamics of Western Gondwana Endorheic Basins during the Middle to Late Permian., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-632, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-632, 2026.

EGU26-1273 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Using 3D Digital Modeling to Identify Reservoir Heterogeneities: A Case Study from the Rio Bonito Formation, Paraná Basin, Brazil 

Lucas Barreto, Manoela Bállico, Ezequiel Souza, Monica Manna, Claiton Scherer, Allan Santos, Caio Paz, Gabriel Fontoura, and Amanda Feitosa

The storage of carbon dioxide (CO₂) in depleted hydrocarbon reservoirs and saline aquifers is regarded as a key strategy to mitigate the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Evaluating a geological formation for CO₂ storage requires assessing its capacity, injectivity, and trapping mechanisms, all of which depend on its geological and petrophysical properties. Outcrops of sedimentary rocks that serve as reservoir analogues have increasingly been used to support the determination of spatial and temporal distribution parameters and reservoir heterogeneities. These outcrops provide essential geological information for understanding subsurface rock characteristics, including geometry, textural and compositional variations, and diagenetic features. Among the different reservoir types, saline aquifers are considered the most promising for geological carbon storage due to their high capacity and broad regional distribution. In this context, within the Paraná Basin, the Rio Bonito Formation stands out as a potential target for CO₂ storage because of its favorable lithological characteristics. The sandstones of this formation, deposited in a transgressive setting, encompass a wide range of depositional systems, from tide-influenced environments to wave-dominated platforms. High-resolution sedimentological, stratigraphic, and structural information obtained from outcrops plays a crucial role in refining the understanding of subsurface reservoir rocks. Detailed stratigraphic surveys are greatly enhanced by 3D outcrop modelling, which has advanced through the use of digital photogrammetry and laser-scanning techniques. When applied with unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), these methods enable the acquisition, processing, and integration of large datasets with high spatial accuracy. This study aimed to characterize the depositional architecture and identify macro- and mesoscale heterogeneities using a 3D digital outcrop model. Five photofacies were distinguished based on the visual tracing of photohorizons, erosional surface patterns, and image-based color and texture criteria. These photofacies supported the identification of stacking patterns and the definition of key architectural elements. The high-resolution stratigraphic elements exhibit geometries ranging from lenticular to tabular, with moderate to high lateral continuity. Laterally extensive deposits are associated with wave-dominated shoreface and barrier-lagoon systems, whereas lenticular bodies with moderate lateral traceability correspond to tidal channels and bar deposits.
Overall, the integration of detailed outcrop analysis with high-resolution 3D modelling provides a robust framework for characterizing the depositional architecture and heterogeneity of potential CO₂ storage reservoirs. The identified photofacies and their associated geometries offer valuable insights into the spatial continuity and connectivity of sedimentary bodies within the Rio Bonito Formation, reinforcing its suitability as a saline-aquifer reservoir analogue. By improving the understanding of reservoir-scale variability, this approach enhances predictions of capacity, injectivity, and trapping efficiency, thereby contributing to more reliable assessments of the formation’s potential for geological carbon storage.

How to cite: Barreto, L., Bállico, M., Souza, E., Manna, M., Scherer, C., Santos, A., Paz, C., Fontoura, G., and Feitosa, A.: Using 3D Digital Modeling to Identify Reservoir Heterogeneities: A Case Study from the Rio Bonito Formation, Paraná Basin, Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1273, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1273, 2026.

The Junggar Basin is a typical intracontinental petroliferous basin in Central Asia, and the Moxizhuang area, located in the hinterland of the basin, is a key target for Jurassic hydrocarbon exploration. The Sangonghe Formation serves as the major petroliferous reservoir interval in this region, yet the coupling relationship between sedimentary architecture  and reservoir microscopic characteristics  remains unclear, which restricts the accurate evaluation of reservoir quality and efficient hydrocarbon exploration. This study aims to investigate the spatial assemblage relationship of sedimentary microfacies and reveal the controlling mechanism of sedimentary architecture on reservoir microscopic characteristics.

Based on the core samples, rock thin sections, and logging data of 12 wells in the Moxizhuang area, a multi-index comprehensive research method was adopted.The research methods include: (1) Sedimentary framework analysis: Through core logging and well log correlation, the types of sedimentary microfacies associations were identified, and the sand body distribution characteristics and geometric morphology were delineated.(2) Reservoir microscopic characterization: Cast thin section observation, scanning electron microscopy  analysis, and mercury intrusion capillary pressure  experiments were carried out to quantitatively characterize the pore types, pore-throat distribution, and reservoir physical parameters.(3) Diagenesis analysis: By means of rock thin section identification and scanning electron microscopy-cathodoluminescence  observation, the diagenetic processes and their impacts on reservoir quality were clarified.

The Sangonghe Formation in the study area is dominated by the estuary bar microfacies and subaqueous distributary channel microfacies of the delta front. A total of four sedimentary microfacies association patterns have been identified in the study area, namely ,superimposed subaqueous distributary channels, truncated subaqueous distributary channels, channel overlying reworked estuary bar, and superimposed estuary bars. These patterns reflect distinct sedimentary environments and hydrodynamic conditions.There are significant differences in reservoir characteristics under different sedimentary microfacies association patterns. Specifically, the sand bodies in the superimposed subaqueous distributary channel pattern exhibit superior overall porosity, permeability, and pore connectivity compared with those in the other patterns.(The conclusion supported by quantitative analytical data.) The sedimentary framework is the dominant factor controlling the microscopic reservoir characteristics of the Sangonghe Formation in the Moxizhuang area.The sedimentary framework controls reservoir quality by regulating diagenetic processes: the superimposed subaqueous distributary channel sand bodies formed in high-energy environments are well-sorted, characterized by intense feldspar dissolution and the development of abundant secondary pores; the superimposed estuary bar sand bodies formed in low-energy environments undergo significant carbonate cementation, resulting in substantial pore loss;In the truncated subaqueous distributary channel pattern, multiple phases of channels are vertically superimposed in an erosional manner, leading to the widespread development of erosion surfaces. The poorly sorted glutenites are mostly cemented by calcite crystals in a mosaic form, resulting in generally poor physical properties.

By identifying the types of sedimentary microfacies associations and comparing the differences in reservoir characteristics among various types, this study establishes the coupling relationship between the sedimentary framework and reservoir quality. The findings hold important significance for the fine evaluation and exploration of hydrocarbon reservoirs in the hinterland of the Junggar Basin and analogous intracontinental basins.

Presentation preference: Poster presentation is also acceptable if PICO slots are full.Thank you.

How to cite: Guo, T. and Zhang, L.: Controlling effect of sedimentary architecture on microscopic reservoir characteristics: Sangonghe Formation, Moxizhuang Area, Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2277, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2277, 2026.

EGU26-3317 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Image-based porosity estimation in Cambrian sandstones from the Vilkyčiai-22 well 

Nurlan Talibov, Donatas Kaminskas, and Anna Cichon - Pupienis

This study focused on the evaluation and comparison of three image-based techniques for pore-space segmentation in Cambrian sandstones from the Baltic Basin: ImageJ thresholding, QuPath thresholding, and a U-Net convolutional neural network. Core samples from a borehole in Western Lithuania were obtained from the Lithuanian Geological Survey storage facility. Conventional epoxy-impregnated thin sections were scanned using a petrographic microscope equipped with a digital camera to acquire high-resolution images.

In QuPath, images were pre-processed and segmented using fixed-threshold pixel classification, followed by visual inspection and manual adjustment to produce validated masks used for U-Net training. ImageJ analysis involved a median filter, conversion to grayscale, automatic thresholding, and binary mask generation. Porosity estimates derived from each method were compared with laboratory-measured core-plug porosity.

The mean absolute error (MAE) relative to laboratory porosity was 3.88% for QuPath, 3.91% for U-Net, and 4.25% for ImageJ. Threshold-based methods performed well in samples with uniform pore–mineral contrast but tended to underestimate pore space where contrast was heterogeneous or pore geometries were complex. The U-Net model more consistently detected smaller and disconnected pores, however, its overall MAE was similar to that of QuPath, reflecting its reliance on threshold-derived training masks.

The results demonstrate that manually validated threshold-based segmentations can serve as effective training data for deep-learning models, enabling reproducible pore-scale characterization of Cambrian sandstones where fully annotated datasets are limited.

How to cite: Talibov, N., Kaminskas, D., and Cichon - Pupienis, A.: Image-based porosity estimation in Cambrian sandstones from the Vilkyčiai-22 well, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3317, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3317, 2026.

EGU26-4038 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Late Neogene seismic stratigraphy of the eastern mixed siliciclastic-carbonate platform of New Caledonia (SW Pacific) 

Léa Kerouédan, Pascal Le Roy, Gwenael Jouet, Estelle Leroux, and Stephan Jorry

The island of Grande-Terre in New Caledonia (NC) hosts one of the world’s largest lagoon complexes, and its sediment infilling makes it an ideal case study to understand the evolution of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate platforms. The eastern margin of Grande-Terre, relatively unknown until now, presents the opportunity to examine the major changes in lagoon sedimentation since the end of the Mio-Pliocene in response to climate variation, vertical movements and anthropogenic activities. Using geomorphological and seismic interpretations constrained with dated sediment cores, this study identifies three seismic sequences separated by major channelized and erosional unconformities. The upper and last unconformity is supposed to be linked to the sea-level lowstand during the Last Glacial Maximum. The overlying sedimentary record, dated to the Holocene, contains both clastic and carbonate deposits, resulting from the reflooding of the shelf. This mixed sediment infill displays significant spatial variation. The inner lagoon concentrates terrigenous inputs whereas the median lagoon is dominated by a series of large carbonate reef flats. The outer-shelf retains a remarkable succession of falling stages deposits that reflect 100 kyr depositional sequence cycles resting atop the Mio-Pliocene carbonate platform. Stratigraphic analysis of these Pleistocene sequences dates their deposition from 630 kyr (MIS 16) and allows us to estimate a subsidence rate of approximately 0.06 m/kyr on the outer shelf, enabling the barrier reef to keep up and the successive lowstand sediment wedges to stack.

How to cite: Kerouédan, L., Le Roy, P., Jouet, G., Leroux, E., and Jorry, S.: Late Neogene seismic stratigraphy of the eastern mixed siliciclastic-carbonate platform of New Caledonia (SW Pacific), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4038, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4038, 2026.

EGU26-5412 | PICO | SSP1.9

Seismic Activity and Turbidite Deposition in the Gulf of Aqaba-Eilat: Insights from Sediment Core Analysis 

Geffen Bichachi, Revital Bookman, Yaroslav Trubin, and Dierk Hebbeln

Submarine turbidites and mass-transport deposits (MTDs) provide potential valuable archives for reconstructing earthquake histories beyond the limits of instrumental and historical records. This study examines turbidite sequences in the Gulf of Aqaba–Eilat (GAE), the southern segment of the Dead Sea Transform (DST), to evaluate their potential as paleo-earthquake indicators. Although the region has experienced major historical earthquakes, including the Mw 7.3 1995 Nuweiba event, offshore paleoseismic records south of the gulf head remain fragmentary. Previous work has demonstrated that turbidite layers in the northern GAE can be correlated with historical and pre-historical earthquakes, supporting the feasibility of turbidite-based paleo-seismic reconstruction in this setting.

Five gravity cores collected during RV Meteor cruise M44/3 from water depths of 135-838 m were studied using a multi-proxy approach integrating sedimentology, X-ray fluorescence (XRF) core scanning, and radiocarbon dating. Grain-size distributions and sedimentary structures are used to characterize turbidites and distinguish earthquake-triggered deposits from non-seismic gravity flows—such as flash-flood-induced hyperpycnal events.

Mass-transport events are expressed in the cores as coarse-grained units with sharp stratigraphic boundaries and distinct geochemical anomalies relative to background pelagic sediment and are more frequent in the deeper basin (> 500 m). Several units may exhibit stratigraphic synchronicity across multiple cores, supporting a seismic trigger, which will be verified by dating.

XRF-derived elemental ratios (Zr/Rb, Sr/Ti, Sr/Ca, Fe/Ca) provide additional constraints on sediment source and mass-transport processes. The coarse-grained event layers reveal systematic geochemical variability among units with high Zr/Rb and comparatively elevated Fe/Ca values characterizing terrigenous-dominated turbidites, while relatively enhanced Sr/Ca and Sr/Ti ratios typify biogenic carbonate-rich event layers probably representing reef debris originating from the shelf edge. While bathymetric and chronological analyses are still ongoing, this may indicate different processes and triggering mechanisms. Radiocarbon dating of planktonic (pelagic background sediment) and benthic (event layers) foraminifera combined with Bayesian age-depth modeling will support the triggers and transport mechanisms interpretation.

Overall, this study aims to refine earthquake recurrence estimates along the southern DST, improve criteria for identifying seismo-turbidites in hyper-arid marine settings, and contribute to regional seismic and tsunami hazard assessments.

How to cite: Bichachi, G., Bookman, R., Trubin, Y., and Hebbeln, D.: Seismic Activity and Turbidite Deposition in the Gulf of Aqaba-Eilat: Insights from Sediment Core Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5412, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5412, 2026.

Abstract: Shallow-water deltas represent a focal point in sedimentology research. However, studies on shallow-water deltas developed under arid climatic conditions, characterized by intermittently oscillating water bodies and complex sedimentary features and processes, are relatively scarce. Based on an integrated analysis of core, well logging, laboratory analytical, and seismic data, and guided by insights from modern sedimentary analogues and sedimentary numerical simulations, this study conducts a systematic investigation of the sedimentary facies within the Jurassic Qigu Formation (J3q) in the Yongjin area of the central Junggar Basin. A sedimentary model for the Qigu Formation is subsequently established. The key findings are as follows: ① Depositional Evolution. During the Middle-Late Jurassic, the climate in the Junggar Basin shifted to arid, leading to shallow and frequently oscillating lacustrine water bodies during the deposition of the J3q. Sand groups 1 to 3 are dominated by shallow-water braided river delta deposits. By sand group 4, with diminished sediment supply and persistent aridity, the sedimentary system transitioned to a meandering river delta. ② Characteristics of Arid Shallow-Water Deltas. Compared to their humid-climate counterparts, the arid shallow-water deltas in this study area exhibit rapidly shifting, frequently bifurcating subaqueous distributary channels, resulting in various channel sandbody morphologies. The sedimentary record shows interbedded red and gray layers, with sandstones being finer-grained, texturally immature, and limited in distribution scale. Sustained aridity led to continuously decreasing accommodation space, resulting in the near-absence of mouth bars within delta lobes. The primary sedimentary bodies are various types of subaqueous distributary channel sands. ③ Reservoir Heterogeneity and Exploration Implications. Controlled by single-point sources, the sedimentary bodies are limited in scale and show significant downstream differentiation. Three sedimentary microfacies are identified: high-energy main subaqueous channels, medium- to high-energy anastomosing distributary channels, and low-energy reworked distributary channels. The poor connectivity between individual sandbodies and strong reservoir heterogeneity pose significant challenges for hydrocarbon exploration and development in such settings.This research not only deepens the understanding of sedimentary processes in arid-climate shallow-water deltas but also provides a crucial sedimentological model and basis for refined reservoir prediction in analogous geological settings.

Keywords:  arid climate,  sedimentary model, shallow-water delta,  Jurassic,  Junggar Basin

How to cite: Kong, Q. and Wang, Y.: Sedimentary Processes and Model Reconstruction of Shallow-Water Deltas under Arid Climate: A Case Study from the J3q in the Hinterland of the Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7036, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7036, 2026.

EGU26-7590 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Early to Middle Miocene terrestrial paleoenvironmental reconstructions of the Dinarides Lake System (Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina) 

Mathis Moreau, Marlena Löberbauer, Gabriela Sanchez-Ortiz, Oleg Mandic, Nevena Andrić Tomašević, Jeremy K.C. Rugenstein, Andre Baldermann, Martin Dietzel, Davor Pavelić, Vedad Demir, Boško Vuković, Gerald Auer, Walter Kurz, and Maud J.M. Meijers

The Dinarides Lake System (DLS) constituted a set of intramontane freshwater lakes, which expanded during the Early to Middle Miocene in southeastern Europe. Sedimentation between ca. 18-12.5 Ma was contemporaneous with two well-documented climatic phases in marine records: the warm and humid Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO; ca. 16.9-14.7 Ma) and the subsequent Middle Miocene Climatic Transition (MMCT; ca. 14.7-13.8 Ma). The MMCT was characterized by global cooling and the establishment of permanent Antarctic ice sheets. Here, we aim to reconstruct continental paleoenvironmental and paleoclimate dynamics during the MCO and MMCT in southeastern Europe based on sedimentary records from the DLS.

We focus on four former lake basins (Pag, Gacko, Livno-Tomislavgrad, and Bugojno) and build on existing stratigraphic, sedimentological, and geochronological studies, including magnetostratigraphy, biostratigraphy, and the absolute dating of ash layers. We establish stable carbon and oxygen isotope records for the four basins and combine them with petrographic and mineralogical analysis derived from Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and X-ray diffraction (XRD).

Our first quantified XRD results show the presence of high-Mg calcite and aragonite in some samples from each section, which indicates little to no diagenesis affecting our samples. δ18O and δ13C values for each lake basin are positively correlated. We interpret the positive correlation to reflect hydrologically closed lake conditions during carbonate precipitation. Additionally, δ18O values display a positive relationship with modern elevations and distance to the coast for two time-equivalent lake records (Pag and Livno-Tomislavgrad) during the onset of the MCO. While the near-coastal Pag section yields mean δ18Ovalues of -9.1 ± 0.1 ‰ (n= 89; V-PDB), the Livno-Tomislavgrad basin (located ca. 50 km off the coast at ca. 750 m elevation) yields δ18O values of -5.0 ± 0.2 ‰ (n= 22; V-PDB). This may indicate that δ18O values are primarily controlled by evaporation in the lake basin located further away from the coast, rather than the isotopic composition of the incoming waters. By combining existing studies with our new data, we aim to reconstruct the terrestrial paleoenvironment and paleoclimate during lake deposition during the MCO and MMCT in southeastern Europe.

How to cite: Moreau, M., Löberbauer, M., Sanchez-Ortiz, G., Mandic, O., Andrić Tomašević, N., K.C. Rugenstein, J., Baldermann, A., Dietzel, M., Pavelić, D., Demir, V., Vuković, B., Auer, G., Kurz, W., and J.M. Meijers, M.: Early to Middle Miocene terrestrial paleoenvironmental reconstructions of the Dinarides Lake System (Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7590, 2026.

Fluvial crevasse splay deposits and their traditional facies models are often modified significantly due to marine influence, viz., incoming flood tidal currents and/or wave encroachments, particularly in downstream-controlled river setting near to delta-estuary mouth areas. An integrated sedimentological-ichnofabric analysis, often typically representing such episodic marine encroachments, may properly represent the depositional models. In the present study, a ~7-8 m-thick siliciclastic interval comprising amalgamated bioturbated sandstones-heteroliths-shale is studied in terms of sedimentological-ichnofabric properties to assess a possible crevasse splay deposit. The succession is a part of the Permian Barren Measures Formation, West Bokaro Basin, India, which is broadly interpreted as a fluvio-marine estuary-delta depositional system. Seven fining-upward cycles represent tide-dominated crevasse-channel, characterized by lenticular and horizontally laminated sandstone, followed by crevasse-fan lobes, ranging from proximal organic-rich, wave-modified bioturbated sandy-heteroliths to medial-distal muddy-heteroliths. Eight diminutive, low-diversity brackish-water ichnogenera are recorded, grouped into six ichnofabrics: Planolites (IF1), Macaronichnus (IF2), Rosselia (IF3), Palaeophycus (IF4), Cylindrichnus-Planolites (IF5), and Teichichnus (IF6) ichnofabrics; reflecting sensitive ecological responses to shifting sub-environmental controls within individual cycles. Salinity fluctuations governed colonization, with euryhaline taxa dominating tidally influenced channels and stenohaline fauna typifying wave-modified lobes. Up-section increase in ichnodiversity and wave influence suggest more frequent marine-influenced flood surges, followed by post-flood quiescent sedimentation, and episodic colonization windows in the low-lying overbank areas. Variations in sedimentation rate across flood and interflood periods regulated colonization strategies, tiering patterns, and the transition from softground to firmground ichnofabric. Collectively, these results demonstrate that interactions between fluvio-marine processes and associated benthic colonization uniquely characterize a crevasse-splay architecture near the tide-wave influenced estuarine mouth system.

How to cite: Bhattacharya, A., Bhattacharya, B., Banerjee, M., and Pathak, A.: Sedimentological–ichnofabric architecture of a crevasse splay deposit near an estuary mouth: A study from Permian Barren Measures Formation, West Bokaro Basin, India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10879, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10879, 2026.

EGU26-11293 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Late Quaternary unconformity-bounded stratigraphy of the northern Po Plain (Verona area) from subsurface data 

Giorgio Lucci, Andrea Di Martino, Giulio Viola, and Alessandro Amorosi

Deciphering the subsurface architecture of Quaternary successions in glacially influenced environments represents a significant challenge, particularly in transitional settings where pronounced lateral variability and the common amalgamation of coarse-grained sedimentary bodies with similar facies characteristics may obscure stratigraphic boundaries. Within the framework of the CARG geological mapping project (Sheet 124 - “Verona Est”), we propose an updated stratigraphic framework for the upper 100 m of the eastern Verona plain (northern Po Basin), developed through the application of Unconformity-Bounded Stratigraphic Units (UBSUs). Our investigation builds upon a robust legacy dataset comprising 667 stratigraphic and geotechnical records, including continuous cores, water wells and cone penetration tests. This extensive database has been recently upgraded and integrated with seven newly acquired sediment cores, ranging from 30 to 85 m in length, specifically targeted to test preliminary stratigraphic models. We employed event-stratigraphy principles to discriminate between aggrading glacial outwash systems and incising fluvial systems associated with glacial-interglacial cycles. Within this framework, laterally continuous peat horizons, traceable across the entire study area, act as key regional stratigraphic markers and record the development of major stratigraphic unconformities. Furthermore, we tested a combined approach integrating classic stratigraphy method with geophysical exploration, involving the acquisition of a dense dataset of single-station ambient noise measurements. We aimed to build a geophysical cross-section based on the Horizontal-to-Vertical Spectral Ratio (HVSR) technique to highlight resonance frequency variations induced by near-surface stratigraphic heterogeneities. Finally, through the inversion of HVSR curves, constrained by Shear Wave Velocity (Vs) measurements and direct stratigraphic observation, we aim to determine the depth of major impedance contrasts to infer the architecture of the basin fill.

How to cite: Lucci, G., Di Martino, A., Viola, G., and Amorosi, A.: Late Quaternary unconformity-bounded stratigraphy of the northern Po Plain (Verona area) from subsurface data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11293, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11293, 2026.

Mixed siliciclastic-carbonate sedimentation is a special phenomenon formed by the intermixture of carbonate and siliciclastic, which holds great significance for unconventional hydrocarbon exploration but also possesses considerable value in the study of sedimentary dynamics, and reconstruction of paleoenvironment-paleoclimate. The Bolila Formation drilled in well QZ-8, eastern part of the Qiangtang Basin, developed mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks and successions. However, their sedimentary characteristics and genetic mechanisms remain unclear. Based on well-logging data, core and microscopic observations, and zircon U‑Pb dating of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks from the Bolila Formation in well QZ‑8, this study constrains the types, characteristics, and provenance of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks. On this basis, an astronomical timescale for the Bolila Formation in well QZ‑8 was established, clarifying the controlling effects of tectonic evolution and astronomical orbital parameters on mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks. The Bolila Formation in well QZ-8 contains clastic rocks, carbonate rocks and mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks, with 18 lithofacies identified, including mudstone(F1), silty mudstone(F2), greywacke(F3), micrite/crystalline limestone(F4), intraclastic/ooid-peloid wackestone(F5&F6), floatstone(F7), calcareous/bioclastic mudstone(F8&F9), calcareous siltstone/sandstone(F10&F11), marlstone (F12), silty/mixed siliciclastic micrite(F13&F14), mixed siliciclastic ooid-peloid packstone(F15), mixed siliciclastic bioclastic wackestone(F16), mixed siliciclastic peloid wackestone/packstone(F17), and mixed siliciclastic sparry bioclastic-ooid grainstone(F18). It was deposited in a distally steepened carbonate ramp, which can be subdivided into inner ramp, middle ramp, distal slope, and outer ramp. The terrigenous clastic grains in the mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks are dominated by feldspar and lithic fragments, with poor sorting and roundness. Cathodoluminescence analysis of the quartz indicates magmatic origin. The detrital zircons are predominantly euhedral with distinct oscillatory zoning and high Th/U values, indicating the magmatic origin. The age spectrum shows a unimodal distribution, which correlates well with the reported U-Pb age spectrum of magmatic arcs in adjacent Tanggula Pass, Yanshiping, Geladandong, Zaduo and Shuanghu areas, indicating the provenance is mainly derived from the proximal magmatic arcs. Furthermore, the zircon U-Pb weighted mean age obtained from the tuffaceous mudstone sample at 286 m is 237.78±0.98 Ma,representing the depositional age of the strata. Taking it as the anchor point, combined with the filtering results of the long eccentricity(~405 kyr), a floating astronomical time scale for the Bolila Formation was established, constraining its age to 242.72–235.06 Ma with a duration of ~7.66 Ma, spanning the Middle Triassic Anisian to the Late Triassic Carnian. The formation of the mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks in the Bolila Formation is jointly controlled by tectonic evolution and the periodic changes of astronomical orbital parameters. During the Middle-Late Triassic, the Longmu Co-Shuanghu Paleo-Tethys underwent northward subduction, forming a multi-magmatic island arcs provenance supply system in the North Qiangtang Depression, providing sufficient material for mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks. Climate fluctuations driven by periodic variations of astronomical orbital parameters further regulated the formation of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks. When long eccentricity and obliquity increased, monsoon intensity enhanced, which led to increased precipitation and intensified surface runoff, increasing terrigenous input and promoting the development of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks; conversely, when long eccentricity and obliquity decreased, monsoon intensity weakened and precipitation reduced, resulting in the lower terrigenous input, facilitating the formation of carbonate rocks.

How to cite: Sui, B. and Wang, Z.: Sedimentary characteristics and genetic mechanism of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate rocks of the Bolila Formation in the eastern Qiangtang Basin , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11345, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11345, 2026.

Upper Cretaceous sedimentary successions of the Gurpi Formation in the eastern Lurestan Zone (Zagros Basin, Iran) provide a valuable record of paleo-depth variations during the early development of the Zagros foreland basin associated with Neo-Tethyan closure. This study presents an integrated sedimentological and micropaleontological analysis of the Campanian–Maastrichtian Gurpi Formation exposed in the Zangul anticline in a proximal foreland setting.

Lithofacies observations combined with quantitative planktonic–benthic foraminiferal data and morphotype-based paleoecological analysis were used to reconstruct relative bathymetric changes and evaluate controls on carbonate preservation. Planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphy constrains the succession from the Globotruncanita elevata Partial Range Zone (middle–late Campanian) to the Gansserina gansseri Interval Zone (early Maastrichtian). A thin fossiliferous marl interval equivalent to the Seymareh Member records a short-lived late Campanian shallowing event related to forebulge development. This phase is followed by progressive deepening into the Maastrichtian, expressed by increasing proportions of deep-dwelling foraminiferal morphotypes.

The upper Gurpi Formation shows a marked decline in foraminiferal abundance and preservation, accompanied by radiolarian-rich micrites, glauconite, and pyrite. These features indicate deposition under low-oxygen and carbonate-corrosive conditions and are interpreted as the result of local shoaling of the lysocline and an effectively shallower carbonate compensation depth in a tectonically active foreland basin, rather than extreme bathymetric deepening. The transition to flysch sedimentation of the Amiran Formation and the presence of slump structures record foredeep development and basin steepening.

Regional comparison across Lurestan demonstrates that Campanian–Maastrichtian depth changes were diachronous and primarily controlled by flexural subsidence and forebulge migration, highlighting the dominant role of tectonics over global eustatic signals in shaping Late Cretaceous basin evolution of the Zagros Basin.

How to cite: Razmjooei, M. J. and Bazvand, A.: Late Cretaceous Paleo-depth Variations in the Zagros Foreland Basin (Iran): Insights into Basin Evolution and Regional Paleoenvironment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11857, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11857, 2026.

EGU26-12262 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Proxy-based characterization of physical properties in fine-grained shelf sediments using X-ray fluorescence 

Karina Ledezma, Chelsea Pederson, Taylor Lee, and Davin Wallace

Seafloor sediment characterization is fundamental to understanding marine environmental processes, including sediment transport, depositional dynamics, and acoustic behavior. However, direct measurements of sediment physical properties such as bulk density and P-wave velocity are often limited by high costs, logistical constraints, and sparse spatial coverage. As a result, large-scale seafloor models frequently rely on simplified or incomplete representations of sediment properties. This study examines the application of sedimentary proxies, specifically elemental concentrations determined by X-ray fluorescence (XRF), to enhance predictions of key physical and acoustic sediment properties.

Sediment cores from the fine-grained New England Mud Patch (NEMP) provide a test case for evaluating proxy-based approaches in a depositional environment dominated by cohesive sediments. Multivariate regression models were developed using both wet and dry XRF measurements to assess how sample preparation influences predictive performance. Results indicate that dry XRF consistently produces stronger elemental signals and higher predictive accuracy than wet XRF, with coefficients of determination (R²) exceeding 0.7 to 0.9 for bulk density and P-wave velocity. These differences reflect the attenuation effects of pore water on elemental detection and highlight the importance of XRF methodology when integrating geochemical data into sediment property models.

Beyond their application to geoacoustic prediction, XRF-derived elemental proxies capture environmentally meaningful variations in sediment composition related to sediment source, grain size distribution, and depositional processes. Incorporating these proxies into statistical frameworks offers a rapid, non-destructive, and cost-effective means of enhancing spatially continuous sediment characterization. This approach supports improved parameterization of seafloor sedimentation models and provides a pathway for reducing uncertainty in marine geophysical analyses and seabed infrastructure assessment and design.

 

How to cite: Ledezma, K., Pederson, C., Lee, T., and Wallace, D.: Proxy-based characterization of physical properties in fine-grained shelf sediments using X-ray fluorescence, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12262, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12262, 2026.

The Swiss Molasse Plateau is the most prominent near-surface geological body across the
entire northern Alpine Foreland and hosts most of Switzerland’s population, cities, and
infrastructure. Molasse sedimentary assemblages are composed of mixed continental and
marine siliciclastic units subdivided stratigraphically into Lower Marine Molasse, Lower
Freshwarter Molasse , Upper Marine Molasse and Upper Freshwarter Molasse . The
Molasse has been extensively used for road and tunnel construction and is a preferential
target for major underground infrastructures, such as CERN’s Future Circular Collider. In
particular, the presumed lateral continuity of sand bodies with good reservoir qualities makes
the Lower Freshwater Molasse (LFM) a potential target for geo-energy storage, such as
heat, and anthropogenic CO2 sequestration. The success of these projects depends on
detailed rock characterisation, from a thorough understanding of the tectono-stratigraphic
evolution of sedimentary units at basin scale down to sediment composition and reservoir
property distribution. However, understanding and predicting fluid flow in Molasse units is not
straightforward, due to the occurrence of subsurface heterogeneities in the form of variable
geometry and architecture of depositional elements, variable textural and fabric properties of
sediments, and the anisotropy of key reservoir parameters (e.g. porosity, permeability).
Therefore, a comprehensive analysis of borehole records, lithofacies, facies associations,
petrophysical analysis and interpretation of 2D seismic (where possible) was performed in
this study to assess reservoir heterogeneities and structural complexities. This study
integrates multiple datasets, including borehole records (Weiach, Bassersdorf, Rheinau, and
four QHAB wells), outcrops (including the Fisibach Quarry) and 2D seismic datasets with a
focus on the Lower Freshwarter Molasse (LFM) in north-eastern Switzerland. The study
demonstrates how the distribution, dimensions, and stacking patterns of sedimentary
architectural elements vary abruptly across small spatial scale, and how these
heterogeneities can be explained by the original complex pattern of fluvial depositional
environments. The results also emphasize the necessity of bridging regional depositional
models with site-specific characterization to reduce uncertainties in rock-property prediction
and to optimize project planning in complex, heterogeneous fluvio-lacustrine deposits of the
LFM.

How to cite: Akhtar, N., Ventra, D., and Moscariello, A.: Geological storage of CO2 in heterogenous Lower Freshwarter Molasse successions of NE Switzerland: Uncertainties and Opportunities., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12917, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12917, 2026.

EGU26-13169 | PICO | SSP1.9

Is Antler Size Driving Evolutionary Success in Cervids? 

Simona Bekeraitė and Andrej Spiridonov

The hypothesis of aesthetic evolution offers a compelling alternative to traditional view of natural selection by suggesting that trait evaluation can occur independently of immediate survival or reproductive fitness factors. While often viewed as arbitrary or even as detrimental at the individual or population level, aesthetic preferences may function as significant determinants of fitness at the species or clade level. 

In this study, we investigate the palaeontological record of Cervid species. Research suggests that their antlers serve a dual role as both armaments for male-male competition and ornaments for female choice. The evolution of these traits appears to be driven by a complex interplay between male-male competition and female choice, eventually decoupling from purely functional demands. We utilize Bayesian models of Cervid evolutionary histories, allometric data and phylogenetic path analysis in order to investigate possible causal links between antler size, evolutionary success and phylogenetic patterns. 
Our preliminary results aim to clarify the link between antler size and the evolutionary success of specific lineages, offering a foundation for future research into the biotic drivers that shape macroevolutionary patterns.

This study was supported by the grant S-MIP-24-62 BretEvoGeneralized.

How to cite: Bekeraitė, S. and Spiridonov, A.: Is Antler Size Driving Evolutionary Success in Cervids?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13169, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13169, 2026.

The Late Albian–Turonian Judea Group represents a significant sequence of shallow-water carbonates deposited across the Israel-Sinai sub-plate. While the biostratigraphy of the Judea Gr. has been extensively studied using ammonites, ostracods and foraminifera, calcareous nannofossil data remain sparse. This study documents the taxonomic composition and stratigraphic distribution of calcareous nannofossils in the Jerusalem and Northern Negev areas, providing a crucial comparative analysis with the high-diversity assemblages of the Carmel area.

To establish this biostratigraphic framework, 281 samples were examined from eight surface sections in the Judea Mountains and three boreholes in the Northern Negev (Kohal 1, Massada 1 and Zohar 1).

Species richness varies significantly from impoverished assemblages in the Jerusalem area (only Moza and Kefar Shaul Fms) (29–60 species) and Negev (33–39), to highly diverse complexes in the Carmel area (95–113).

In the Judea Mts, extremely rare nannofossils in the Kefira Fm. indicate the Upper Albian–Maastrichtian age, the benthic foraminifera indicate the Albian–Cenomanian age, and the presence of Hemicyclammina points to the Middle Cenomanian. In the Soreq Fm., rare nannofossils indicate the Albian–Maastrichtian age and benthic foraminifera specify the Cenomanian age. The Beit Me'ir Fm. is devoid of nannofossils, while benthic foraminifera indicate the Cenomanian age. Diverse nannofossils of the Moza Fm. indicate the Early–early Middle Cenomanian age (Zones UC1–UC2), whereas abundant benthic and scarce planktonic foraminifera point to the Cenomanian age. The Kefar Shaul Fm. is Late Cenomanian based on rich nannofossils (Subzone UC3d, undivided UC3e–Zone UC4 and Subzone UC5a). Rare planktonic foraminifera and ostracods specify the Late Albian–Cenomanian and Late Cenomanian ages, respectively. Rare nannofossils of the Bina Fm. broadly indicate the Upper Albian–Maastrichtian age, and benthic foraminifera point to the Late Cenomanian–Turonian age.

In the Northern Negev Hazera Fm., the nannofossils and ostracods identify the Hevyon Member as Early Cenomanian (Massada 1: nannofossil Zones UC1 and UC2, ostracod Zone UC-1) or Late Albian–Early Cenomanian (Zohar 1 nannofossil undivided Zones UC0–UC1 and Zone UC2; Kohal 1 nannofossil (Sub)Zones: UC0a–b, UC0c–UC1, UC2a, UC2b–c). Nannofossils from the 'En Yorqe'am Member specify the Early–Late Cenomanian age (Zone UC2, undivided Zones UC3–UC4) and the ostracods suggest the Late Cenomanian age (Zone UC-3) in the Massada 1 and Kohal 1 boreholes. The Zafit Member is Middle–Late Cenomanian in all boreholes (nannofossil undivided UC3–UC4 Zones, Subzone UC5a). The Avnon Member is Late Cenomanian (nannofossil Subzones UC5a and UC5b) in Kohal 1.

In the Carmel area, both boreholes yielded rich nannofossil assemblages supporting the Isfiye Fm. as Late Albian, and the Arqan Fm. as Late Albian–Middle Cenomanian (Zones UC0–UC3; foraminiferal zones P. appenninica, Th. globotruncanoides, Th. reicheli and R. cushmani). The Tavasim Volcanics is Late Albian (borehole CT2) or Late Albian–Lower Cenomanian (borehole CT8).

By integrating novel nannofossil data with existing macro- and microfossil zonations, this research establishes a robust framework for correlating lithologically diverse formations of the Judea Gr., filling a significant gap in the regional micropaleontological biostratigraphy.

How to cite: Ovechkina, M.: Biostratigraphic framework of the Judea Group of Israel (Jerusalem, Negev and Carmel areas): A calcareous nannofossil approach. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14379, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14379, 2026.

EGU26-14819 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Subsurface and outcrop characterization of large fluvial channel deposits of the Late Cenozoic Solimões Formation (Acre Basin, western Amazonia). 

Isaac Salém Bezerra, Renato Almeida, Geovana Geraldo, Pedro Gomes, Felipe Figueiredo, Camila Althaus, Liliane Janikian, Cristiano Galeazzi, André Sawakuchi, Sherilyn Fritz, Anders Noren, Cleverson Guizan, and Paul Baker

Cores recovered by the Trans-Amazon Drilling Project (TADP) in the Acre Basin provide an unprecedented opportunity to investigate the stratigraphic record in the Andean foreland in the western Brazilian Amazon. This study integrates subsurface data with sedimentological data of correlative units from outcrops along the Juruá River and roadcuts, providing key information on depositional geometry and architectural elements. The entire sampled interval of the core (870 m), except the uppermost 12 m,  is assigned to a single lithostratigraphic unit, identified as the Solimões Formation. The core succession comprises fine- to medium-grained sandstones, siltstones, and mudstones, exhibiting variable degrees of paleopedogenetic alteration. The sand-grade facies are rich in feldspar grains and lithic fragments, displaying a grayish coloration that contrasts with the reddish oxidized hues and locally green-mottled colors observed in more intensely paleoweathered profiles. Four facies associations (FA) are defined: sandy fluvial channel deposits (FA1 and FA2) and finer-grained overbank and floodplain deposits (FA3 and FA4). Facies associations FA1 and FA2 are best represented by deposits exposed along the BR-364 highway in the eastern Acre Basin, where they form channel-dominated sandy successions, with homogeneous successions up to 1.5 m thick. FA3 and FA4 are best represented by deposits exposed along the Juruá River riverbanks in the western Acre Basin, characterized by laterally extensive tabular beds intercalated with thin sandy bodies deposits forming fine-grained heterolithic deposits, generally with well-developed paleoweathering features and cemented by calcite. Subsurface deposits from the core record a phase of long-term aggradation associated with foreland basin subsidence. These facies are interpreted as bar top deposits transitioning into floodplain environments of a large alluvial system, with very limited occurrence of lacustrine sequences. The limited lateral accretion in floodplain or shallow pond environments was subject to repeated subaerial exposure with prolonged floodplain stability under waterlogging and/or seasonal discharge variability. Further refinement of these interpretations, together with ongoing geochronological and geochemical analyses, should help to improve our understanding of Amazonian basin development and its linkage to climate and tectonic change through the Late Miocene and Pliocene.

How to cite: Bezerra, I. S., Almeida, R., Geraldo, G., Gomes, P., Figueiredo, F., Althaus, C., Janikian, L., Galeazzi, C., Sawakuchi, A., Fritz, S., Noren, A., Guizan, C., and Baker, P.: Subsurface and outcrop characterization of large fluvial channel deposits of the Late Cenozoic Solimões Formation (Acre Basin, western Amazonia)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14819, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14819, 2026.

EGU26-18078 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Geochemical Perspectives on the Permian Barakar Formation, Gondwana Supergroup, WestBokaro Basin, India 

Mritunjoy Banerjee, Biplab Bhattacharya, Anirudha Pathak, and Arnab Bhattacharya

Abstract: Early Permian sedimentation within the Gondwana intracratonic basins provides
important insights into the sedimentation history. Integrated petrographic and geochemical
proxies offer an effective means to reconstruct these processes. This study examines
siliciclastic rocks—sandstone, shale, and sandstone–mudstone heteroliths from the Permian
Barakar Formation of the West Bokaro Basin, eastern India. The rocks were analysed for
their mineralogical and geochemical properties to interpret provenance, paleoclimate, paleo-
tectonic setting, paleoredox conditions, and paleo-depositional environment. XRD, SEM, and
petrographic analyses, accompanied by major and trace element chemistry, supported by REE
patterns normalized to PAAS and UCC, indicate a predominant felsic provenance, which is
potentially considered to be the granite-granodiorite rocks of the Proterozoic Chhotanagpur
Gneissic Complex, Singhbhum cratonic block. Higher CIA values with A–CN–K plots, along
with MFRW weathering trends, suggest intense chemical weathering under a warm, humid
climate. Relative abundance of redox-sensitive trace elements (e.g., V, Ni, Cu, Zn, Ce, etc.)
points to oxic-dysoxic (for sandstone) and dysoxic-anoxic (for shale) conditions, often
supported by presence of localized pyrite framboids and abundant organic matter in shales
and heteroliths. Tectonic discrimination diagrams indicate deposition in a passive margin
riftogenic basin. Binary and ternary plots of common major element oxides suggest a
continental-marine transitional depositional setting, indicating marine incursions within the
continental Gondwanaland. The results and the interpretations provide important clues
regarding the Early Permian post-glacial warm paleoclimatic transition within the broader
Gondwana paleogeographic-paleoclimatic framework.

How to cite: Banerjee, M., Bhattacharya, B., Pathak, A., and Bhattacharya, A.: Geochemical Perspectives on the Permian Barakar Formation, Gondwana Supergroup, WestBokaro Basin, India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18078, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18078, 2026.

EGU26-19154 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Microfacies Distribution and Depositional Environments of the Lower Cretaceous Gadvan Formation (Barremian–Aptian) in the Persian Gulf 

Anna Yari Nejad, Mohammad Mehdi Farahpour, Bizhan Yousefi Yeganeh, and Michael Wagreich

The Gadvan Formation (Barremian–Aptian) in the Persian Gulf represents a heterogeneous mixed carbonate–siliciclastic succession with important implications for depositional architecture and reservoir characterization. In this study, fourteen distinct microfacies (MF-1 to MF-14) were identified based on detailed core descriptions and petrographic analysis of thin sections from five wells across several oil fields.

Outer-ramp facies (MF-1 to MF-4) are dominated by mud-supported argillaceous bioclastic mudstones and wackestones, radiolarian- and sponge spicule–rich wackestones, and planktonic foraminiferal wackestones, reflecting low-energy open-marine deposition below the storm wave base. Middle-ramp facies (MF-5 to MF-8) comprise echinoderm-rich wackestones, orbitolinid wackestones, benthic foraminifera–echinoderm wackestones, and sandy bioclastic facies, indicating moderate-energy open-marine conditions with episodic siliciclastic input. Inner-ramp facies (MF-9 to MF-13) include peloidal packstones to grainstones, Lithocodium floatstones to boundstones, and green algae–benthic foraminiferal wackestones, representing shoal, back-shoal, and semi-restricted lagoonal environments. Coastal to proximal depositional settings (MF-14) are characterized by argillaceous sandstones and scattered quartz grains, reflecting sporadic terrigenous supply from nearby continental sources.

The vertical and lateral distribution of these microfacies documents deposition on a homoclinal carbonate ramp that locally evolved into a distally steepened geometry, particularly in the northwestern part of the Persian Gulf. Shoal complexes acted as barriers separating open-marine conditions from restricted lagoonal settings. This microfacies-based framework improves the depositional model of the Barremian–Lower Aptian Gadvan Formation on the northeastern Arabian Plate and provides a robust basis for regional correlation and reservoir-scale interpretation.

How to cite: Yari Nejad, A., Farahpour, M. M., Yousefi Yeganeh, B., and Wagreich, M.: Microfacies Distribution and Depositional Environments of the Lower Cretaceous Gadvan Formation (Barremian–Aptian) in the Persian Gulf, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19154, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19154, 2026.

EGU26-20088 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Sequence stratigraphic model for epicratonic basin fills in arid settings 

Victor Hême de Lacotte, Stuart Clarke, Valentin Zuchuat, and Oliver Button

Marginal-marine successions deposited in restricted basins under arid conditions are characterised by complex interplay between variable hydrodynamic conditions, localised carbonate-evaporitic production and continental surface processes. In such scenario, climatically driven shifts of depositional belts may result in stratigraphic compartmentalisation through vertical facies and environments dislocation. As importantly, accommodation variations across marine margins can lead to preferential deposition of coeval systems which may ultimately translate into stratigraphic sealing through lateral facies transition. By deciphering the relative influence of allogenic controls upon marine margins stratigraphic architectures in arid and restricted settings and by documenting their sedimentary products, this work provides a generalised sequence stratigraphic model for arid epicratonic basin fills.

Stratigraphic arrangement of mixed paralic deposits is investigated across two margin-perpendicular transects of the Middle to Upper Jurassic San Rafael Group in Utah. Transgressive sequences of the Carmel and the Curtis formations deposited during flooding events of the Sundance Sea are intercalated between the aeolian- to fluvially-dominated low stand deposits of the Entrada Sandstone and the Summerville Formation. Facies changes and sequence stratigraphic surfaces are documented through detailed sedimentary logging and architectural panel interpretations at locations representative of 1) sediment-supply and accommodation controlled continental basin flanks; 2) autogenically overprinted paralic basin margin settings; 3) climatically controlled basin centre. Gamma-ray log data were collected in parts of the basin characterised by differing tectonics settings.

Successions deposited during transgressions are dominantly associated with complex tidal embayments reworking contemporaneous continental sediment deposited further inland and may present contrasting architectural and lithological characteristics linked to variability in basin physiographic settings and climatic conditions. Transgression sequences are generally recorded as composite surfaces in continental basin flank settings although thin fluvial deposits may locally be preserved in the case of favourable accommodation and sediment supply conditions. Sedimentary successions deposited during relative sea-/base-level low stands are characterised by the advance of aeolian systems during aridity maximums and translate basinward to coastal unconfined large-scale alluvial accretion successions. Maximum regression surfaces are associated with terminations of aeolian dune fields. High-frequency climatic fluctuations are preferentially recorded in continental basin flank settings during regressive trends as aeolian dune field growth stages bounded by deflationary supersurfaces. Larger-scale T-R sequential frameworks and their associated spatio-temporal facies evolution are more likely to be controlled by overarching changes in rates of accommodation creation due to foreland basin tectonics. By incorporating spatial facies variations within stacking trends at a basin scale, the proposed model highlights the architectural complexity and facies diversity of depositional sequences within arid epicratonic basins and may constrain reservoir characteristics and associated stratigraphic heterogeneities.

How to cite: Hême de Lacotte, V., Clarke, S., Zuchuat, V., and Button, O.: Sequence stratigraphic model for epicratonic basin fills in arid settings, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20088, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20088, 2026.

EGU26-20371 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Facies analysis provides new insights into event bed deposition in a hadal trench environment  

Mishelle Muthre, Jean-Noël Proust, Charlotte Pizer, Ken Ikehara, Jyh-Jaan Steven Huang, Hajime Naruse, and Michael Strasser

Hadal trenches uniquely preserve exceptional sedimentary archives of past geological events, yet their depositional processes remain poorly constrained. The Japan Trench captures complex earthquake-triggered event beds that record repeated sediment-gravity flows that deliver terrigenous and biogenic material into the trench, influencing both paleoseismic reconstruction and deep-sea carbon cycling on multi-millennial timescales. Classical event stratigraphy treats these event beds as the product of a brief, isochronous process. This study aims to build on this concept to enable the documentation of relative depositional timing within a single event bed. Within four well documented historical earthquake-triggered beds recovered during IODP Expedition 386 and linked to megathrust earthquakes (CE 2011 Tohoku-Oki, CE 1454 Kyotoku, CE 869 Jogan, and ~2.3 ka), we develop a systematic, facies-based framework to identify event-internal characteristics. This integrated approach resolves sedimentary structures—physical, chemical and biogenic characteristics—by combining visual core description with high-resolution 2D and 3D imaging (X-ray computed tomography and X-ray radiography), grain-size measurements, and geochemical datasets (X-ray fluorescence). Six event-internal facies (F1–F6), bounded by hemipelagic facies (F0), form a fining-upward sequence that records the shift from high-energy, non-cohesive, bedload-dominated flows to low-energy, cohesive, suspension-dominated deposition. This shift is marked by a 32 µm grain-size threshold that separates coarse-grained (F1–F3; >32 µm) from fine-grained (F4–F6; <32 µm) facies. Grain-size breaks at this threshold mark the transition from non-cohesive to cohesive deposition, and from bed-load to suspended-load dominated regimes. Event-internal facies organize into pulses and pulse groups that stack hierarchically into three patterns: single-pulsed, multi-pulsed and amalgamated. The amalgamated pattern comprises two or more single- or multi-pulsed successions separated by breaks in the fining-upward trend. Breaks marked by opportunistic trace fossils or by F6 indicate pauses during deposition (quasi-synchronous flows); whereas their absence suggests synchronous flows. Most event beds are amalgamated and comprise flows emplaced at different times and sourced from different directions, as reflected by variable composition, facies, and paleo-flow indicators. Basin physiography strongly influences facies development and deposit thickness: basin highs record erosion–deposition stages, whereas depocenters favor ponding turbid water masses in prolonged suspension, producing thick fine-grained tops. Here, transitional facies (F4) forms where new flows interact with the still-settling suspension clouds, allowing interpretation of complex mainshock–aftershock sequences; this process is enhanced in depocenters but absent at basin highs. By providing new insights into hydrodynamic conditions, relative depositional timing and duration of event bed deposition in hadal trenches, the resulting facies-based framework advances the event stratigraphy concept and improves global understanding of deep-marine and hadal sedimentary dynamics and supports the use of hadal event beds as robust natural archives of mainshock–aftershock and source-to-sink processes.

How to cite: Muthre, M., Proust, J.-N., Pizer, C., Ikehara, K., Huang, J.-J. S., Naruse, H., and Strasser, M.: Facies analysis provides new insights into event bed deposition in a hadal trench environment , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20371, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20371, 2026.

EGU26-20784 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Deciphering Middle-Upper Eocene Environmental Conditions Using Geochemical Trends: Insights from Beni Suef area, Northeastern Desert, Egypt 

Mostafa Mohamed, Michael Wagreich, Petra Heinz, Ibrahim M. Abd El-Gaied, Susanne Gier, Erik Wolfgring, Ramadan El-Kahawy, Ahmed G. Ali, Ammar Mannaa, Rabea Haredy, and Dina M. Sayed

The reconstruction of detrital flux, paleoclimate, paleosalinity, paleo-primary productivity, paleohydrodynamic conditions, and paleo–water depth enhances the understanding of sedimentary processes and their drivers in deep-time greenhouse-icehouse transitions such as the Eocene to Oligocene times. This study uses detailed geochemical analyses of major oxides and trace elements in sediment samples collected from the Beni Suef Formation (Bartonian–Priabonian) and the Maadi Formation (Priabonian) in the southern Tethys shelf (Egypt, northeastern Desert). Detrital proxies, including Si/Al, Ti/Al, and Zr/Al, indicate an enhanced influx of terrigenous sediments in the middle portion of the Qurn Member of the Beni Suef Formation, as further supported by noticeable facies variations, particularly the transition from shale to coarser silt- and sand-sized fractions. Paleoclimate indicators (Sr/Ba, Rb/Sr, K₂O/Al₂O₃, and Sr/Cu) point to a climatic shift from humid to arid conditions, consistent with the regional Late Eocene aridification across the Tethyan realm. Paleosalinity proxies (Sr/Ba, Ca/Al, and Mg/Al*100) suggest episodic intensification of open marine influence and a reduction in freshwater input, with the upsection increase in Sr/Ba ratios, reflecting phases of enhanced marine water settings or decreased terrestrial runoff. Primary productivity was evaluated using multiple geochemical proxies such as P, Ni/Al, Cu/Al, P/Al, P/Ti, and Babio ratios, which collectively indicate generally low primary productivity interrupted by intervals of enhanced paleoproductivity or increased organic matter export to the sediments. This interpretation is further supported by the low total organic carbon (TOC) values. These results highlight the sensitivity of the southern Tethys shelf to Middle–Late Eocene climatic variability and the key role of prevailing paleoenvironmental conditions in controlling sediment supply, water chemistry, and biological productivity.

How to cite: Mohamed, M., Wagreich, M., Heinz, P., Abd El-Gaied, I. M., Gier, S., Wolfgring, E., El-Kahawy, R., Ali, A. G., Mannaa, A., Haredy, R., and Sayed, D. M.: Deciphering Middle-Upper Eocene Environmental Conditions Using Geochemical Trends: Insights from Beni Suef area, Northeastern Desert, Egypt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20784, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20784, 2026.

EGU26-21414 | ECS | PICO | SSP1.9

Field Evidence for Intrusive Speleothem Formation in the Cradle of Humankind, South Africa 

Tebogo V. Makhubela, Lee R. Berger, Tariye Onyeogu, Lambert van Rooyen, and John Hawks

The stratigraphic relationship between flowstones and clastic cave deposits in the Cradle of Humankind (Cradle) UNESCO World Heritage Site is central to establishing the ages of key hominin-bearing sequences. A recent petrographic synthesis suggested that intrusive flowstones do not occur in the Cradle, implying that all flowstones represent conformable depositional breaks and provide reliable chronological constraints. Our new field observations from the Gladysvale Cave challenge this interpretation and document a clear example of intrusive flowstone formation within fossil-bearing sandstone. The observed carbonate body penetrates the sandstone along bedding planes and fractures, incorporating angular clasts and forming irregular, cross-cutting, and vein-like geometries. These field relationships demonstrate the precipitation of calcite from infiltrating CaCO3-rich fluids into pre-existing voids, which postdate clastic deposition and partial lithification. The intrusive flowstone displays multiple sub-packages with interfingering terminations, abundant small to large-sized cavities, and lateral offshoots that wrap around brecciated clasts. Such geometries are diagnostic of intrusion rather than surface accretion. The Gladysvale example provides definitive field evidence that intrusive flowstones occur within fossil-bearing deposits of the Cradle and can mimic the morphology of primary depositional flowstones. Their recognition is essential for correctly interpreting speleothem–clastic relationships and for refining the chronological framework of hominin-bearing cave systems.

How to cite: Makhubela, T. V., Berger, L. R., Onyeogu, T., van Rooyen, L., and Hawks, J.: Field Evidence for Intrusive Speleothem Formation in the Cradle of Humankind, South Africa, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21414, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21414, 2026.

EGU26-22335 | PICO | SSP1.9

Taxonomic Diversity and Morphological Variability of Proboscidea from the Early Miocene 

Konstantin Cincinnatus, María Rios, and Vicente Roures

Proboscideans (Afrotheria, Paenungulata) have been found in Early Miocene layers of Portugal. The oldest specimens of proboscideans in Portugal have been found in the Targus Basin. The Museo Geológico in Lisbon, Portugal, houses teeth of Early to Middle Miocene proboscideans from the Lisbon area. These remains have been ascribed to the genera: Deinotherium, Serridentinus, Trilophodon, and Zygolophodon. Serridentinus and Trilophodon are recognised as synonym for Gomphotherium. However, specimens in Portugal ascribed to Zygolophodon are most likely misinterpreted and instead belong to Gomphotherium. The current consensus is that Gomphotherium and Deinotherium are the only two genera present in the Early Miocene of Portugal. They migrated to the Iberian Peninsula from France in two separate events. Dinotherium reached Portugal later than Gomphotherium, most likely due to a change in the vegetation following the Miocene Climatic Optimum. Platybelodon may also have been present in Portugal at this time. Here, we study the Early Miocene proboscidean teeth from the Museo Geológico in Lisbon. We analysed and compared the teeth morphometrically to deduce the taxonomic diversity and morphological variability. These results can further be related to the environmental conditions and the diet of proboscideans in the Early Miocene of Portugal.

How to cite: Cincinnatus, K., Rios, M., and Roures, V.: Taxonomic Diversity and Morphological Variability of Proboscidea from the Early Miocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22335, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22335, 2026.

EGU26-1738 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

Earthquake-related fluids behaviour at Salse di Nirano mud volcano field (Italy) 

Elisa Ferrari, Andrea Luca Rizzo, Gioia Capelli Ghioldi, Alessandra Sciarra, Giancarlo Tamburello, Fátima Viveiros, Sara Lovati, and Marco Massa

Salse di Nirano (Fiorano Modenese, Italy) host one of the largest mud volcano fields of Europe. They are positioned upon an anticline structure of the NE-verging fold-and-thrust Northern Apennine belt and emit fluids mainly consisting of clay mud, saline water and hydrocarbons (liquid and gas). Like most of the world’s mud volcanoes, their gas emissions are primarily composed of methane (> 98%), with minor contributions from carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and other hydrocarbons (Mazzini and Etiope, 2017). Two main fault and fracture systems (one NW-SE oriented and the other SW-NE/ENE-WSW oriented) allow fluids migration to the surface (e.g., Bonini, 2008). From a geomorphological point of view, Salse di Nirano are placed within a caldera-like depression presumably formed by progressive collapse due to degassing (e.g. Bonini, 2008) or as the final stage of mud diapir evolution (Castaldini et al., 2005).

As many world’s mud volcanoes, Salse di Nirano activity is closely linked to tectonic processes (Martinelli and Ferrari, 1991; Bonini, 2009). With the aim of studying the interplay between geofluids and seismicity, a multiparametric monitoring system was set up in 2023. Two distinct mud pools were selected for the continuous monitoring of mud level/density, temperature and electrical conductivity. In addition, a permanent station measuring CO2 flux diffused by the soil was installed at the edge of the mud volcanoes field, where higher gas fluxes were detected (Ferrari et al., 2024). Recently, the station has been upgraded with a methane sensor. A meteorological station and a velocimeter were installed to monitor the atmospheric parameters and the seismic activity of the area, respectively.

Overall, the multiparametric monitoring system continuously recorded about two years of data. Periodic oscillations were identified, with some anomalous variations of mud level, temperature, electrical conductivity and soil gas flux that have been compared with environmental data (meteorological and soil-related) and seismicity. Notably, synchronous changes in mud pools electrical conductivity and soil CO2 fluxes were detected in relation to two distinct seismic swarms occurred in February and August 2024. In addition, differences in the behaviour of the two mud pools were also observed throughout all the time-series and presumably point to extremely local conditions influencing the common feeding system. All these observations highlight the efficiency of the presented continuous multiparametric monitoring system in inferring new insights on mud volcano crustal fluids dynamics. This work reports the results achieved in the framework of the INGV-MUR project Pianeta Dinamico.

References

Bonini, M.; 2008: Geology Vol. 36, pp. 131-134, https://doi.org/10.1130/G24158A.1.

Bonini, M.; 2009: Tectonophysics Vol. 474, pp. 723-735. doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2009.05.018.

Castaldini, D., Valdati, J., Ilies, D.C., Chiriac, C., Bertogna, I.; 2005: Italian Journal of Quaternary Sciences Vol. 18, n. 1, pp. 245-255.

Martinelli, G., Ferrari, G.; 1991: Tectonophysics Vol. 193, n. 4, pp. 397-410, https://doi.org/10.1016/0040-1951(91)90348-V.

Mazzini, A., Etiope, G.; 2017: Earth-Science Reviews Vol. 168, pp. 81-112, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2017.03.001.

Ferrari, E., Massa, M., Lovati, S., Di Michele, F., Rizzo, A.L.; 2024: Frontiers in Earth Science Vol. 12, n. 1412900, pp. 1-26, https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2024.1412900.

How to cite: Ferrari, E., Rizzo, A. L., Capelli Ghioldi, G., Sciarra, A., Tamburello, G., Viveiros, F., Lovati, S., and Massa, M.: Earthquake-related fluids behaviour at Salse di Nirano mud volcano field (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1738, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1738, 2026.

EGU26-5050 | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

Clumped isotope signatures of methane from mud volcanoes in Italy and Romania: implications for microbial activity  

Naizhong Zhang, Jan Meissner, Nico Kueter, Stefano Bernasconi, Lukas Emmenegger, Calin Baciu, Alexandru Lupulescu, Alessandra Sciarra, Fausto Grassa, Adriano Mazzini, Alexis Gilbert, Keita Yamada, Yuichiro Ueno, and Joachim Mohn

Natural gas seeps and mud volcanoes are widely distributed across terrestrial and shallow submarine sedimentary basins and contribute considerable amounts of fossil methane to the atmosphere. Methane emissions from these systems are commonly interpreted as dominantly thermogenic in origin; however, microbial activity may significantly contribute to, or overprint, these emissions through secondary methanogenesis or methane oxidation during gas migration and storage.

Conventional bulk isotope composition (δ¹³C and δD) and hydrocarbon concentration ratios are often insufficient to distinguish secondary microbial contributions from an initial thermogenic source. Independent of bulk isotopic signatures, methane clumped isotopes (Δ¹³CH₃D and Δ¹²CH₂D₂) provide direct constraints on methane formation pathways and post-generation alteration processes. Recent studies have revealed low-temperature near-equilibrium clumped-isotope signatures in mud-volcano systems in Azerbaijan1, indicative of strong microbial overprinting, whereas methane from Japanese mud volcanoes exhibits clumped isotope signatures spanning from far from equilibrium to near equilibrium values2. For the latter, clumped isotope signatures of methane correlate with 13C-position-specific isotope composition of propane, suggesting the biodegradation of higher hydrocarbons is associated with progressive modification of methane clumped isotopes.

Here, we investigate methane emissions from mud volcanoes and gas seeps in central and southern Italy (n = 14) and Romania (n = 15). Methane bulk and clumped isotope composition (δ¹³C, δD, Δ¹³CH₃D and Δ¹²CH₂D₂) are analyzed using a quantum cascade laser absorption spectrometer (QCLAS) equipped with a customized gas-inlet system at Empa3. Propane concentrations span from below detection to 0.8%, indicating a wide range of potential microbial influence. Selected samples are further characterized by propane position-specific isotope analyses at Science Tokyo following established protocols by Gilbert et al. 4, providing constraints on the extent of secondary microbial processes affecting higher hydrocarbons.

Preliminary clumped-isotope results from Italian mud volcanoes indicate near-equilibrium signatures consistent with strong microbial influence, comparable to patterns reported from Azerbaijan mud-volcano systems. In contrast, Romanian samples exhibit pronounced variability in propane concentrations, providing a critical test case to explore whether methane clumped-isotope systematics transition toward more thermogenic-dominated patterns with secondary microbial influence, similar to those observed in Japanese systems. By integrating new datasets from Italy and Romania with published clumped-isotope and propane intramolecular isotope data, this study explores whether microbial influences on methane emissions follow consistent or system-specific patterns across mud-volcano and gas-seep systems globally.

 

[1] Liu et al., 2023 Geology

[2] Gilbert et al., 2025 EGU2025 Abstract

[3] Zhang et al., 2025 Anal. Chem.

[4] Gilbert et al. 2019 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.

How to cite: Zhang, N., Meissner, J., Kueter, N., Bernasconi, S., Emmenegger, L., Baciu, C., Lupulescu, A., Sciarra, A., Grassa, F., Mazzini, A., Gilbert, A., Yamada, K., Ueno, Y., and Mohn, J.: Clumped isotope signatures of methane from mud volcanoes in Italy and Romania: implications for microbial activity , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5050, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5050, 2026.

EGU26-5222 | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

Mud volcanoes as natural laboratories for fluid-driven processes: a comparison between Nirano and Aragona (Italy) 

Valeria Misiti, Stefania Pinzi, Alessandra Sciarra, Fausto Grassa, Antonio Cascella, and Alessandra Venuti

This study presents a comparative analysis of the two key example of sedimentary volcanism in Italy: the mud volcanoes of Salse di Nirano (Northern Italy) and the Maccalube of Aragona (Sicily). Mud volcanoes are not related to magmatic activity but result from the ascent of gas, mainly methane, which transports mud, water and fine-grained sediments to the surface These systems represent natural laboratories for investigating subsurface fluid migration, gas-driven processes, and their surface expressions.

At both sites, mud and fluid samples were collected to perform geochemical, mineralogical, magnetic, and paleontological analyses, providing integrated constraints on fluid sources, sediment provenance, and mud volcano dynamics

Despite their apparent similarities, the two sites display markedly different genetic mechanisms and activity style. The study is carried out within the framework of the INGV-MUR project Pianeta Dinamico, called PROMUD.

The Nirano mud volcanoes are characterized by slow and persistent activity, forming small and stable mud cones and bubbling pools. This behavior reflects the compressional tectonic setting of the Northern Apennines, where fractures facilitate the upward migration of fluids and hydrocarbons. The extruded material mainly consists of ARGILLE SCAGLIOSE, the main constituent of the volcanoes, marly clays rich in CaCO3, and Plio-Pleistocene clay sediments, while saline waters indicate an ancient marine depositional environment.

In contrast, the Maccalube of Aragona area exhibits highly variable and sometimes violent activity, with bubbling mud pools and sudden eruptive events. Here, the mud composition derives from poorly consolidate shallow clayey sediments, and methane is generated within organic-rich sediments. Brackish waters are likely derived from compaction processes of marine sediments.

The comparison highlights how similar fluid-driven process can produce contrasting surface features, levels of activity and hazard scenarios.

How to cite: Misiti, V., Pinzi, S., Sciarra, A., Grassa, F., Cascella, A., and Venuti, A.: Mud volcanoes as natural laboratories for fluid-driven processes: a comparison between Nirano and Aragona (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5222, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5222, 2026.

Mud volcanoes represent key natural pathways for the transfer of deep-seated fluids to the surface, yet their gas composition and degassing behavior can vary significantly depending on geological setting and post-genetic processes. Here we present a comparative geochemical and monitoring-based study of mud volcano systems from Azerbaijan and Northern Italy, integrating molecular composition, stable isotopes (δ¹³C-CH₄, δ²H-CH₄, δ¹³C-CO₂) and soil gas flux measurements, to investigate the dynamics of crustal fluid circulation and the release of climate-relevant gases to the atmosphere.

Azerbaijani mud volcanoes are characterized by CH₄-dominated gases with variable contributions of CO₂ and higher hydrocarbons, wide ranges in C₁/C₂⁺ ratios, and isotopic signatures indicating predominantly thermogenic methane, locally affected by secondary microbial processes and mixing during migration. These systems commonly display significant and spatially focused CH₄ and CO₂ fluxes, reflecting active and deep-rooted fluid pathways, and highlighting an efficient transfer of deep fluids to the atmosphere and a potentially significant role in natural greenhouse gas emissions.

Northern Italian mud volcanoes are also characterized by CH₄-dominated gases with low content of CO₂ and wide ranges of C₁/C₂⁺ ratios, but isotopic signatures indicate a dominant secondary microbial methane origin, associated with biodegradation of hydrocarbons and subsequent methanogenesis, producing isotopically heavy CO₂. Soil gas flux measurements are generally lower than those reported for Azerbaijan mud volcanoes, suggesting that deep-sourced gases are largely attenuated by shallow processes and limited near-surface permeability.

The comparison highlights how mud volcanoes with similar surface expressions can reflect markedly different subsurface processes, fluid sources and degassing dynamics. These results emphasize the importance of integrated geochemical characterization and monitoring to 1) properly assess mud volcano activity, 2) their contributions to greenhouse gas emissions and 3) their environmental and societal implications including associated geohazards.

How to cite: Sciarra, A. and Mazzini, A.: Comparative gas geochemistry and degassing behavior of mud volcanoes: insights from Azerbaijan and Northern Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8482, 2026.

EGU26-12274 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

Multispectral pre-labelling workflow for mud volcano training datasets: a case study at the Maccalube of Aragona 

Massimiliano Guastella, Raffaele Martorana, Antonino Pisciotta, and Antonino D'Alessandro

Mud volcanoes are highly dynamic geohazard environments in which surface conditions can change over very short timescales due to episodic mud extrusion, flow, drying, cracking and oxidation. The resulting landscapes are spatially heterogeneous and typically include mixtures of fresh and weathered mud, crusted deposits, bare soil and dense or sparse vegetation. Considering the opportunities offered by deep learning for environmental monitoring, a consistent categorization of these surfaces is essential to quantify spatial patterns through time and to assess the evolution of active areas. However, progress is often limited by the lack of high quality, domain-specific labelled datasets. This gap slows the adoption of deep learning models in specialized environmental settings such as mud volcanoes, because the most readily available training datasets are largely drawn from urban and human-centered contexts. While manual annotation can partially compensate for limited training data, it is labor-intensive and difficult to standardize across operators, especially where class transitions are gradual and boundaries are diffuse rather than sharp.

This study investigates how multispectral orthophotos can support separation of key mud volcano surface features and thereby accelerate mask creation for dataset generation. We present a case study at the Aragona mud volcano field (Sicily, Italy), called the Maccalube, using imagery acquired with a DJI Mavic 3 Multispectral and processed into an orthomosaic with Agisoft Metashape. We first evaluated common soil and vegetation oriented spectral indices as separability baselines. In this setting, however, baseline indices can be ambiguous because wet clay-rich substrates and thin surface water films may yield intermediate responses that overlap low cover vegetation. We additionally tested common rapid segmentation methods on the RGB orthomosaic including K-means, Simple Linear Iterative Clustering and Segmentate Anything.  These algorithms show poor performance, often merging distinct classes and fragmenting individual ones, which requires substantial manual correction.

We therefore introduce a practical band combination that integrates information from the visible channels with the red-edge and near-infrared bands to improve discrimination between vegetation, wet mud and drier or more weathered mud areas. The calculation is constructed in two steps: first, the visible channels are combined into a neutrality term that increases when RGB responses are similar (low color contrast). Second, this term is multiplied by an inverted red-edge contrast component derived from the near-infrared and red-edge bands, reducing the output where a strong red-edge rise is present. The result of the proposed band combination is a pre-labelling layer that can be thresholded to generate candidate masks with improved vegetation suppression. Remaining ambiguities are mainly confined to non-vegetated materials with similar dark appearance, including very fresh dark mud versus other bare substrates.  Overall, the workflow offers a practical way to accelerate mask creation in domains where labelled data are limited. It supports the rapid development of domain specific training datasets for deep learning applications, in light of future automated monitoring of these environments.

How to cite: Guastella, M., Martorana, R., Pisciotta, A., and D'Alessandro, A.: Multispectral pre-labelling workflow for mud volcano training datasets: a case study at the Maccalube of Aragona, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12274, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12274, 2026.

EGU26-13197 | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

The Maccalube d’Aragona mud volcano Monitoring System 

Eliana Bellucci Sessa and the Maccalube Team

We describe the design, implementation, and evaluation of a combined monitoring tasks to better understand a mud volcano (MV) activity, in the framework of INGV Pianeta Dinamico – MT-PROMUD project. The study site is the Maccalube d’Aragona (Sicily, Italy) protected reserve, hosting a MV field. Maccalube MV is characterized by continuous low-energy emissions of mud, water and gases (mainly CH4) as well as episodic paroxysmal eruptions. During the 2014 paroxysm, two children were buried by the mud fallout, and the site has been under judicial seizure for several years, until early 2025.

Starting from 2023, we carried out a series of pilot studies and consultations to design a monitoring network and to plan simultaneous acquisitions of multidisciplinary signals and spot surveys. The resulting monitoring strategy includes: 1) permanent instrumentation, acquiring in a continuous mode, seismic signals, meteorological parameters, soil temperature, apparent volumetric water content, Temperature, Electric Conductivity and water column pressure (CTD) in the mud pool; 2) mobile devices, for spot acquisitions of mud emitting vents positions (GNSS), tromographies, hydrophone recordings for acoustic soundscape characterization, apparent soil volumetric water content and environmental radioactivity measures, (focused on 222Rn and 220Rn emissions), and geoelectrical tomographies; 3) sample collections of plants  for metabolomic analysis, water and gas emitted from MV and mud pools for chemical and isotopic analyses, mud for magnetic, micropaleontological and mineralogical investigations. All spot surveys were documented with photographic reportages.

This monitoring system enabled the acquisition of high quality and unique data associated with the paroxysmal eruption of 29 August 2025, as well as variations in MV activity in occasion of a local earthquake.

Our combined and multidisciplinary approach provided a comprehensive picture of mud volcanoes functioning and can serve as a model to assess the need for future monitoring of other mud volcanoes.

How to cite: Bellucci Sessa, E. and the Maccalube Team: The Maccalube d’Aragona mud volcano Monitoring System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13197, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13197, 2026.

EGU26-16824 | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

DEMETRA - A Seismic Noise Survey at the Maccalube di Aragona Mud Volcanoes: Results and Perspectives 

Simona Petrosino, Paola Cusano, Paolo Madonia, and Daniele Gucciardo

On 22–23 April 2025, a seismic noise survey was carried out at the Maccalube di Aragona mud volcano field (Sicily, southern Italy), with the aim of investigating the characteristics of the background seismic signal related to vent activity, and the shallow subsurface structure. The experiment, named DEMETRA (DEnse MaccalubE TRomino Acquisition), was conducted within the INGV–PROMUD multidisciplinary research project, aimed at identifying diagnostic indicators of mud volcano activity and potential precursors of paroxysmal events. Ambient seismic noise was acquired at 21 sites using three-component, 24-bit digital tromograph deployed with a high spatial density across vent zones and surrounding areas. The data analyses include spectral characterization, horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR) computation, and estimate of the polarization pattern of the recorded signals. The HVSR results do not reveal distinct amplification peaks but instead show site-dependent deamplification features. Polarization analysis highlights coherent directional patterns within the vent areas. Furthermore, transient signals embedded in the background noise were detected at some sites; their spectral content and polarization properties suggest a possible association with degassing processes, mud emissions, or surface bubbling phenomena. Owing to its dense spatial coverage, the DEMETRA experiment provides a valuable dataset for improving the understanding of subsurface properties and dynamic processes in active mud volcano systems.

How to cite: Petrosino, S., Cusano, P., Madonia, P., and Gucciardo, D.: DEMETRA - A Seismic Noise Survey at the Maccalube di Aragona Mud Volcanoes: Results and Perspectives, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16824, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16824, 2026.

EGU26-17707 | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

Biodiversity and Environmental Stressors: Some applications to mud volcanoes 

Enza De Lauro, Mariarosaria Falanga, Zahra Alizadeh, Nunziatina De Tommasi, Paola Forlano, Giulia Giunti, Daniele Gucciardo, Emanuele Rosa, Simona Mancini, Alessandra Sciarra, and Paola Cusano

Halophytic species thriving in these environments display remarkable phytochemical resilience through specialized metabolite production. In Atriplex sagittata Borkh. (Nirano), 64 compounds, including flavonoids and phenylethylamine alkaloids, were identified. Sulfated flavonoids and alkaloids were enriched in populations exposed to higher salt inputs (Na⁺, Cl⁻, Br⁻). Similarly, Puccinellia fasciculata (Torr.) E.P.Bicknell exhibited enhanced production of sulfated flavonoids and alkaloids in the more saline soil of Ferdinando cone, and its polar extract inducing up to 85.3% mortality in Drosophila melanogaster, indicating environmentally triggered bioactive defenses. We studied the metabolome of Lavatera agrigentina Tineo and Suaeda vera Forssk. ex J.F.Gmel collected in Maccalube Nature Reserve and in a nearby stress-free environment. Analysis of the hydroalcoholic extract of S. vera using by LC-MS revealed a rich phytochemical profile, including flavonoids and sulphated flavonoids, phenylethylamine alkaloids and phenolic compounds. Similarly, HR-ESI-MS analysis of L. agrigentina identified metabolites such as flavonoids, coumarins, and terpenes. Comparative analysis showed that plants from the stress-free environment  produced lower levels of abscisic acid, glycosylated, and sulphated derivatives.

Radionuclide measurements in soils, mud and water pools complemented the botanical observations, revealing significant site-specific behavior. High concentrations of radon (²²²Rn) were detected exclusively at active mud emission centers, correlating with gas bubbling flows. Gamma spectrometry of mud, soil, and plant tissues (226Ra, ²³²Th, ⁴⁰K, 137Cs) indicated generally homogeneous distributions; however, ⁴⁰K levels in dried plants were linked to biological activity, suggesting an interplay between vegetation and the radioactive properties of volcanic substrates.

This study, conducted on both Nirano and Maccalube Nature Reserves, was supported by the PROMUD (PROtocol for MUD volcanoes) project, funded by the Italian Ministry of University and Research INGV Pianeta Dinamico Project. The results show how the  plant species, particularly halophytes, can modulate their specialized metabolite pathways in response to environmental stressors in sedimentary volcanic settings. These findings underscore the value of sedimentary mud volcanoes as natural laboratories for studying environmental stress adaptation and biogeochemical interactions.

 

How to cite: De Lauro, E., Falanga, M., Alizadeh, Z., De Tommasi, N., Forlano, P., Giunti, G., Gucciardo, D., Rosa, E., Mancini, S., Sciarra, A., and Cusano, P.: Biodiversity and Environmental Stressors: Some applications to mud volcanoes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17707, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17707, 2026.

EGU26-17807 | Posters on site | GMPV10.10

Imaging near-surface geometry of mud volcanoes: a multi-method geophysical study from Monteleone di Fermo (Marche Region, Italy) 

Miller Zambrano, Humberto Arellano, Dougleimis Torres, Nunzia Lucci, Antonio Ughi, Anakarina Arias, Selenia Ramos, and Yoan Mateus

Mud volcanoes are key geo-environmental features, particularly in central Italy, where their origin is linked to the interaction between tectonics, fluid migration, and high sedimentation rates. In the Monteleone di Fermo area (Marche Region), these structures are aligned with active thrust faults and anticlines of the Marche–Abruzzi system. Despite their relevance as geo-heritage sites and their potential as geohazard indicators, a significant gap persists in the knowledge of their subsurface architecture. Previous studies have focused primarily on compositional aspects and geomorphological descriptions, proposing contrasting triggering and fluid transport mechanisms.This work constitutes a pioneering study in the geophysical characterization of the Monteleone di Fermo mud volcanoes, aiming to define their near-surface geometry and distribution. A multi-parametric approach was applied, integrating full-waveform 3D Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and 2D seismic refraction tomography (P- and S-wave velocities). Results show distinctive geophysical signatures associated with the system’s saturation state and mud accumulation. The 3D ERT imaging, reaching effective depths of nearly 100 m, shows a slight resistivity contrast between mud bodies (ρ = 10–15 Ω·m) and the hosting clay-rich deposits with lower resistivity (ρ = 8–10 Ω·m). Seismic tomography reveals a marked contrast between the mud edifice and the hosting sediments. In particular, Poisson’s ratio increases (ν > 0.45), indicating the presence of fully saturated muds intruding the clay-rich sediments (ν = 0.35–0.40).These results demonstrate both the feasibility and limitations of full-waveform geo-electrical data for deep 3D resistivity imaging in clay-rich sediments, testing the detectability of mud-volcano structures under low resistivity-contrast conditions. The study further benchmarks sensitivity against complementary seismic indicators (Vp/Vs and Poisson’s ratio), supporting a multi-physics strategy for resolving fluid-migration pathways in challenging near-surface settings.

How to cite: Zambrano, M., Arellano, H., Torres, D., Lucci, N., Ughi, A., Arias, A., Ramos, S., and Mateus, Y.: Imaging near-surface geometry of mud volcanoes: a multi-method geophysical study from Monteleone di Fermo (Marche Region, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17807, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17807, 2026.

SSP2 – Stratigraphy, Earth Systems History and Climate Geology

EGU26-305 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Unravelling the impact of the Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 (ETM2) : A high-resolution shallow marine record from Belgium  

Julien Talon, Pierre Pellenard, Alina Iakovleva, Ekaterina Shcherbinina, Mathieu Martinez, Florence Quesnel, Clara Rusch, Nicolas Dupont, Johann Schnyder, François Baudin, Christian Dupuis, and Jean-Marc Baele

The early Eocene long-term warming was punctuated by relatively short (50 to 200 kyr) and abrupt warming events, which are used as analogues to understand current anthropogenic global warming. Among these hyperthermal events, the Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 (ETM2) corresponds to an orbitally paced release of 2,600 to 3,800 Gt of carbon at 54.1 Ma. It has primarily been identified in deep oceanic settings, while terrestrial and coastal records of this event remain scarce. Indeed, the ETM2 has only been identified in shallow marine settings in a few locations (Arctic, USA Atlantic coast, Egypt, India, and New Zealand), hindering a full understanding of its environmental impact.

Here, we present a high-resolution multi-proxy record from a newly drilled 25-m-long core in southwest Belgium (Mons Basin), at a paleolatitude of ~40°N, combining Gamma-ray spectrometry, mineralogy (XRD bulk-rock and clays, TEM, grain-size) and organic geochemistry (δ13Corg, Rock-Eval®, and palynofacies). Sedimentological interpretation indicates a siliciclastic tidal shallow marine environment (a few tens of meters water depth). Using an age model based on nannofossils, dinocysts and cyclostratigraphy, the ETM2 is recorded over approximately 2.5 m by a ~1‰ negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE) located within the NP11 nannofossil biozone. The peak of this CIE corresponds, with a slight delay, to an increase in carbonate content and nannofossil abundance, suggesting enhanced primary productivity related to an intensified hydrological cycle and higher nutrient inputs during the ETM2. An increase in detrital input is also suggested by the transition to coarser grain size. After a progressive decline in kaolinite, illite, and chlorite contents in the clay fraction, smectite becomes the dominant clay mineral during the CIE, possibly pointing to a transgressive event in relation with the ETM2, as also suggested by palynofacies and dinocyst assemblages.

This study presents the first high-resolution record of the ETM2 in the coastal environments of the southern North Sea Basin, preserved in the Mons Basin. In these settings, the ETM2 is associated with a deepening trend, possibly related to sea-level rise, as well as with increased primary productivity and detrital inputs, which point to an enhanced hydrological cycle.

How to cite: Talon, J., Pellenard, P., Iakovleva, A., Shcherbinina, E., Martinez, M., Quesnel, F., Rusch, C., Dupont, N., Schnyder, J., Baudin, F., Dupuis, C., and Baele, J.-M.: Unravelling the impact of the Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 (ETM2) : A high-resolution shallow marine record from Belgium , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-305, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-305, 2026.

EGU26-1424 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

BENTHICS: Benthic Foraminiferal Temperature-Based High-Resolution Ice-Volume Reconstructions during Cenozoic Snapshots 

Leon Koniarczyk, Oliver Friedrich, Nele Meckler, and Victoria Taylor

The response of ice sheets and sea level to a warming climate is of global concern, with significant implications for human populations. To better understand these dynamics, especially during climates warmer than today, this project reconstructs sea-level and ice-sheet variability across six glacial-interglacial (G-IG) cycles of the late Cenozoic (~5 Ma), spanning the transition from the Pliocene greenhouse to the Pleistocene icehouse.

We use paired measurements of benthic foraminiferal δ¹⁸O and Mg/Ca ratios to reconstruct bottom-water temperature (BWT) and derive seawater δ¹⁸O (δ¹⁸Osw), a proxy for global ice volume. While effective for interglacials, the Mg/Ca proxy likely overestimates glacial lowstands due to non-thermal effects. To improve reconstructions, we integrate carbonate clumped isotope (Δ₄₇) thermometry, a seawater chemistry-independent BWT proxy, using material from Eastern Equatorial Pacific ODP Site 849. Though analytically demanding, Δ₄₇ offers a critical calibration check for Mg/Ca-derived BWTs.

Preliminary paired δ¹⁸O-Mg/Ca data from Oridorsalis umbonatus (3.35–2.0 Ma) at sub-millennial resolution reveal G-IG sea-level cycles with glacial lowstands lower than previous estimates. Δ₄₇-BWTs, available at lower resolution, broadly support the Mg/Ca-based reconstructions, reinforcing their validity despite limited precision and resolution.

Future work will refine the understanding of discrepancies between Mg/Ca- and Δ₄₇-derived BWTs, improving glacial sea-level estimates. This study aims to constrain sea-level variability rates and assess existing reconstructions, offering a more robust understanding of past ice-volume dynamics and informing projections of future sea-level rise.

How to cite: Koniarczyk, L., Friedrich, O., Meckler, N., and Taylor, V.: BENTHICS: Benthic Foraminiferal Temperature-Based High-Resolution Ice-Volume Reconstructions during Cenozoic Snapshots, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1424, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1424, 2026.

EGU26-2851 | Orals | CL1.1.2

Reconstructing Late Miocene Arctic Climate from North Greenland Speleothems 

Gina E. Moseley, Gabriella Koltai, Jonathan L. Baker, Jian Wang, Heather Stoll, Anika Donner, Lena Anders (née Friedrich), Christoph Spötl, M. Paul Smith, Denis Scholz, Hai Cheng, Adam Hartland, Clivia Hejny, and R. Lawrence Edwards

Reconstructing terrestrial climate conditions in the high Arctic during the Late Miocene (∼11.6–5.3 Ma) is essential for understanding how polar environments respond to warmer-than-present global climates. However, direct land-based climate archives from the Arctic are rare, limiting understanding of terrestrial climate sensitivity under greenhouse-gas concentrations comparable to present and near-future conditions. Here we present a terrestrial proxy record from speleothems collected in a cave in eastern North Greenland (∼80.3°N). Speleothem growth phases indicate repeated intervals of sustained permafrost absence, implying significantly warmer and wetter conditions than today under moderate atmospheric CO₂ forcing and elevated regional sea-surface temperatures. Trace-element variability further suggests episodic glaciation in North Greenland during the Late Miocene, pointing to a highly dynamic cryosphere. Together, these results highlight pronounced terrestrial climate variability in the Arctic under warm background conditions broadly relevant to future climate trajectories. This new archive provides an important benchmark for assessing high-latitude climate sensitivity and feedbacks in a warming world.

How to cite: Moseley, G. E., Koltai, G., Baker, J. L., Wang, J., Stoll, H., Donner, A., Anders (née Friedrich), L., Spötl, C., Smith, M. P., Scholz, D., Cheng, H., Hartland, A., Hejny, C., and Edwards, R. L.: Reconstructing Late Miocene Arctic Climate from North Greenland Speleothems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2851, 2026.

EGU26-3542 | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Paleoclimatic conditions during Marine Isotope Stage 31 – a global database for PMIP Interglacials 

Antje H. L. Voelker and Nazik Ogretmen

Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 31 is an interglacial period during the later part of the Early Pleistocene, which is often referred to as a super-interglacial due to the perceived strong warming in the polar regions. The new atmospheric pCO2 stack from Nuber et al. (2025; https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-6480074/v1) indicates levels reaching up to 285 ppm, placing MIS 31 into the same range as interglacial MIS 11c, the last interglacial MIS 5e or the Holocene. Based on the LR04 isotope stack, the timing of MIS 31 was defined as the period from 1081 to 1062 ka. However, in records from the mid-latitudinal North Atlantic, interglacial oceanographic conditions started much earlier, i.e., around 1092 ka, and the interval from 1092-1062 ka is perceived to represent MIS 31. Last year, the PMIP-Interglacials working group decided to include a MIS 31 time slice into the scenarios to be modelled. So, the database presented here aims to compile paleoclimatic and paleoecological information for the model-data comparison. Currently, the database includes 113 sites, of which 89 are from the marine environment and 13 are loess records. The sites are globally widely distributed and 45 sites provide direct temperature information either as sea-surface temperature or as lake water temperature reconstructions. After evaluating the respective age models, we will use the compiled data to produce time slice reconstructions for the early and peak interglacial phases of MIS 31.

How to cite: Voelker, A. H. L. and Ogretmen, N.: Paleoclimatic conditions during Marine Isotope Stage 31 – a global database for PMIP Interglacials, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3542, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3542, 2026.

EGU26-4308 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.2

Neogene Australian hydroclimate variability exceeds model predictions 

Rohit Samant, Alexander Farnsworth, Or Mordecai Bialik, Stefan Back, Lars Reuning, Stephen Gallagher, Anta Clarisse Sarr, and David De Vleeschouwer

Australia’s Neogene hydroclimate evolved in response to continental drift and major global climate reorganizations, yet the magnitude and spatial structure of these changes remain poorly constrained. Moreover, the ability of climate models to reproduce Australian hydroclimate variability during deep-time warm periods has rarely been evaluated against geological data. Here, we reconstruct hydroclimate evolution across the Northwest Shelf of Australia over the past 23 million years using a continent-scale compilation of downhole natural gamma radiation (NGR) records and directly compare these reconstructions with climate model simulations.

We integrate NGR measurements from 105 industrial and scientific boreholes into a regionally coherent stratigraphic framework using automated Dynamic Time Warping, with biostratigraphic age control providing temporal calibration. High-resolution (~100 kyr) time-slice reconstructions reveal pronounced spatiotemporal variability in terrigenous input, reflecting changes in precipitation and continental runoff.

The reconstructions indicate persistently humid conditions during the Early Miocene, followed by an abrupt transition to widespread aridity at ~18-17 Ma. This major hydroclimate shift is not reflected in HadCM3 simulations, which instead suggest wetter conditions than those inferred from the NGR reconstruction across subtropical Australia during this interval. A subsequent increase in hydroclimate variability at ~6.5 Ma, marked by elevated NGR values, aligns with enhanced modeled precipitation and is consistent with an intensified Leeuwin Current and southward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, pointing to a transient return to wetter conditions. Lower NGR values during the Late Pliocene indicate the onset of a transitional phase preceding the establishment of fully arid conditions by ~2.4 Ma.

Together, these results demonstrate that the magnitude and spatial complexity of Neogene Australian hydroclimate variability inferred from geological records exceed those predicted by state-of-the-art climate models. The pronounced data-model mismatch in the Early and Middle Miocene highlights persistent challenges in simulating regional hydroclimate responses in warmer-than-present greenhouse climates. These findings underscore the importance of geological benchmarks for evaluating model performance and improving projections of future hydroclimate change.

How to cite: Samant, R., Farnsworth, A., Bialik, O. M., Back, S., Reuning, L., Gallagher, S., Sarr, A. C., and De Vleeschouwer, D.: Neogene Australian hydroclimate variability exceeds model predictions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4308, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4308, 2026.

EGU26-5445 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Ichnology of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum  

Olmo Miguez Salas, Luis Valero, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, Miguel Lopez Blanco, Victoriano Pujalte, and Miguel Garcés

The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) is among the most extensively studied climatic events in Earth’s history, primarily due to its relevance as an analogue for future climate change. This brief interval (<200kyr) is marked by a pronounced global temperature increase of approximately 4–8°C and widespread environmental disruptions, including ocean acidification, sea-level rise, intensification of the hydrological cycle, ice-sheet retreat, and significant species extinctions. Despite its importance, ichnological analyses—an essential tool for paleoenvironmental interpretation—remain relatively scarce compared to other Earth science studies.

To address this gap, we performed an ichnological analysis across several sections of the Iberian Peninsula: four sites within the Pyrenean Basin (Esplugafreda, Serraduy, Campo, and Zumaia), representing a continental-to-marine transect in a deep-water gulf opening toward the Bay of Biscay, and one deep-sea section along the southern margin of the Iberian Massif, connected to the Tethys Sea (Río Gor). In the south-pyrenean foreland, conforming an elongated restricted basin, the onset of the PETM coincided with the extinction of the tracemaker community. After that, on the platform areas, trace fossil assemblages were re-established prior to the recovery of the carbon isotope excursion, whereas in deep-sea settings, assemblages only partially recovered even after the excursion ended. These findings indicate a prolonged tracemaker recovery period during the PETM, suggesting that deep-sea tracemaker communities experienced extended ecological stress. In the southern margin of the Iberian Massif (i.e., open ocean setting), during the PETM a high trace fossil abundance is recorded.

Finally, by comparing our results with those from other parts of the world (previous published studies and ongoing research), we can hypothesize why the PETM did not cause a global extinction in the macrobenthic tracer community.

How to cite: Miguez Salas, O., Valero, L., Rodríguez-Tovar, F. J., Lopez Blanco, M., Pujalte, V., and Garcés, M.: Ichnology of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5445, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5445, 2026.

EGU26-6048 | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

A modern-like rate of climate change observed in the latest Paleocene 

Mingsong Li, Qingqing Jiang, and Yujing Wu

Understanding the pace of past carbon-cycle disruptions is essential for contextualizing today’s rapid warming. The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, ~56 Ma) is commonly invoked as an analogue for anthropogenic change, yet its comparatively protracted onset implies carbon release, warming, and acidification rates substantially slower than those observed today. In contrast, a short-lived 1–2‰ negative carbon isotope excursion immediately preceding the PETM, termed the pre-onset excursion (POE), has been reported from multiple sites, but its timing and duration remain controversial due to limited chronological control. Key questions therefore remain: How rapidly did climate and environmental change unfold during the POE, and can it provide a more appropriate rate analogue for near-future change? Here we analyze two high-sedimentation-rate paleo-shelf cores from the Mid-Atlantic Coastal Plain (Maryland, USA): South Dover Bridge (SDB) and Cambridge Dorchester Airport (Cam-Dor). High-resolution paleoclimate proxy time series from X-ray fluorescence (XRF) scanning are evaluated using spectral and tuning approaches, and astrochronologic robustness is assessed with statistical tests. Dominant stratigraphic cycles at ~10.5 m and ~2.0 m yield ratios consistent with short eccentricity (~100 kyr) and climatic precession (~20 kyr), implying a mean sedimentation rate of ~10 cm/kyr. The resulting astrochronology constrains the total duration of the POE to 6-8 kyr. Independent δ¹¹B constraints indicate that the POE was accompanied by measurable surface-ocean acidification of ~0.1–0.3 pH units. The inferred rate of pH decline during the POE is of the same order as the present, reinforcing the POE as a potential high-rate analogue and highlighting rapid recovery consistent with strong Earth-system buffering prior to full PETM feedback activation.

How to cite: Li, M., Jiang, Q., and Wu, Y.: A modern-like rate of climate change observed in the latest Paleocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6048, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6048, 2026.

EGU26-7307 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Similar Tropical Upper-Ocean Temperatures in the Late Miocene and Pleistocene Interglacials 

Maja Leusch, Madalina Jaggi, Stefano Bernasconi, and Heather Stoll

The late Miocene cooling (LMC; ~7–5.4 Ma) represents a major global climate transition associated with declining atmospheric CO₂, large-scale aridification, and reorganization of terrestrial ecosystems. While cooling at high and mid latitudes during this interval is well documented, temperature changes in the tropical oceans appear muted. Existing tropical sea-surface temperature (SST) reconstructions based on alkenone unsaturation (UK’37​) are limited by proxy saturation at ~29 °C, potentially leading to an underestimation of tropical warmth. Here, we investigate tropical upper-ocean temperature evolution during the late Miocene using coccolith clumped isotope (∆47) thermometry, which reflects habitat-depth temperatures rather than regressed SSTs.

We present new coccolith ∆47 temperature records from ODP Site 926 (Ceara Rise) spanning the late Miocene and compare them to late Pleistocene glacial and interglacial intervals from nearby ODP Site 925. Coccolith-enriched sediment fractions were carefully isolated and screened prior to ∆47 analysis. Results indicate muted tropical cooling of ~3 °C during the LMC, consistent with global temperature compilations. Notably, reconstructed late Miocene upper-ocean temperatures (~20–25 °C) are similar to those observed during Pleistocene interglacials, despite fundamentally different climate states characterized by Antarctic-only glaciation in the late Miocene and bihemispheric glaciation in the Pleistocene.

These findings suggest that muted tropical cooling during the late Miocene is not solely an artefact of alkenone saturation.

This study underlines the potential of coccolith clumped isotopes to provide constraints on upper-ocean temperatures, avoiding uncertainties associated with regressing proxy signals to SST. However, changes in coccolithophore depth habitat and water-column stratification remain key uncertainties. Ongoing paired coccolith–foraminifera ∆47 and foraminifera δ¹⁸O analyses will improve interpretations of tropical ocean temperatures and vertical gradients across contrasting climate states.

How to cite: Leusch, M., Jaggi, M., Bernasconi, S., and Stoll, H.: Similar Tropical Upper-Ocean Temperatures in the Late Miocene and Pleistocene Interglacials, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7307, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7307, 2026.

EGU26-8860 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.2

Upper-ocean temperature and upwelling variability across the Pacific during the Plio–Pleistocene transition: Insights from UK′37 and TEX86 

Syed Azharuddin, Sze Ling Ho, Jens Hefter, Erin McClymont, and Jeroen Groeneveld

The Plio–Pleistocene transition represents the shift from a warmer Pliocene to a cooler Pleistocene, offering key insights into climate sensitivity to CO₂ forcing and ice-volume changes. However, the upper-ocean thermal response of the Pacific mid-latitudes and upwelling regions remains poorly constrained, despite their critical role in global climate and ocean circulation. Here, we present paired UK′37–TEX86 upper-ocean temperature records spanning 3.4–2.4 Ma from the subtropical and equatorial Pacific at ODP Site 1012 (California Margin), IODP Site U1338 (Eastern Equatorial Pacific, EEP), and DSDP Site 593 (Tasman Sea). Surface sediment data in these regions indicate that UK′37 reflects annual mean sea surface temperatures. In contrast, high GDGT [2/3] ratios (>7) observed in surface sediments and downcore records suggest that TEX86 records shallow subsurface temperatures, likely near the nitrite maximum, as inferred from matching TEX86 temperatures to climatological annual mean temperature profiles, regardless of the calibration used. In upwelling regions, this depth correlates strongly with thermocline depth, indicating deeper (shallower) TEX86 recording depths during weakened (intensified) upwelling. Downcore UK′37 SST records from both subtropical sites indicate warmer-than-present Pliocene conditions, ~5 ºC cooling during the M2 glaciation, warming at KM5c, and a long-term cooling after the Mid-Pliocene Warm Period (MPWP), whereas SSTs at the equatorial Pacific site show no significant Pliocene–Pleistocene cooling trend. However, TEX86-derived subsurface temperatures exhibit significant Pliocene-Pleistocene cooling across all three regions. Based on the UK′37–TEX86 temperature difference (ΔT), we infer weaker upwelling along the California Margin during the MPWP, possibly linked to an intensified North American Monsoon (NAM) that weakened upwelling-favorable winds, followed by stronger upwelling under a weakened NAM during the early Pleistocene. In contrast, there is no change in upwelling in the EEP from the Pliocene to the Pleistocene. In the Tasman Sea, UK′37 likely records northward-sourced surface waters transported by the East Australian Current, whereas TEX86 reflects subsurface South Antarctic Mode Water (SAMW). The convergence of UK′37 and TEX86 temperatures between 3.1 and 2.6 Ma likely indicates northward migration of the Subtropical Front, allowing SAMW to shoal and influence surface conditions at the site. Overall, during the Plio–Pleistocene transition, the mid-latitude Pacific experienced an expansion of cold high-latitude waters. This study highlights the usefulness of paired UK′37–TEX86 analyses in advancing our understanding of upper-ocean thermal evolution across diverse Pacific hydrological settings during past key climate transitions.

How to cite: Azharuddin, S., Ho, S. L., Hefter, J., McClymont, E., and Groeneveld, J.: Upper-ocean temperature and upwelling variability across the Pacific during the Plio–Pleistocene transition: Insights from UK′37 and TEX86, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8860, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8860, 2026.

EGU26-10100 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.2

Micropaleontological and geochemical evidence for late Miocene to Pliocene warming in the high-latitude North Atlantic (IODP Site U1562). 

Boris Theofanis Karatsolis, Paul N. Pearson, Tom Dunkley Jones, Takuma Suzuki, Inigo A. Müller, Matthias Sinnesael, Nhung Pham Le Tuyet, Constantin Treand, Jorijntje Henderiks, Joseph D. Asanbe, Bridget Wade, and Philippe Claeys and the Expedition 395 scientists

The late Miocene and Pliocene were periods characterized by warmer-than-present climatic conditions and are therefore commonly used to investigate the possible effects of ongoing global warming. The Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) is a crucial component of the climate system, since it involves oceanic currents and controls the redistribution of heat around the globe. Specifically, warm and saline water from the low-latitudes reaches the high-latitude North Atlantic, where it loses heat and sinks to form deep-water masses. This sinking generates strong bottom currents, which flow southwards, powering what is known as the global ocean conveyor belt. Understanding the generation and evolution of these water masses during past warm periods provides valuable insights into their potential response to ongoing increases in ocean temperatures. Recently, International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) expeditions 395 and 395C made such investigations possible by recovering deep sea sedimentary sequences spanning the late Miocene and Pliocene in the high latitude North Atlantic region (60°N; Parnell-Turner et al., 2025). In this study, we investigate sediment samples from IODP Site U1562 (60°06.3006′N, 26°30.1044′W; ~2003m water depth), located at the edge of a sediment body deposited under the influence of deep-water currents (Björn Drift). This site exhibits continuous sedimentation and excellent microfossil preservation during the latest Miocene to Pliocene (~6.5–3.6 Ma). For our investigation, we use a combination of micropaleontological and geochemical proxies, including X-Ray fluorescence (XRF) core scanning, isotopic analysis of foraminiferal shells, and microfossil species identification and morphometrics. Combining these proxies allows for reconstructing the evolution of temperature, primary productivity, and ocean circulation in the region. Pronounced cyclic variations in calcium carbonate (CaCO₃) preservation indicate a highly dynamic depositional environment, likely controlled by changes in export production and bottom ocean dissolution related to deep-sea currents. These cycles are accompanied by distinct isotopic signatures, with intervals of high CaCO₃ content broadly corresponding to lighter δ¹⁸O values, and vice versa. The occurrence of planktonic foraminifera Orbulina universa, as well as calcareous nannofossils belonging to the genus Discoaster reveal periodically warmer conditions, driven by an overall increase in upper-ocean temperature or enhanced influence of warm currents associated with stronger AMOC. Further analyses will aim to better characterize these cyclic changes, link them to orbital cycles, and combine them with other sedimentological observations to reconstruct the evolution of AMOC during past warm intervals of the late Neogene.

References

Parnell-Turner, R.E., Briais, A., LeVay, L.J., and the Expedition 395 Scientists, 2025. Reykjanes Mantle Convection and Climate. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 395: College Station, TX (International Ocean Discovery Program). https://doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.395.2025

How to cite: Karatsolis, B. T., Pearson, P. N., Dunkley Jones, T., Suzuki, T., Müller, I. A., Sinnesael, M., Le Tuyet, N. P., Treand, C., Henderiks, J., Asanbe, J. D., Wade, B., and Claeys, P. and the Expedition 395 scientists: Micropaleontological and geochemical evidence for late Miocene to Pliocene warming in the high-latitude North Atlantic (IODP Site U1562)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10100, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10100, 2026.

Carbonate clumped isotope thermometry is a powerful tool increasingly utilized across earth science disciplines. This proxy measures the thermodynamically controlled bonding of heavy rare isotopes 13C and 18O within the same CO2 molecule (mass 47) derived from carbonate acid digestion. Unlike the widely used Mg/Ca thermometer, △47 thermometry is independent of seawater chemistry changes, including past pH, dissolved inorganic carbon, and carbonate saturation states, although it typically requires larger sample sizes and yields lower precision.

Here, we report on the establishment of a small-sample carbonate △47 measurement method using a Thermo Fisher Kiel IV coupled to a MAT253Plus mass spectrometer at the State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, Tongji University. Using an aliquot mass of ~120 μg, we achieved a reproducibility for the IAEA-603 standard (n = 35) of 0.04‰ in △47, 0.02‰ in 13C, and 0.05‰ in 18O (1 SD). We applied this method to planktonic foraminifera G. sacculifer from ODP Site 762 in the eastern Indian Ocean. The measured △47 values were 0.666‰ (n = 17, 1 SE = 0.009‰) for the 5.95 Ma interval and 0.673‰ (n = 35, 1 SE = 0.005‰) for the 3.95 Ma interval. Using the recalculated Kele et al. (2015) calibration (Bernasconi et al., 2018), we reconstructed SSTs of 26.8±6.0°C at 5.95 Ma and 24.7±3.4°C at 3.95 Ma. For comparison, temperatures reconstructed using Mg/Ca analysis were 25.9°C at 5.95 Ma and 23.5°C at 3.95 Ma, based on the calibration by Anand et al. (2003). The results demonstrate strong consistency between the two proxies, validating the utility of △47 for paleotemperature reconstruction even when temperature variations are subtle.

Keywords: Clumped isotope (△47), Mg/Ca thermometry, Temperature reconstruction, Foraminifera

How to cite: Ding, Y. and Tian, J.: Reconstructing Late Miocene and Early Pliocene Sea Surface Temperatures: A Comparison of △47 and Mg/Ca Thermometry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11064, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11064, 2026.

EGU26-11918 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Gulfstream Variability in a Globally Warming World – The Forgotten Danish Archive 

Chloe Walker-Trivett, Esther-Charlott Kiel, Kasia Śliwińska, and Camilla Snowman Andresen

Geological archives from past warm periods are essential for contextualising future climate change under ongoing global warming. However, interpreting these archives requires a robust understanding of how palaeotemperature proxies record oceanographic variability under modern boundary conditions. This study presents ongoing Holocene alkenone-based sea surface temperature (SST) reconstructions from marine sediment cores collected around Denmark. The primary aim is to constrain alkenone signal provenance through comparison with instrumental SST datasets, and to apply this understanding to reconstructions of Gulfstream variability during past warm climates.

The Danish coastal seas, including the Skagerrak–Kattegat region and shelf settings along the Jutland Peninsula, occupy a climatically sensitive position at the interface between warm Atlantic waters transported by the North Atlantic Current and waters derived from the Nordic Seas, Baltic outflow, and terrestrial runoff. Variability in this Atlantic inflow has been linked to changes in North Atlantic heat transport and proposed as a sensitive indicator of broader AMOC-related variability. As such, the Danish marine realm offers a strategic location for assessing how surface ocean temperatures respond to circulation changes under differing climate states.

We use Holocene-age sediment cores to reconstruct SSTs using alkenone palaeothermometry, a biomarker-based proxy derived from marine haptophyte algae that records upper-ocean temperature conditions. Comparison of Holocene alkenone-derived SSTs with instrumental datasets provides a framework for assessing how proxy temperatures relate to observed surface ocean variability, including the influence of regional circulation changes, stratification, and potential freshwater input. This is of particular importance when examining alkenones, as these compounds may be transported by ocean currents, potentially biasing the recorded temperature signal if such effects are not accounted for. In addition to constraining proxy behaviour, the Holocene record is used to explore the expression of Holocene climate variability in the Danish coastal seas and its relationship to other North Atlantic records.

This Holocene–instrumental framework directly supports ongoing research investigating Gulfstream variability during the Eemian Interglacial (MIS 5e, or the Last Interglacial), a past warm period when the average global temperature was approximately 1–1.5 °C higher than present. Exceptionally thick Eemian marine clay sequences from the Vendsyssel region of Denmark are currently being analysed to develop high-resolution alkenone-based SST records capable of resolving multidecadal variability under warm-climate boundary conditions. Anchoring these reconstructions in a modern, provenance-sensitive analogue improves confidence in interpretations of Gulfstream behaviour during past warm periods and enhances the use of geological archives to inform expectations of future oceanographic change.

How to cite: Walker-Trivett, C., Kiel, E.-C., Śliwińska, K., and Snowman Andresen, C.: Gulfstream Variability in a Globally Warming World – The Forgotten Danish Archive, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11918, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11918, 2026.

EGU26-12158 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Changes in the surface and subsurface temperature across Glacial-Interglacial transitions in the Indonesian Throughflow over the past 150-kyr: A perspective from the northern Makassar Strait 

Vera Christanti Agusta, Mary Elliot, Franck Bassinot, Li Lo, Marion Rivoal, Patricia Richard, Fatima Manssouri, Aline Govin, and Catherine Kissel

The Indonesian Throughflow (ITF) is a key component of the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP) and global ocean circulation, regulating the transfer of heat and freshwater from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean. Here we reconstruct surface and thermocline hydrographic variability of the ITF over the past 150 kyr using paired δ¹⁸O and Mg/Ca records from Globigerinoides ruber, Pulleniatina obliquiloculata, and Neogloboquadrina dutertrei in sediment core MD10-3334 (0.22°N, 119.30°E; 1169 m water depth) from the northern Makassar Strait. The records reveal pronounced glacial–interglacial variability in upper-ocean thermal structure and ITF dynamics. During the last two deglaciations (~27 and ~144 ka), upper thermocline warming preceded sea-surface warming resulting in a smaller vertical temperature gradient (i.e., deepening of the thermocline), which suggests an increase in La Niña–like mean state conditions associated with enhanced heat accumulation in the IPWP and intensified subsurface ITF transport. In contrast, the mid-Holocene and early Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5e are characterized by a progressive cooling of thermocline temperatures (increasing vertical temperature gradients), suggesting a reduced subsurface heat transport, consistent with a weakened ITF. These changes likely reflect adjustments in zonal and/or monsoonal wind-driven circulation and upper-ocean stratification linked to orbital-scale shifts in ITCZ position, sea level, and seasonal insolation. Our results suggest changes in the vertical temperature gradients in the Makassar Strait that we interpret as a measure of ITF strength and highlight the critical role of subsurface processes in modulating tropical Indo-Pacific climate variability across glacial–interglacial timescales.

How to cite: Agusta, V. C., Elliot, M., Bassinot, F., Lo, L., Rivoal, M., Richard, P., Manssouri, F., Govin, A., and Kissel, C.: Changes in the surface and subsurface temperature across Glacial-Interglacial transitions in the Indonesian Throughflow over the past 150-kyr: A perspective from the northern Makassar Strait, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12158, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12158, 2026.

EGU26-12459 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Oyster shells record seasonal climate variability in the middle Eocene Paris Basin under higher-than-modern temperatures and seasonal rainfall patterns 

Aniket Mitra, Steven Goderis, Michiel Baatsen, Xianye Zhao, Swagata Chaudhuri, Béatrice A. Ledésert, Philippe Claeys, and Inigo A. Müller

The Eocene experienced pronounced temporal changes in temperature and atmospheric pCO2, with multiple warming phases from the early to late middle Eocene. High-resolution, sub-annual palaeoclimate reconstructions are essential to evaluate the impact of elevated pCO2 on seasonal climate dynamics, providing critical insights for mitigating future climate crises. Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO), the Lutetian–Bartonian boundary warming event (~41 Ma) is particularly relevant, as current pCO2 levels are rising rapidly and could reach similar concentrations within a century.

Bivalvia shells, growing incrementally, record seasonal to even sub-daily climatic and environmental fluctuations throughout their life. Shells of the oyster Cubitostrea cubitus, a shallow-to-marginal marine cementing bivalve from the Sables du Guépelle Formation (~41 Ma) of the Paris Basin (~41° N palaeolatitude), contain very low Mn and Fe concentrations (<250 µg/g), indicating their pristinity. These shells are used as a palaeoclimate archive in a multiproxy approach that combines LA-ICP-MS trace element analyses and clumped isotope thermometry (Δ47), integrated with simulations from the Community Earth System Model (CESM). Sub-annual periodic variations in trace elements to Ca ratios along the oyster hinge indicate an oyster lifespan of ~16 months when aligned with monthly temperature variability from CESM simulations. Clumped isotope thermometry (Δ47-T) records a seasonal sea surface temperature (SST) amplitude of ~8 °C, where the summer temperature reaching 28.3 ± 4.4 °C (68% CI) and winter temperatures of  19.6± 3.5 °C. Summer δ18Ow (-1.1± 0.9  ‰), consistent with Bartonian seawater compositions (-0.5 to -1.0 ‰), indicate a strong seasonal marine influence in early Bartonian Paris Basin. In contrast, significantly lower winter δ18Ow values (-2.9± 0.7 ‰) reflect enhanced freshwater input, which is further supported by relatively lower Sr/Ca profile, a salinity indicator consistent with increased winter rainfall predicted by CESM simulations.

In summary, our preliminary results indicate that during the MECO, the Paris Basin experienced seasonal sea-surface temperature variability comparable to that of modern shallow waters along the French North Sea coast, but with higher temperatures of approximately 10 °C throughout the year. In contrast to the modern climate (in the region of : 0–5° E, 46–50° N), where annual precipitation is relatively evenly distributed, rainfall during the MECO appears to have been strongly seasonal.

How to cite: Mitra, A., Goderis, S., Baatsen, M., Zhao, X., Chaudhuri, S., Ledésert, B. A., Claeys, P., and Müller, I. A.: Oyster shells record seasonal climate variability in the middle Eocene Paris Basin under higher-than-modern temperatures and seasonal rainfall patterns, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12459, 2026.

EGU26-14189 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Neogene U.S. Southwest Temperatures Paced by Global Climate 

Rachel Bernstein, Daniel J. Koning, Ashley Maloney, Siânin Spaur, Olivia Lee, Gabriela Sanchez Ortiz, Katharina Methner, Andreas Mulch, Jens Fiebig, Daniel E. Ibarra, R. Paul Acosta, Kathryn E. Snell, and Jeremy K. C. Rugenstein

Large uncertainty surrounds efforts to model the regional response to CO2-driven warming in the southwestern U.S. The region hosts a seasonally variable hydroclimate and significant topography – much of which is tied to the region’s complex Cenozoic geologic history. These intricacies are difficult to reconcile in models, leading to disagreement even on the modelled sign of future precipitation change in the southwestern U.S. Previous and new stable isotope analyses of pedogenic carbonates from the well-dated Santa Fe Group of New Mexico suggest a potential shift from a middle Miocene winter-wet climate towards the dual-wet season regime seen in the region today, where annual precipitation is relatively low but delivered in both the summer and winter. This shift in regime might be spurred by either a strengthening of the North American Monsoon or a weakening of the westerlies. New clumped isotope analysis of these pedogenic carbonates documents a long-term cooling of as great as 18.5 ± 10.3°C between the Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO) and the Pleistocene. This Neogene cooling trend in New Mexico tightly tracks the global benthic δ18O record over the same period, as well as Pacific sea-surface temperature records. This correlation suggests that paleotemperature change throughout the record is controlled by global climate rather than a potential shift in carbonate formation season driven by a shift in the precipitation regime. However, climate models, including both modern ocean-equilibrated LongRunMIP and Middle Miocene simulations, are unable to match the degree of continental MCO warmth in New Mexico indicated in our data even at CO2 concentrations 8x higher than pre-industrial levels. Illustrating the magnitude of disagreement, Miocene and modern simulations respectively predict 4.6°C and 3.2°C of warming in New Mexico under a 560-ppm climate while the clumped isotope temperatures at the MCO are roughly 10°C warmer than modern mean annual temperatures in New Mexico. The disagreement between the magnitude of MCO warmth indicated by our clumped isotope record and that resulting from models can be explained either by (1) an underprediction of modelled temperature responses to CO2-driven warming in the southwestern U.S. or (2) other factors that modify local temperature, such as changes in elevation associated with ongoing rifting along the Rio Grande rift and/or long-wavelength uplift associated with passage of the Farallon plate beneath the southwestern U.S. Whether the discrepancy in magnitude is an indication of extreme warmth at the MCO in New Mexico or a result of paleotemperatures encapsulating tectonic signals, our record demonstrates that global drivers pace temperature change in the U.S. Southwest.

How to cite: Bernstein, R., Koning, D. J., Maloney, A., Spaur, S., Lee, O., Sanchez Ortiz, G., Methner, K., Mulch, A., Fiebig, J., Ibarra, D. E., Acosta, R. P., Snell, K. E., and Rugenstein, J. K. C.: Neogene U.S. Southwest Temperatures Paced by Global Climate, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14189, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14189, 2026.

EGU26-14704 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.2 | Highlight

Testing the role of large igneous province volcanism in the Miocene Climate Optimum with a new boron isotope record from the Western Pacific Warm Pool 

Jennifer Kasbohm, Hana Jurikova, Ann Holbourn, Lucien Nana Yobo, Bridget Wade, Simon Ring, Noah Planavsky, James Rae, and Pincelli Hull

While the Miocene Climate Optimum (MCO) is viewed as an analogue for near-future conditions resulting from anthropogenic climate change, improving our understanding of this event requires the development of proxy records within a well-calibrated temporal framework. Large igneous province emplacement in the Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) has been suggested to cause elevated global temperatures and CO2 during the MCO, but assessing the connection between volcanism and warming requires robust timelines for proxy records of these events. While we have developed a new age model for CRBG volcanism based on high-precision U-Pb geochronology (Kasbohm et al., 2023) and a U-Pb age model for the MCO that reinforces the validity of astronomically tuned age models for this event (Kasbohm et al., 2024), only a small number of MCO proxy records have been age-calibrated through astronomical tuning. Existing boron isotope CO2 proxy records from the MCO were age-calibrated through biostratigraphy alone, hindering correlation to known intervals of CRBG volcanism. These records showed high-amplitude CO2 variability, calling into question the stability of the Miocene climate system.

Here, we present a new foraminiferal boron isotope record from International Ocean Discovery Program Site U1490 (Western Pacific Warm Pool), which has an astronomically tuned age model concordant with our radiometric ages for the MCO (Holbourn et al., 2024). This new record targets the onset of the MCO through the end of the main-phase CRBG volcanism (17.1-16 Ma) at ~15 kyr resolution, with lower resolution across the entire MCO (17.8-13 Ma). We find well-resolved and relatively stable pH values across the MCO, with sampling resolution that reveals orbital pacing of these records. Our reconstructed CO2 estimates show less variability than prior records, though we note somewhat variable correlation with changes in MCO benthic δ18O values, which may reflect dynamism in foraminifera’s habitat during the warmest conditions of the MCO. We observe little change in CO2 resulting from CRBG surface volcanism, and no strong correlation between CO2 changes and the tempo of CRBG eruptions. A transient uptick in CO2 prior to surface eruptions, as well as sustained somewhat higher values afterwards, may be explained by cryptic degassing of large amounts of CRBG magma trapped in the crust, but the magnitude of this CO2 change was small.

How to cite: Kasbohm, J., Jurikova, H., Holbourn, A., Nana Yobo, L., Wade, B., Ring, S., Planavsky, N., Rae, J., and Hull, P.: Testing the role of large igneous province volcanism in the Miocene Climate Optimum with a new boron isotope record from the Western Pacific Warm Pool, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14704, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14704, 2026.

EGU26-17248 | Orals | CL1.1.2

Exploring proxy-proxy and proxy-model (dis)agreements during the leadup to the Miocene Climatic Optimum in the Southern Ocean 

Addison Rice, Stefano M. Bernasconi, Madalina Jaggi, and Heather M. Stoll

High reconstructed temperatures and pCO2 concentrations during the Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO; ~17-15 Ma) make it a possible analog for future warm climates. Proxy sea surface temperature (SST) reconstructions often indicate warm high latitudes, with a relatively small latitudinal temperature gradient. However, Earth system models generally do not yield the relatively flat latitudinal temperature gradients given by proxy reconstructions, and instead have cooler polar regions and somewhat warmer tropics. In tropical regions, this proxy-model disagreement may be due to habitat depths below the surface mixed layer, where the proxy would record temperatures from deeper, cooler waters, whereas the model output is simply SST. At high latitudes, however, the proxy-model disagreement cannot be fully explained by habitat depth or seasonal temperature, leaving two possibilities: one, that the models do not fully capture the Earth System; or two, that proxies are impacted by widespread non-thermal effects.

In an attempt to elucidate matters, we investigated clumped isotopes in coccoliths (cocco-Δ47) at Southern Ocean sites 1168 (South Tasman Sea) and 751 (Kerguelen Plateau) and compare these results to previously published biomarker-based temperature proxies (UK’37 and TEX86) at Site 1168. Clumped isotope samples were screened for good preservation, and contain little or no diagenetic carbonate. Unlike most temperature proxies, cocco-Δ47 values are independent of seawater chemistry and do not exhibit species- or strain-specific offsets, instead yielding an absolute growth temperature. Additionally, coccoliths and alkenones are derived from the same organisms, and should be directly comparable. During peak warmth (~16.5 Ma), cocco-Δ47 values yield temperatures of 12.0 ± 2.8 and 7.3 ± 2.8 °C at Sites 1168 and 751, respectively, and agree well with latitudinal averages of climate model output. At Site 1168, previously published UK’37 and TEX86 yield much higher temperatures (27 °C SST and 21 °C 0-200 m temperatures, respectively; Guitián and Stoll P&P, 2021; Hou et al. Clim. Past, 2023). The difference in proxy temperature estimates is large and cannot be reconciled with modern ranges in seasonal SST or photic zone habitat depth temperature. Mixing effects and physiological influences will be further explored.

How to cite: Rice, A., Bernasconi, S. M., Jaggi, M., and Stoll, H. M.: Exploring proxy-proxy and proxy-model (dis)agreements during the leadup to the Miocene Climatic Optimum in the Southern Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17248, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17248, 2026.

EGU26-18001 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.2

Calcrete clumped and stable isotopes reveal transient cooling and heterogeneous Eocene-Oligocene paleo-environments in SW Montana 

Niels Meijer, Nikki Seymour, Katharina Methner, Jens Fiebig, and Andreas Mulch

Global cooling during the Eocene-Oligocene Transition (EOT; 33.9 Ma) drove pronounced environmental and biotic shifts across the globe. However, the paleo-climatic response on the North American continent remains debated, especially in the high-elevation Cordillera, which may have been cold and dry already before the EOT. To test the response of this high-elevation terrain to global climate forcing, we studied three sedimentary sections in SW Montana (Easter Lily, Black Butte and Lion Mountain) that span the Eocene-Oligocene boundary and contain calcretes for paleo-environmental reconstructions. Dual clumped isotope thermometry in the Easter Lily section shows cooling of ~2°C during the earliest Oligocene followed by warming to pre-EOT temperatures. This indicates that EOT cooling was only transient and that long-term temperatures during the early Oligocene were similar to the late Eocene. In addition, calcrete oxygen (δ18O) and carbon (δ13C) isotope ratios within the three sections do not record major changes across the EOT. Instead, large differences are observed among the studied sections in δ18O values (up to 2‰) and especially in δ13C values (up to 6‰). This suggests strong heterogeneity of the intermontane paleo-environments in SW Montana, with individual basins recording different temperatures and degrees of aridity. Such a topographically and climatologically complex landscape may have produced the diverse endemic mammal fauna observed in these fossil localities.

How to cite: Meijer, N., Seymour, N., Methner, K., Fiebig, J., and Mulch, A.: Calcrete clumped and stable isotopes reveal transient cooling and heterogeneous Eocene-Oligocene paleo-environments in SW Montana, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18001, 2026.

EGU26-18266 | Orals | CL1.1.2

Multistage process of North Pacific cooling during the past 10 million years 

Kyung Eun Lee and Tae Wook Ko

Earth’s climate and ocean circulation have reorganized profoundly since the late Miocene. Global compilations of sea surface temperature reconstructions indicate cooling trends during the late Miocene and the Pliocene-Pleistocene periods. However, there is no long-term high-resolution temperature record from the northwestern Pacific yet. Here we present a new, extremely high-resolution (1-3 kyr), continuous alkenone sea surface temperature record spanning the past 10 million years from the subarctic front region of the northwestern Pacific. On glacial-interglacial timescale, SST variance and dominant frequencies changed stepwise, defining three phases: strong-amplitude variability (~5–9°C) at 0–1.7 Ma, moderate variability (~2–5°C) at 1.7–5.6 Ma, and weak variability (~1–2°C) at 5.6–9 Ma. Band-pass filtering isolates 405, 100, 41 and 21/19 kyr components, revealing pervasive orbital pacing and reproducing the three-phase structure. On long-term timescale, our results exhibit multistage process of the North Pacific cooling with related climate changes during the time period. In particular, the late Miocene (5-7 Ma) cooling can be compared with that of the late Pliocene-Pleistocene periods (1-3 Ma). Further comparisons between our temperature record at the subarctic front region with those from the western and eastern equatorial Pacific have been conducted, anticipating being able to reconstruct the evolution/variability of the subarctic front and its relationship with the evolution of the North Pacific subtropical gyre during the northern hemisphere glaciation.

How to cite: Lee, K. E. and Ko, T. W.: Multistage process of North Pacific cooling during the past 10 million years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18266, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18266, 2026.

EGU26-18622 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Reduced precipitation variability over mid–latitude East Asia during the Pliocene-Pleistocene Transition 

Jinglian Ge, Hao Long, Liangqing Cheng, Hanlin Wang, and Heikki Seppä

The trend of hydroclimatic variability represents a major area of concern in the context of global warming. The Pliocene–Pleistocene Transition (PPT) provides a valuable geological analogue, characterized by a dramatic shift in global ice volume and temperature. Here we present a pollen-based quantitative summer precipitation record spanning 3.4–2.4 Ma, derived from a fluvio-lacustrine sequence from the Datong Basin in the mid-latitude East Asia. Pollen data were converted to precipitation estimates using a pollen-derived Weighted Averaging Partial Least Squares (WA-PLS) model. Our results show that the summer precipitation remained broadly stable across the PPT, with no clear long-term trend. Instead, pronounced changes occur in precipitation variability. Before ~2.9 Ma, the late Pliocene hydroclimate showed large-amplitude fluctuations, with more frequent wet and dry extremes. After 2.9 Ma, variability decreases, and extreme values became less frequent, indicating a transition to a more stable rainfall regime. Spectral analyses further support this regime shift in the frequency domain: while ~100-kyr eccentricity-scale variability dominated the late Pliocene hydroclimate, it weakened and became less coherent following 2.9 Ma. Under future warming scenarios, these results imply that changes in hydroclimatic variability may represent a critical source of risk to mid-latitude Asian climate systems.

How to cite: Ge, J., Long, H., Cheng, L., Wang, H., and Seppä, H.: Reduced precipitation variability over mid–latitude East Asia during the Pliocene-Pleistocene Transition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18622, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18622, 2026.

EGU26-19376 | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Globally warm deep ocean during the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum indicates high climate sensitivity to greenhouse gases 

Nele Meckler, Victoria Taylor, Johanna Marquardt, Ismini Lypiridou, Simon Ring, James Rae, Philip Sexton, Thomas Westerhold, James Zachos, and Sandra Kirtland-Turner

Past greenhouse climates like the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (~53-49 million years ago, Ma) provide an opportunity to assess the sensitivity of global temperature to greenhouse forcing, with proxy-based temperature reconstructions from such time intervals providing crucial benchmark data for evaluating Earth System Models. However, estimating global mean temperatures is complicated by sparse proxy evidence for surface temperatures and heterogenous warming patterns. For this reason, most depictions of global mean temperature evolution use temperature reconstructions from the deep ocean, a vast and (proposedly) relatively homogenous heat reservoir (e.g., Hansen et al., 2013; Westerhold et al., 2020). Deep ocean temperature reconstructions, however, are usually based on the oxygen isotopic composition (δ18O) of benthic foraminifera, which can additionally be influenced by the isotopic composition of seawater and other non-thermal factors.

Here we present new deep ocean temperature reconstructions for ~52–50 Ma from both the North Atlantic (IODP Site U1409) and the Pacific Ocean (ODP Site 1209) using clumped isotope thermometry, which is independent from seawater composition and less affected by non-thermal influences. We confirm previously reported deep North Atlantic temperatures exceeding δ18O-based estimates (Meckler et al., 2022). Crucially, our results show that deep ocean warmth is not a regional feature of the Atlantic Ocean, with similarly warm temperatures also found in the vast deep Pacific Ocean. The new data advocate for a revision of previous, δ18O-based estimates of global mean temperatures. Combined with new CO2 estimates, we derive an updated and more robust estimate of equilibrium climate sensitivity for the Early Eocene Climate Optimum, which is higher than most previous estimates, an important new constraint for Earth System Models.

References

Meckler, A.N., et al. (2022), Cenozoic evolution of deep ocean temperature from clumped isotope thermometry. Science 377, 86-90

Hansen, J., et al. (2013), Climate sensitivity, sea level and atmospheric carbon dioxide. Philos. Trans. A Math. Phys. Eng. Sci. 371, 20120294

Westerhold, T., et al. (2020), An astronomically dated record of Earth’s climate and its predictability over the last 66 million years. Science 369, 1383–1387

How to cite: Meckler, N., Taylor, V., Marquardt, J., Lypiridou, I., Ring, S., Rae, J., Sexton, P., Westerhold, T., Zachos, J., and Kirtland-Turner, S.: Globally warm deep ocean during the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum indicates high climate sensitivity to greenhouse gases, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19376, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19376, 2026.

EGU26-20142 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.2

New constraints on the duration of the onset of the PETM carbon isotope excursion 

Mei Nelissen, Yannick Bats, Heather Furlong, Stephie Verkooijen, Joost Frieling, Morgan Jones, Tamsin Mather, Reed Scherer, Marcel van der Meer, Stefan Schouten, Francien Peterse, Appy Sluijs, and Henk Brinkhuis

The response of the climate system to rapid carbon-cycle perturbations can be constrained by studying past transient climate events such as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, ~56 million years ago). The PETM is marked by a massive input of isotopically light carbon, as recorded by a 3–4‰  negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE) in sedimentary records globally. Estimates of the duration of the rapid onset of the CIE range from a few hundred to several thousand years. The exact duration remains poorly constrained due to the scarcity of marine sedimentary records that 1) have sufficiently high sedimentation rates to resolve rapid decadal- to centennial scale transitions, 2) provide robust controls on sedimentation rates and event timing, and 3) preserve proxy data that record perturbations of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) pool. Consequently, the rate of carbon release during the CIE onset, and its relevance for understanding anthropogenic climate change, remains unclear.

International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 396 recovered expanded PETM successions on the Norwegian Margin, including a microlaminated CIE onset interval that preserves decadal-scale variability. We document the first occurrence of haptophyte alkenones from the onset of the PETM CIE and present a high-resolution record of their stable carbon isotopic variability (δ¹³Calk) across the onset interval. The δ¹³Calk records variations in the (isotopic) composition and concentration of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) pool. We show that the δ¹³Calk record is not strongly influenced by local (volcanically induced) input of ¹³C-depleted carbon based on high-resolution sedimentary mercury and polyaromatic hydrocarbon data from this interval. Finally, we provide robust age control from the diatom laminations, enabling a direct and well-constrained estimate of the duration of the global CIE onset interval.

How to cite: Nelissen, M., Bats, Y., Furlong, H., Verkooijen, S., Frieling, J., Jones, M., Mather, T., Scherer, R., van der Meer, M., Schouten, S., Peterse, F., Sluijs, A., and Brinkhuis, H.: New constraints on the duration of the onset of the PETM carbon isotope excursion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20142, 2026.

EGU26-20224 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

More Ice in Warmer Worlds? Reassessing Plio-Pleistocene Climate Relationships 

Elena Domínguez Valdés, Ilja K. Kocken, Tobias Agterhuis, Inigo A. Müller, Renée M. van der Kloos, Pien Hendriks, Noa J. Bode, Lucas J. Lourens, and Martin Ziegler

Paleoproxy records of bottom water temperature (BWT) have been used to investigate past reconfigurations of ocean circulation, infer changes in global ice volume following deconvolution of benthic oxygen isotopes, and extract information about average surface climate in warm, equilibrated states. Despite the wealth of BWT data available for the past 5 Myrs, persisting uncertanties in the proxy systems and methods most widely used to derive BWT have led to different, at times conflicting, views of climate and sea level variability across key Plio-Pleistocene transitions. Here we present ongoing work to better constrain the long-term evolution of Plio-Pleistocene BWTs using clumped isotopes from benthic foraminifera, bypassing well-known pitfalls affecting other temperature indicators and opening new avenues of leverage in multiproxy comparisons. Our results question previous definitions of the relationship between mean ocean BWTs and global ice volume, with puzzling implications  for the so-called intensification of Northern Hemisphere glaciations after the mid-Piazencian Warm Period and the expected influence of ice-sheets on global climate. Moreover, these new records support the use of mean ocean BWT as a reflection of average surface climate beyond the Miocene, thereby showing great potential to inform the development of new paleo-informed climate models.

How to cite: Domínguez Valdés, E., Kocken, I. K., Agterhuis, T., Müller, I. A., van der Kloos, R. M., Hendriks, P., Bode, N. J., Lourens, L. J., and Ziegler, M.: More Ice in Warmer Worlds? Reassessing Plio-Pleistocene Climate Relationships, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20224, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20224, 2026.

EGU26-20368 | Posters on site | CL1.1.2

Impact of the Late Lutetian Thermal Maximum (41.52 Ma) on plankticforaminiferal assemblages (Site 1263, Atlantic Ocean) 

Florencia Ferrando, Silvia Sigismondi, Thomas Westerhold, and Valeria Luciani

The short-lived (~30 Kyr) warming C19r event or Late Lutetian Thermal Maximum (LLTM) is the hyperthermal recorded 41.52 Ma ago in the upper part of
magnetochron C19r. Like most Eocene hyperthermals, this event has been defined by a sharp negative excursion in the oxygen and carbon isotopic records in the Atlantic Ocean, including ODP Sites 1260, 1263 and 702 and in a land section in Spain. To understand how marine biota responded to past warming is crucial also for a future climatic perspective. However, differently from the early Eocene hyperthermals for which biotic response has been widely analyzed, the LLTM has been so far explored only for the benthic foraminiferal response. Planktic foraminifera, that are extremely sensitive to ocean changes, have a key role to evaluate how global warming affects marine ecosystems. We present here the impact on planktic foraminiferal communities to this event, at the south Atlantic Site 1263. Although the LLTM records a moderate temperature increase with respect to other Eocene warming events, planktic foraminiferal assemblages reveal to be extreme sensitive as showing marked variations that include a decline in abundance of the cold-index Subbotina and a not straightforward response of the mixed-layer warm-index taxa, suggesting possible ecological competition and different flexibility to challenge the new environmental conditions.

How to cite: Ferrando, F., Sigismondi, S., Westerhold, T., and Luciani, V.: Impact of the Late Lutetian Thermal Maximum (41.52 Ma) on plankticforaminiferal assemblages (Site 1263, Atlantic Ocean), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20368, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20368, 2026.

EGU26-2001 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Quantifying PETM Carbonate Burndown and Alkalinity Feedbacks through Cyclostratigraphy  

Nina M Papadomanolaki, Heather L Jones, Emma M Hanson, Kirsty M Edgar, Or M Bialik, Sietske J Batenburg, and David De Vleeschouwer

The dissolution of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is a key regulator of long-term changes in oceanic CO2 uptake, through the generation of alkalinity. Geological records from past climatic and carbon-cycle perturbation events contain abundant evidence for ocean acidification and seafloor CaCO3 dissolution. Such events can thus serve as natural laboratories to assess the role of carbonate compensation in mitigating extreme carbon release and stabilizing the Earth system. In this study, we aim to evaluate the magnitude, rate, and climatic significance of carbonate dissolution for the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, ~56 Ma), the most dramatic of the early Cenozoic hyperthermals. Specifically, we use a new high-resolution record from IODP Site U1514 from the Mentelle Basin in the SE Indian Ocean (paleolatitude: ∼60°S at 50 Ma) to quantify the dissolution of seafloor CaCO3 deposited prior to the PETM (‘burndown’), in the earliest phases of the event.  Our site is ideally positioned to document this process due to its location in the deep-sea, relatively high sedimentation rates, expanded upper Paleocene record and sensitivity to changes in carbonate saturation. We use precession-scale cyclostratigraphy to create an age model for the late Paleocene and early Eocene at U1514, anchored within 405-kyr astrochronozones and subsequently tied to the established astrochronology of ODP Site 690 in the Weddell Sea, allowing for refined interbasinal stratigraphic alignment across the Southern Ocean. The age model forms the basis for our analysis of ‘burndown’ dissolution and alkalinity generation at our site and across the PETM seafloor. Our work is an important step forward in our ability to quantify alkalinity fluxes from seafloor dissolution and their impact relative to terrestrial weathering, on millenial to orbital timescales.

How to cite: Papadomanolaki, N. M., Jones, H. L., Hanson, E. M., Edgar, K. M., Bialik, O. M., Batenburg, S. J., and De Vleeschouwer, D.: Quantifying PETM Carbonate Burndown and Alkalinity Feedbacks through Cyclostratigraphy , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2001, 2026.

Reconstructing carbon release fluxes during extreme climatic events in Earth history—particularly quantifying the magnitude and climatic impacts of biogenic greenhouse-gas emissions—is crucial for building high-confidence “past–future” climate analog frameworks. In paleoclimate research, the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE; ~183 Ma), one of the most prominent global warming episodes of the Mesozoic, still features key knowledge gaps regarding the coupled mechanisms linking its carbon-isotope excursions (CIEs) to greenhouse-gas release. Here we integrate multi-proxy constraints to develop a global coupled biogeochemical model that explicitly represents methane cycling across the sediment–ocean–atmosphere system, and we apply a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) Bayesian inversion to systematically quantify methane emission fluxes during the T-OAE for the first time. Model simulations indicate that reproducing the pulsed negative CIEs, the rise in atmospheric pCO2, and the 4–6 °C global warming inferred from paleotemperature proxies requires at least ~4700 Gt (CO2-equivalent) of sustained biogenic methane input to the Earth’s surface system. Notably, the inferred carbon-isotopic composition of the methane (δ¹³C = −50‰ to −70‰) closely matches the characteristic fractionation associated with methanogenic archaeal metabolisms. The model further suggests that methane release may have amplified methanogenesis and increased organic-matter input, while sulfate-depleted ocean conditions reduced methane oxidation, together establishing a positive feedback of “enhanced methane production–suppressed oxidation efficiency.” Sensitivity experiments show that methane emissions of this magnitude could drive an atmospheric pCH₄ increase of >5 ppm, producing additional radiative forcing sufficient to yield ≥2 °C extra surface warming. Moreover, oceanic methane release promotes a millennial-scale decline in dissolved oxygen, triggering systemic collapse of benthic habitats. This nonlinear coupling between biogeochemical cycling and ecosystem responses may have been a key driver of widespread marine biotic losses during the T-OAE.

How to cite: Qiu, R.: Pulsed biogenic methane emissions and episodic carbon cycle perturbations during the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2050, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2050, 2026.

EGU26-2419 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Eastern Pacific El Niño activated by the Atlantic Ocean 

Yongyun Hu, Sheng Wu, and Yonggang Liu

Understanding of different types of El Niño events, notably Eastern Pacific (EP) and Central Pacific (CP) El Niño, is hindered by the limited length of observations. Using climate simulations, we investigated the evolution of El Niño flavor from 250 million years ago (Ma) to present. Results show that El Niño has been persistent throughout the entire period the simulation spans, but was dominated by CP El Niño at 250 Ma - 80 Ma. With the emergence of the Atlantic Ocean, which modulated the state of the Pacific Ocean through atmospheric circulation, EP El Niño became the predominant El Nino state (70 Ma - 10 Ma). After the closure of the Central American Seaway (0 Ma), EP and CP El Niño occurred with similar frequencies. Our findings highlight that El Niño types are controlled by geography over tectonic timescales.

How to cite: Hu, Y., Wu, S., and Liu, Y.: Eastern Pacific El Niño activated by the Atlantic Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2419, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2419, 2026.

Paleoproterozoic cap carbonates provide vital records of post-glacial environmental and biogeochemical transitions, offering crucial insights into early Earth’s climatic, ocean–atmosphere evolution, and the planet’s habitability[1]. This study reports, for the first time, well-preserved evidence of such cap carbonates from the Aravalli Supergroup, India, identified within calc-silicate horizons embedded in the metavolcanics of the Delwara Formation. Comprehensive geochemical and isotopic analyses confirm their primary depositional signatures and effectively rule out major diagenetic or metamorphic overprinting. The systematically collected samples exhibit negative δ13CV-PDB values, characteristic of global cap-carbonate sequences that formed immediately after the Paleoproterozoic glaciation. These strata are subsequently overlain by dolomites displaying the pronounced positive δ13CV-PDB excursion associated with the Lomagundi–Jatuli Event (LJE). Unlike the Sausar Group of India, which records cap carbonates without evidence of the LJE, the Aravalli Supergroup uniquely preserves both features within its Paleoproteozoic succession[2]. This integrated record establishes the Aravalli Basin as a key site for understanding the temporal link between deglaciation, large-scale carbon-cycle shifts, and atmospheric oxygenation. Furthermore, the coexistence of post-glacial and LJE signatures enables refined global chemostratigraphic correlations with other Paleoproterozoic basins across continents such as South Africa, Canada, and Australia[3]. These findings highlight the Aravalli Basin’s pivotal role in tracing the aftermath of Paleoproterozoic glaciations and provide new perspectives on how early Earth’s surface environments evolved during one of the most transformative intervals in the planet’s history.

References

[1] Bekker et al. [2005]. Precamb Res. 137(3-4), 167-206.

[2] Goswami et al. [2023]. Precamb Res. 399.

[3] Maheshwari et al. [2010]. Gondwana Res.  417, 195-209.

How to cite: Goswami, A., Jang, Y., and Kwon, S.: When Ice Met Oxygen: Unveiling the Oldest Clues of Earth’s Climate Shift from the Aravalli Supergroup, India. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2953, 2026.

EGU26-3078 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Data-model comparison of marine 13C across Termination I  

Peter Köhler and Stefan Mulitza

We use benthic isotope data from 491 sediment cores compiled in the World Atlas of late Quaternary Foraminiferal Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Ratios (Mulitza et al., 2022) to evaluate transient simulations across the last 25 kyr performed with BICYCLE-SE, the solid Earth version of the Box model of the Isotopic Carbon cYCLE (Köhler & Mulitza, 2024), which have been updated by data-based constraints on the deglacial release of ~250 PgC from land via permafrost thaw (Winterfeld et al., 2018), extensive petrogenic organic carbon oxidation (Wu et al., 2022) and biomass burning (Riddell-Young et al., 2025). These additional land carbon fluxes reduce mean ocean δ13C by 0.1‰ since the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The increase in mean ocean δ13C is 0.45‰ since the LGM in both data and model, but the rise started only after Heinrich Stadial 1 in the data, but earlier in the simulations. Abrupt reductions in Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation during Greenland stadials as suggested from 14C (Köhler et al., 2024) lead to simulated anomalies in δ13C in most ocean boxes, that are not confirmed by the δ13C data. Further model-data offsets suggest that the so far applied assumptions on changes in the Southern Ocean physical and biological carbon pumps during the deglaciation in BICYCLE-SE might need to be revised – or point to the limitations of this simple box model approach.        

References:

Köhler, P. and Mulitza, S.: No detectable influence of the carbonate ion effect on changes in stable carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) of shallow dwelling planktic foraminifera over the past 160kyr, Clim. Past, 20, 991–1015, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp- 20-991-2024, 2024.

Köhler, P., Skinner, L. C., and Adolphi, F.: Radiocarbon cycle revisited by considering the bipolar seesaw and benthic 14C data, Earth Planet. Sc. Lett., 640, 118801, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2024.118801, 2024.

Mulitza, S., Bickert, T., Bostock, H. C., Chiessi, C. M., Donner, B., Govin, A., Harada, N., Huang, E., Johnstone, H., Kuhnert, H., Langner, M., Lamy, F., Lembke-Jene, L., Lisiecki, L., Lynch- Stieglitz, J., Max, L., Mohtadi, M., Mollenhauer, G., Muglia, J., Nürnberg, D., Paul, A., Rühlemann, C., Repschläger, J., Saraswat, R., Schmittner, A., Sikes, E. L., Spielhagen, R. F., and Tiedemann, R.: World Atlas of late Quaternary Foraminiferal Oxygen and Carbon Isotope Ratios, Earth Syst. Sci. Data, 14, 2553–2611, https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-14-2553-2022, 2022.

Riddell-Young, B., Lee, J. E., Brook, E. J., Schmitt, J., Fischer, H., Bauska, T. K., Menking, J. A., Iseli, R., and Clark, J. R.: Abrupt changes in biomass burning during the last glacial period, Nature, 637, 91–96, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-08363-3, 2025.

Winterfeld, M., Mollenhauer, G., Dummann, W., Köhler, P., Lembke-Jene, L., Meyer, V. D., Hefter, J., McIntyre, C., Wacker, L., Kokfelt, U., and Tiedemann, R.: Deglacial mobilization of pre-aged terrestrial carbon from degrading permafrost, Nature Communications, 9, 3666, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06080-w, 2018.

Wu, J., Mollenhauer, G., Stein, R., Köhler, P., Hefter, J., Fahl, K., Grotheer, H., Wei, B., and Nam, S.-I.: Deglacial release of petrogenic and permafrost carbon from the Canadian Arctic impacting the carbon cycle, Nature Communications, 13, 7172, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34725-4, 2022.

How to cite: Köhler, P. and Mulitza, S.: Data-model comparison of marine 13C across Termination I , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3078, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3078, 2026.

Climate-induced changes in salinity and hydrological restriction can reshape ecological communities and biogeochemical cycles in anoxic water bodies, thereby altering the productivity–preservation balance and influencing organic carbon burial. This study distinguishes two anoxic depositional modes and employs lipid biomarkers, trace element indices, and C–N stable isotopes to elucidate their ecological and biogeochemical implications. During arid intervals (Mode A), characterized by hypersaline, restricted conditions and high TOC, elevated δ¹⁵N values (~6‰) indicate enhanced denitrification. Although cyanobacterial abundance is relatively high, low Mo/TOC ratios suggest limited Mo availability, which constrains nitrogen fixation. In humid periods (Mode B), corresponding to low‑salinity, open‑system settings with low TOC, δ¹⁵N values decrease (~4.5‰). Increased Mo/TOC ratios point to improved Mo availability that promotes nitrogen fixation, superimposing a nitrogen‑fixation signal on the δ¹⁵N record and causing a slight negative shift even under anoxic conditions. Differences in δ¹³C between the two modes further indicate that higher productivity during arid phases enriches the dissolved inorganic carbon pool in heavier carbon, whereas humid periods are marked by reduced productivity and greater input of terrestrially derived light carbon. Overall, the sensitivity of the nitrogen cycle to environmental perturbation is primarily governed by the supply of Mo—a key cofactor for nitrogenase—rather than cyanobacterial abundance. Meanwhile, aridity‑driven nutrient concentration combined with brief oxidative decomposition under a shallow halocline jointly enhances both organic matter input and preservation, ultimately promoting organic carbon burial. This framework highlights the coupling among climate, nutrient dynamics, trace‑metal limitation, and biological communities, offering an ecological‑process perspective for interpreting nitrogen‑cycle perturbations and carbon‑sink formation in anoxic systems.

 

How to cite: Chen, A. and Liang, C.: Climate fluctuations drive periodic shifts in anoxic depositional environments: Mo availability regulates nitrogen cycling and organic carbon burial, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3098, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3098, 2026.

Organic carbon (OC) burial is a critical process regulating the global carbon cycle and climate system. However, compared to well-studied marine systems, the role and mechanisms of lacustrine OC burial in deep time remain poorly constrained. Despite covering an area only 1/80th that of the oceans, modern lakes contribute 10–50% of the global OC burial, highlighting their exceptional sequestration efficiency. This review synthesizes OC burial records from typical deep-time lacustrine shales, revealing that the geological-scale transition in OC burial capacity was driven by the evolution of lake ecosystems from "dead" and "starved" lakes to "ecologically primary" and "prosperous" ones. Based on the "productivity, preservation, and dilution" ternary equilibrium theory, we evaluate the multi-factor composite controls on the OC burial process, including tectonics, climate, hydro-ecological conditions, volcanic–hydrothermal activities, and marine transgressions. Our findings show that efficient OC burial results from the synergistic coupling of tectonic–climatic–ecological systems. Notably, nutrients from volcanic and hydrothermal activities were crucial for overcoming adverse climatic or ecological conditions—particularly during the "ecologically primary lakes" stage before the Late Paleozoic—thereby enabling effective OC sequestration. Finally, we propose five primary mechanisms for large-scale lacustrine OC burial: (1) volcanic–hydrothermal driven, (2) climate–volcanic activities coupling, (3) climate–basin scale coupling, (4) climate–transgressions coupling, and (5) tectonic–climate coupling. This synthesis not only offers a new perspective from lake records for understanding deep-time Earth's sphere interactions and carbon cycling but also establishes a geological-historical framework for predicting the response of lacustrine carbon reservoirs to future climate change.

How to cite: Liang, C., Chen, A., and Cao, Y.: Lacustrine organic carbon burial in deep time: Perspectives from major geologic events and tectonic-climatic-ecological coupling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3702, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3702, 2026.

EGU26-4416 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

The transformation and burial of methane-derived organic carbon in the South China Sea 

Lihua Dong, Mengfan Chu, and Rui Bao

Methane seeping from the submarine has long been recognized as a driver of climate warming, owing to its oxidation that emits carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Yet, the biogeochemical processes that transfer methane to organic carbon (OC), serving as a negative feedback on warming, remain largely under constrained. Here, we measured concentration and stable and radiocarbon isotopes of the dissolved and sedimentary OC, as well as foraminifera, across contemporary and past methane seepage settings. Our findings reveal that methane undergoes transformation into OC, promoting its long-term burial in sediments and mitigating climate change. At active methane seeps in the South China Sea, methane contributes up to 23% of dissolved OC in the contemporary bottom water. And our results suggest that methane may be emitted to the water column ~700 m above the seafloor during the Last Glacial Maximum, and subsequently undergoes transformation into OC buried in sediments. It accounts for up to 11% of methane-derived OC burial during the Last Glacial Maximum with active methane seepage events, and reduces the radiative forcing caused by methane emission over glacial cycles. Our discovery of the enhanced methane carbon burial calls for reconsideration of methane’s impact on climate warming.

How to cite: Dong, L., Chu, M., and Bao, R.: The transformation and burial of methane-derived organic carbon in the South China Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4416, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4416, 2026.

EGU26-4725 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Reconstructing pelagic fish productivity and export productivity during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum 

Xiuwen Zhou, Ruiling Zhang, Man-Yin Tsang, and Weiqi Yao

Ocean productivity is highly sensitive to climate change, but its future trend remains largely unknown, complicating projections for marine ecosystems and fisheries. Past warm climate events offer valuable analogs for understanding the long-term effects of anthropogenic warming on ocean productivity. The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, about 56 million years ago) is one of the most pronounced global warming events in the Cenozoic era, triggered by massive and rapid injections of isotopically light carbon into the ocean-atmosphere system. While previous studies have evaluated ocean productivity during the PETM, proxy records and model results remain contradictory, and the response of fish productivity is also poorly constrained. Here we present global records of ichthyolith accumulation rates (IAR) from deep-sea sediment cores across the PETM. Our new data show the temporal and spatial evolution of pelagic fish productivity as well as the resilience in fish communities. These IAR data are then compared with export productivity estimates derived from marine barite accumulation rates (BAR) from the same or proximal sites to explore their correlation. Using the Earth system model cGENIE, we further conduct sensitive simulations to investigate the roles of elevated atmospheric pCO2, changes in nutrient supply (internal and external), and ocean circulation in driving carbon export during the PETM. Through combining multi–proxy and model–informed analyses, this study provides an integrated perspective on how ocean productivity and fish communities reacted to abrupt warming, offering a critical long-term context for understanding the future of ocean ecosystems.

How to cite: Zhou, X., Zhang, R., Tsang, M.-Y., and Yao, W.: Reconstructing pelagic fish productivity and export productivity during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4725, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4725, 2026.

EGU26-5416 | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

The impact of paleogeography and atmospheric CO2 concentrations on Miocene warmth in AWI-ESM 

Gregor Knorr and Gerrit Lohmann

Proxy records from the Miocene epoch (∼23‐5 Ma) indicate a warmer climate than today with a reduced meridional temperature gradient. These characteristics have been partly attributed to atmospheric CO2 changes and differences in the tectonic setting. In this contribution we present climate simulations using the complex coupled earth system model AWI-ESM2  for Miocene boundary conditions to investigate the impact of different atmospheric CO2 concentrations and paleogeographic configurations.  Besides investigating their individual contribution, we will also examine the combination of both forcing factors and differences that arise from different orographic and bathymetric reconstructions. We will discuss implications for global and meridional temperature responses, as well as sea ice changes and high latitude ocean ventilation.

How to cite: Knorr, G. and Lohmann, G.: The impact of paleogeography and atmospheric CO2 concentrations on Miocene warmth in AWI-ESM, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5416, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5416, 2026.

EGU26-5914 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Input and output fluxes of surface CO2 throughout the Cenozoic 

Luca Castrogiovanni, Claudia Pasquero, Nicola Piana Agostinetti, Bram Vaes, Jack Longman, and Pietro Sternai

Changes in the geological carbon cycle and associated surface input and output CO2 fluxes drive long-term Cenozoic climate trends mainly through magmatic emissions and weathering of silicate minerals. Proxy records, which indirectly reconstruct past climate conditions, demonstrate a steady decline in both surface CO2 and temperature since ˜50 million years ago (Ma), punctuated by shorter periods of climatic optima and hyperthermals such as the PETM, EECO, MECO and MMCO. However, lack of constraints in terms of input and output CO2 fluxes prevents the assessment of responsible processes for these trends. Here, we use a newly developed technique based on a reversible-jump Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm (rj-McMC) to invert the temporal CO2 changes from the Proxy Integration Project (CENCO2PIP) (Hönisch et al., 2023) and obtain estimates of the surface input and output CO2 fluxes throughout the Cenozoic. We base the inversion on a general formulation of the geological carbon cycle that includes a degassing source and a temperature-dependent sink term, with the temperature time history (Hansen et al., 2023) used as an additional constraint. Reconstructed fluxes reveal that perturbations of the carbon cycle are stronger during the early Cenozoic (i.e., ˜66 – 34 Ma), while these reduce since˜34 Ma. We hypothesise that stronger degassing from the solid-Earth during the EECO and MECO prevent an earlier onset of the Antarctic ice cap during the Eocene. We discuss that the higher carbon emissions during these periods can partially link to the evolution of the Neo-Tethyan magmatic margin, which extinction occurs ˜34 Ma. Results show that carbon flux stabilization since the Oligocene could be due to temperature dependent processes like albedo increase and enhanced silicate weathering in the context of Tibetan Plateau uplift. Finally, we estimate that the net amount of CO2 removed since ˜34 Ma is four times greater than that of the first half of the Cenozoic.  

 

 

 

References

 

Hansen, J. E., Sato, M., Simons, L., Nazarenko, L. S., Sangha, I., Kharecha, P., Zachos, J. C., von Schuckmann, K., Loeb, N. G., Osman, M. B., Jin, Q., Tselioudis, G., Jeong, E., Lacis, A., Ruedy, R., Russell, G., Cao, J., & Li, J. (2023). Global warming in the pipeline. Oxford Open Climate Change, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfclm/kgad008.

Hönisch, B., Royer, D. L., Breecker, D. O., Polissar, P. J., Bowen, G. J., Henehan, M. J., Cui, Y., Steinthorsdottir, M., McElwain, J. C., Kohn, M. J., Pearson, A., Phelps, S. R., Uno, K. T., Ridgwell, A., Anagnostou, E., Austermann, J., Badger, M. P. S., Barclay, R. S., Bijl, P. K., … Zhang, L. (2023). Toward a Cenozoic history of atmospheric CO2. Science, 382(6675). DOI: 10.1126/science.adi517.

 

How to cite: Castrogiovanni, L., Pasquero, C., Piana Agostinetti, N., Vaes, B., Longman, J., and Sternai, P.: Input and output fluxes of surface CO2 throughout the Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5914, 2026.

EGU26-5952 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Simulated Ocean Oxygen under Miocene Boundary Conditions 

James Berg, David Hutchinson, Katrin Meissner, Benoit Pasquier, Mark Holzer, and Alexandra Auderset

Investigating changes in ocean oxygenation during past warm climates advances our process understanding of biogeochemical and physical dynamics in the ocean and may inform our predictions of future changes. The Miocene Climatic Optimum (MCO) was a warm climate episode ~15, million years ago (Ma), with high atmospheric CO2 concentrations that are comparable to end-of-century predictions for mid-range future emission scenarios. Proxy records suggest that the Oxygen Minimum Zone (OMZ) in the Eastern Tropical Pacific (ETP) was small or non-existent during the high-CO2 MCO, and only expanded when CO2 declined after 15 Ma. In contrast, the OMZ in the Eastern Pacific was already extensive in the recent preindustrial era, and is currently expanding further with increasing CO2, due to ocean warming and stratification. Despite the importance of understanding the controls on Pacific OMZ extent under warm conditions, there are no existing model investigations of these opposing OMZ dynamics. Here, we use a climate model with an offline biogeochemical framework to investigate ocean oxygen concentrations during the Miocene for a range of CO2 concentrations and two different topographic configurations. We compare results to available physical and biogeochemical proxies and assess which combination of boundary conditions best replicates recorded proxy trends. We find that for higher CO2 concentrations, oxygen declines globally and OMZs expand, particularly in the Atlantic Ocean. However, for one of the topographic configurations, OMZs in the ETP contract under higher CO2 concentrations. This contraction can be attributed to regionally reduced export production and remineralization rates, which are caused by weaker upwelling due to a southward shifted Hadley cell and correspondingly weaker southern hemisphere trade winds. This atmospheric response is driven by hemispheric asymmetries in warming due to changes in large scale ocean circulation. These results emphasize the complexity and spatial heterogeneity of the marine oxygen response to climate change.

How to cite: Berg, J., Hutchinson, D., Meissner, K., Pasquier, B., Holzer, M., and Auderset, A.: Simulated Ocean Oxygen under Miocene Boundary Conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5952, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5952, 2026.

EGU26-5987 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Paleogeography strongly influences CO2 threshold for Sturtian Snowball Earth initiation 

Minmin Fu, Robert Graham, and Dorian Abbot

Neoproterozoic “snowball Earth” refers to extreme glaciations when sea ice extended from the poles to the tropics and perhaps to the equator. Despite decades of study, the mechanisms that triggered global glaciation are still debated, although many mechanisms link their onset to reductions in atmospheric CO2 concentration. We use a coupled general circulation model and two geologically constrained paleogeographic reconstructions to re-examine the CO2 threshold for the initiation of the Sturtian snowball Earth (~717 Ma). With modern landmasses, a hard-Snowball transition occurs at 95±5 ppm CO2, consistent with prior estimates. In contrast, one 720 Ma reconstruction, resists global glaciation down to 6±1 ppm CO2 – a threshold so low that initiation via CO2 drawdown might be challenging – while maintaining an "oasis climate" with a small, zonally asymmetric region of open tropical ocean. A second 720 Ma reconstruction glaciates at 110±10 ppm, similar to modern. We show that the oasis climate is possible because the former continental configuration inhibits ocean heat transport out of a small, tropical ocean basin, allowing it to maintain above-freezing sea surface temperatures. While the "oasis climate" lacks the hysteresis expected for snowball glaciations in our climate model, hysteresis might be supplied by land ice sheets. The apparent sensitivity of Earth's snowball glaciation behavior to subtle changes in continental geometry points to a need for better-constrained paleogeographic reconstructions for understanding snowball Earth events and highlight potential challenges to CO2 drawdown mechanisms for snowball initiation.

How to cite: Fu, M., Graham, R., and Abbot, D.: Paleogeography strongly influences CO2 threshold for Sturtian Snowball Earth initiation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5987, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5987, 2026.

EGU26-6267 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Loess weathering as an important contributor to the glacial atmospheric pCO2 drawdown 

Miho Ishizu, Axel Timmermann, and Kyung-Sook Yun

Loess deposits are silt sediments that can contain up to 30% carbon. As they are transported into the ocean, whether by wind or by rivers, they can increase the ocean's alkalinity. Recent studies have reported that accounting for the carbon weathering of loess under glacial conditions could increase the global alkalinity flux by more than 50% compared with previous estimates. This, in turn, could lower atmospheric CO2 concentrations by increasing the ocean's buffering capacity. To test this hypothesis in a transient Earth System Modeling framework and quantify the role of loess weathering in orbital-scale global carbon reorganizations, we employed the cGENIE model, nudged the ocean circulation state to a previously conducted transient 3 Ma CESM1.2 simulation, and applied various loess weathering scenarios. Our results suggest that plausible estimates of loess-derived carbon fluxes can explain a considerable fraction of interglacial/glacial CO2 variability during the last 1 Ma.

How to cite: Ishizu, M., Timmermann, A., and Yun, K.-S.: Loess weathering as an important contributor to the glacial atmospheric pCO2 drawdown, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6267, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6267, 2026.

EGU26-7593 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Modeling Long Memory Cyclical Trends in the Cenozoic 

Yeliz Özer, Tomás del Barrio Castro, Álvaro Escribano, and Philipp Sibbertsen

Long paleoclimate time series combine strong persistence, multiple orbital cycles, and regime shifts, which complicates the analysis of dynamical coupling and predictability. We analyze Cenozoic variability using the Cenozoic global reference benthic foraminiferal carbon and oxygen isotope dataset, in a regime based time series framework that integrates deterministic decomposition, cyclical fractional cointegration, and regime aware forecasting. We divide the record into segments in line with the major Cenozoic climate states. Within each segment, deterministic components are estimated and removed, including linear trends, orbital forcing variables, and harmonic cycles identified via a GARMA based filtering procedure. We then apply cyclical fractional cointegration tests at shared orbital frequencies to assess whether common spectral peaks reflect a stable frequency specific linkage (cointegration) between the proxies and orbital variables. The results reveal pronounced regime dependence. The long eccentricity cycle (405 kyr) shows recurrent evidence of cointegration with both proxies across different climate states. For obliquity, an indication of frequency specific linkage is primarily found after the middle Miocene Climate Transition. Finally, we fit regime specific VAR(2) models to the residuals and report in-sample forecasts, and we generate a 100 kyr out-of-sample projection based on the Icehouse specific dynamics. Forecast behaviour varies across climate states, highlighting that non-stationarity and regime specific dynamics place strong constraints on predictability in long paleoclimate records. 

How to cite: Özer, Y., del Barrio Castro, T., Escribano, Á., and Sibbertsen, P.: Modeling Long Memory Cyclical Trends in the Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7593, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7593, 2026.

EGU26-8129 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Isotopic Imprints of Coccolithophore Blooms Overthe Past Million Years 

Josué Dauvier, Luc Beaufort, Corinne Sonzogni, Clara Bolton, Jean Charles Mazur, Tachikawa Kazuyo, William Rapuc, Nicolas Thouveny, Yohan Lichterfeld, and Laurence Vidal

Coccolithophores, calcifying marine phytoplankton, play a dual role in the oceanic
carbon cycle by contributing to carbon fixation through photosynthesis and to carbon
release via calcification (uptake of bicarbonate and release of CO2). To evaluate the net
effect of coccolithophore long-term evolutionary and productivity dynamics on the car-
bon cycle, we analyzed two sediment cores, MD96-2060 (Mozambique Channel) and MD97-
2125 (Coral Sea), spanning the past 1 Myr. Using automated light microscopy and im-
age recognition, we quantified coccolithophore assemblages, morphology, and calcite mass.
These data were complemented by stable isotope analyses (δ13C and δ18O) of coccolith-
dominated the fine fraction (< 30 µm,) sediment samples. Our results reveal pronounced
coccolithophore bloom phases, characterized by high abundances of Gephyrocapsa caribbean-
ica and Emiliania huxleyi, and sharp increases in total Noelaerhabdaceae mass accumu-
lation rate. The Morphological Divergence Index, a proxy for evolutionary divergence,
exhibits similar long-term trends at both sites, in phase with orbital eccentricity cycles.
Fine-fraction δ13C records display long-term patterns that are absent in benthic and plank-
tonic foraminiferal δ13C records, indicating a persistent coccolithophore-driven isotopic
signal. We interpret this signal as the result of species-specific vital effects in dominant
blooming taxa, particularly during periods of low eccentricity, when reduced ecological
niche partitioning may have favored the proliferation of smaller more cosmopolitan species.
This, in turn, may have led to a significant depletion in δ13C values of the fine fraction
during low eccentricity phases, thereby influencing the marine carbon cycle on orbital
timescales.

How to cite: Dauvier, J., Beaufort, L., Sonzogni, C., Bolton, C., Mazur, J. C., Kazuyo, T., Rapuc, W., Thouveny, N., Lichterfeld, Y., and Vidal, L.: Isotopic Imprints of Coccolithophore Blooms Overthe Past Million Years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8129, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8129, 2026.

EGU26-8384 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Waterbelt solutions to avoid a hard Snowball Earth 

Aiko Voigt and Johannes Hörner

During the Neoproterozoic, Earth experienced at least two extreme glaciations with ice extending to tropical latitudes. While the Snowball Earth hypothesis proposes a fully ice-covered planet, geological evidence and the persistence of life suggest that parts of the ocean may have remained ice-free. This has motivated the concept of Waterbelt states: alternative climate equilibria featuring open equatorial oceans that could act as refugia for early life and expand the range of habitable climates relevant to Earth-like exoplanets. Despite their appeal, Waterbelt states remain disputed due to uncertainties in the mechanisms required to halt the ice–albedo feedback at low latitudes, including the role of bare sea-ice albedo and cloud radiative effects.

Here, we investigate whether Waterbelt states are robust solutions of the coupled climate system and identify the processes controlling the stability of low-latitude ice margins. Using a hierarchy of models, this work combines mechanistic insights from a Budyko–Sellers energy balance model with a large ensemble of global climate simulations. In particular, we present results from a coordinated model intercomparison that includes three versions of the ICON model and five versions of the CAM model, all run in the same aquaplanet slab-ocean setup. The simulations are analyzed with respect to three key factors that have been proposed to influence Waterbelt stability: the area of exposed bare sea ice, cloud masking of the ice–albedo feedback, and shortwave cloud radiative feedbacks.

We demonstrate that stable Waterbelt states can be found in a wide variety of models. While ICON Waterbelt states depend on cloud tuning, all CAM models readily simulate stable Waterbelt states over a substantial range of CO2 radiative forcing. These differences are primarily due to cloud radiative effects: the CAM models exhibit stabilizing shortwave cloud feedbacks and stronger cloud masking than ICON. Overall, this suggests that clouds do not present a fundamental obstacle to Waterbelt climates, but instead play a modulatory role that varies across models. This implies that Waterbelt states may be more physically plausible than studies based on a single model have suggested, while at the same time emphasizing the importance of clouds for deep-time climate and exoplanet habitability.

How to cite: Voigt, A. and Hörner, J.: Waterbelt solutions to avoid a hard Snowball Earth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8384, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8384, 2026.

EGU26-8390 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Southern Ocean circulation reorganization led to abrupt CO2 outgassing during the Mid-Miocene Climate Transition 

Yuhao Dai, David Hutchinson, Jimin Yu, Sebastian Bland, and Michael Ellwood

The Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) expansion and global cooling during the Mid-Miocene Climate Transition (MMCT) is thought to be closely linked to marine carbon cycle changes. However, how the marine carbon cycle interacted with the rest of the climate system during this period remains elusive. Here, we reconstruct surface-water CO2 and intermediate-depth seawater carbonate chemistry from the Southern Ocean during the MMCT. We show that a marked surface-water CO2 rise in the Southern Ocean, accompanied by carbon loss from the intermediate depths, coincided with AIS retreat and surface Southern Ocean warming within the MMCT. The release of CO2 from the intermediate depths to the surface ocean was likely caused by the northward shift of the Southern Ocean fronts and possibly strengthening of the Southern Ocean overturning circulation. Southern Ocean circulation reorganization, triggered by AIS expansion and global cooling, was able to transiently interrupt the transition of the Earth’s climate into a cooler state during the MMCT.

How to cite: Dai, Y., Hutchinson, D., Yu, J., Bland, S., and Ellwood, M.: Southern Ocean circulation reorganization led to abrupt CO2 outgassing during the Mid-Miocene Climate Transition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8390, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8390, 2026.

Large Igneous Province (LIP) volcanism is widely invoked as a primary driver of major carbon-cycle perturbations and climate extremes in Earth history, yet its short-term eruptive tempo and terrestrial environmental impacts remain poorly constrained. Most existing models assume temporally smoothed volcanic carbon release, largely due to the limited temporal resolution of marine sedimentary archives. Here we present a sub-millennial-resolution lacustrine sedimentary record spanning Oceanic Anoxic Event 1a (OAE1a) from the Aptian Jiufotang Formation in the Kazuo Basin, northeastern China, providing a rare terrestrial perspective on high-frequency LIP activity. A total of 199 samples were collected from a ~130 kyr interval (covering the transition from high to low 187Os/188Os) of organic-rich lacustrine black shales, achieving a temporal resolution of ~0.3–1.0 kyr per sample—comparable to Quaternary paleoclimate studies but applied to a deep-time volcanic event. High-resolution stratigraphic profiles of carbon isotopes reveal repeated, abrupt excursions, indicating episodic volatile release associated with super-eruptive volcanism. These geochemical signals are stratigraphically coupled with sedimentological features, including volcanic ash layers, sulfide laminae, and storm-induced deposits, demonstrating that individual eruptive pulses are not only geochemically resolvable but also sedimentologically expressed. Additional Pb isotope constraints further support an Ontong Java Plateau mantle source. Importantly, the magnitude and frequency of lacustrine carbon isotope excursions exceed those typically observed in coeval marine records, implying strong terrestrial amplification through enhanced organic carbon burial, primary productivity blooms, and potentially intensified methanogenesis. These results challenge conventional time-averaged carbon-cycle models and highlight that the climatic and ecological impacts of LIP volcanism are governed by short-lived, threshold-crossing forcing events. Lacustrine systems thus provide a uniquely sensitive archive for resolving the true temporal structure of deep-time volcanic perturbations and their consequences for Earth’s surface environments.

How to cite: Sun, M.-D., Matsumoto, H., and Xu, Y.-G.: A sub-millennial-resolution lacustrine record of Large Igneous Province volcanism during Early Cretaceous OAE1a, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8621, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8621, 2026.

EGU26-8803 | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Diagnosing deglacial ocean carbon cycle change through radiocarbon and stable carbon isotopes 

Hidetaka Kobayashi, Akira Oka, Takashi Obase, Miyano Nishida, and Ayako Abe-Ouchi

Radiocarbon (Δ14C) and stable carbon isotope (δ13C) proxy records provide important constraints on how carbon is redistributed among Earth’s surface reservoirs during major climate transitions. Previous work by Kobayashi et al. (2024, Climate of the Past) showed that transient simulations with the MIROC 4m climate model reproduce the timing of deglacial atmospheric pCO2 changes but underestimate their magnitude. Here, we extend this analysis by using carbon isotope proxies to better diagnose ocean carbon cycle processes during the last deglaciation (21 to 11 ka BP).

We combine three-dimensional transient model output with marine sediment core and ice core records of Δ14C and δ13C to examine how changes in ocean ventilation, biological carbon export efficiency, and alkalinity cycling are reflected in carbon isotope budgets. Particular attention is given to Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1), the Bølling–Allerød, and the Younger Dryas, periods characterized by abrupt changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and pronounced interhemispheric climate asymmetry.

We analyze three-dimensional transient model output and compare the results with existing marine sediment core and ice core records of Δ14C and δ13C. This comparison is used to examine how changes in ocean circulation and biological carbon export and remineralization are expressed in carbon isotope budgets. We focus on Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1), the Bolling-Allerod, and the Younger Dryas, periods associated with abrupt changes in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and strong interhemispheric climate asymmetry.

The model reproduces the sequence of atmospheric pCO2 variations across these events, but comparisons with proxy data reveal a systematic underestimation of enhanced deep-ocean ventilation during HS1, particularly in the Southern Ocean and North Pacific, as indicated by marine Δ14C records. Stable carbon isotope data further suggest that reductions in biological carbon export efficiency during HS1 are weaker in the model than implied by benthic and planktonic δ13C records. During the Younger Dryas, proxy records indicate a continued increase in deep-ocean δ13C, whereas the model simulates an opposite trend, pointing to potential biases in simulated AMOC changes, ecosystem responses, or terrestrial carbon exchange.

Overall, radiocarbon and stable carbon isotope comparisons indicate that the redistribution of carbon within the ocean is underestimated in the model. To further investigate these discrepancies, we additionally report sensitivity experiments that revisit the initialization of the Last Glacial Maximum state and assess the respective roles of ocean circulation and the biological pump in shaping deglacial carbon isotope and atmospheric pCO2 evolution. 

How to cite: Kobayashi, H., Oka, A., Obase, T., Nishida, M., and Abe-Ouchi, A.: Diagnosing deglacial ocean carbon cycle change through radiocarbon and stable carbon isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8803, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8803, 2026.

The efficiency of the ocean to store or release gases, such as carbon, is mainly governed by overturning circulation and air-sea gas exchanges, thereby it regulates the carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration in the ocean interior and its subsequent outgassing. Changes in the ocean circulation are considered as one of the primary drivers of atmospheric CO2 fluctuations during the last glacial-interglacial cycle. Although Indian Ocean role plays an important role in the global ocean circulation, its role in carbon cycle during the last glacial termination remains scantily studied. In this study, the ventilation records from the northern Indian Ocean over the last 25 kyr has been compiled and examined, where the ventilation ages are calculated as the difference between the radiocarbon ages of coexisting benthic and planktic foraminifera.  The most notable feature from our result is the stratification between the intermediate and deep water of the northern Indian Ocean during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). During this period, the water mass at a depth of ~2000 m below was poorly ventilated, characterized by low-14C, enrich in CO2 and high ventilation ages exceeding 2000 14C years. In contrast, the reported ventilation ages of water mass above ~2000 m depth were low (~1400 14C years) indicating relatively better ventilated water. This strong vertical stratification between the water masses implies a reduced renewal of deep water in the northern Indian Ocean during the LGM, suggesting that the northern Indian Ocean basin was a part of the glacial ocean aged carbon pool. The condition changed to better-ventilated water during the deglaciation, probably due to increased contribution of the northern sourced deep water to the northern Indian Ocean and outgassing the glacially stored CO2.

How to cite: Kumari, N. and Naik, S.: Radiocarbon evidence for the last glacial-interglacial ventilation changes in the northern Indian Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8941, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8941, 2026.

EGU26-9562 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Global reconstruction of ocean export productivity from the late Eocene to the early Oligocene 

Ruiling Zhang, Erwan Pineau, Yannick Donnadieu, and Weiqi Yao

The Earth's climate shifted swiftly from a "greenhouse" state to an "icehouse" state ~34 million years ago (Ma). This climatic transition is characterized by abrupt atmospheric pCO2 drawdown, the initiation of Antarctic glaciation, and perturbations of marine carbon cycling. While previous studies have suggested heterogeneous changes across ocean basins in primary productivity, but a global unchanged state of fish production. The net effect of the marine biological pump on sequestrating atmospheric pCO2 is still an enigma. Marine barite (BaSO4) is a reliable proxy of export productivity owing to its biologically induced formation and refractory nature. Here, we present global records of marine barite accumulation rates from multiple sediment cores representing different oceanographic regions from the late Eocene to the early Oligocene. We reconstruct the temporal and spatial evolution of export productivity between 41 and 28 Ma, and investigate its contribution to the global carbon budget before and after the Eocene–Oligocene Transition. Additionally, we use the Earth System Model IPSL-CM5A2 and biogeochemical model PISCESv2, and compare proxy data with model results of the 40 Ma and 30 Ma simulations. Together, they can help to explore the role of tectonic-driven reorganization of ocean circulation in export productivity. These findings offer implications for understanding feedbacks between tectonic, climate, and carbon cycling at the onset of the early Cenozoic icehouse world.

How to cite: Zhang, R., Pineau, E., Donnadieu, Y., and Yao, W.: Global reconstruction of ocean export productivity from the late Eocene to the early Oligocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9562, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9562, 2026.

Oceanic Anoxic Event 1b (OAE1b) occurred near the Aptian–Albian boundary during the mid-Cretaceous and represents a unique long-lasting global perturbation of the carbon cycle, characterized by multiple black shale intervals and four distinct negative carbon isotope excursions (Jacob/113, Kilian, Urbino/Paquier, and Leenhardt events). Compared with other OAEs, OAE1b is notable for its prolonged duration (~4 Myr) and its subdivision into multiple sub-events. Despite extensive marine studies, its triggering mechanisms remain controversial, with proposed drivers including volcanism related to the Southern Kerguelen Plateau, enhanced ocean stratification, intensified monsoonal circulation, and methane hydrate dissociation. However, terrestrial environmental responses to OAE1b remain poorly constrained.

Here we present a high-resolution terrestrial record of OAE1b from the Songliao Basin, northeastern China, based on the ICDP SK-2 borehole. Integrated analyses of organic carbon isotopes (δ¹³Corg), mercury concentrations, mercury isotopes (Δ¹⁹⁹Hg), and major and trace elements, combined with an established astrochronological framework, allow identification of three OAE1b sub-events (Jacob, Kilian, and Paquier) in terrestrial deposits. For the first time, mercury isotope evidence reveals three episodes of globally significant volcanic activity occurring prior to the Jacob event, prior to the Kilian event, and following the Kilian event. These volcanic signals correlate well with records from other basins worldwide, indicating a global volcanic influence.

Notably, the temporal decoupling between volcanic pulses and OAE1b sub-events suggests that volcanism was unlikely the direct trigger of OAE1b. Instead, relatively weak and predominantly subaerial volcanism of the Southern Kerguelen Plateau may have exerted a longer-term climatic influence, promoting a transition from transient cooling to greenhouse conditions and enhancing continental weathering. This long-term forcing, superimposed on orbital-scale monsoon intensification and increased wildfire activity, likely enhanced primary productivity and organic carbon burial, ultimately contributing to the development of OAE1b.

 

How to cite: Yang, L., Gao, Y., and Wu, Z.: Mercury Isotopic Evidence that global carbon cycle disturbance decoupled from volcanism during the Oceanic Anoxic Event 1b, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10145, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10145, 2026.

EGU26-10197 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Lithium isotopes reveal enhanced weathering fluxes in North America during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum: Perspectives on clay chronology 

Rocio Jaimes-Gutierrez, Lucas Vimpere, Sébastien Castelltort, David J. Wilson, Patrick Blaser, Philip A.E. Pogge von Strandmann, Thierry Adatte, Swapan Sahoo, and Georgina E. King

Silicate weathering regulates Earth’s surface climate over geological timescales by removing atmospheric CO2. Understanding changes in weathering dynamics and rates is key to predicting climate response time scales. We investigated the reactivity of the North American source-to-sink system and the chemical weathering regime during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). We measured the detrital lithium isotope composition (δ7Li) in a deep-marine sediment core from the Gulf of Mexico, tracking changes in the formation of clay minerals, alongside neodymium isotopes (εNd), to constrain sediment provenance.

We find a buffered negative δ7Li excursion during the PETM body, likely reflecting the mixing of newly formed and reworked clays from continental floodplains, followed by a pronounced negative δ7Li excursion during the recovery phase. This pattern is consistent with the continental Bighorn Basin (Wyoming, USA) δ7Li record (Ramos et al., 2022), indicating a rapid propagation of enhanced weathering and erosion fluxes in response to the PETM, which would have contributed to efficient CO2 drawdown (Jaimes-Gutierrez et al., 2025).

To fully understand weathering–climate feedbacks during the PETM, future work will target the radiometric dating of clay minerals exported to the ocean during this climatic perturbation. Constraining the timing of clay formation and residence on continental floodplains will allow us to distinguish between newly formed and reworked clays. Such age constraints would provide critical insights into the response timescales of continental weathering processes and thereby improve our understanding of carbon budgets during the PETM.

References:

Jaimes-Gutierrez, R., Vimpere, L., Wilson, D.J., Blaser, P., Adatte, T., Sahoo, S., and Castelltort, S., 2025, Lithium isotopes reveal enhanced weathering fluxes in North America during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum: Geology, doi:https://doi.org/10.1130/G53708.1.

Ramos, E.J. et al., 2022, Swift Weathering Response on Floodplains During the Paleocene‐Eocene Thermal Maximum: Geophysical Research Letters, v. 49, doi:10.1029/2021GL097436.

 

How to cite: Jaimes-Gutierrez, R., Vimpere, L., Castelltort, S., Wilson, D. J., Blaser, P., Pogge von Strandmann, P. A. E., Adatte, T., Sahoo, S., and King, G. E.: Lithium isotopes reveal enhanced weathering fluxes in North America during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum: Perspectives on clay chronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10197, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10197, 2026.

Semi-arid and arid regions have traditionally been regarded as peripheral to the global carbon cycle because of their presumed low silicate weathering rates, resulting in their systematic omission from long-term carbon budget assessments. Direct quantification on CO₂ consumption by silicate weathering (CO₂(SIW)) in eolian-dominated drylands, however, remains scarce. Here we reconstruct both silicate weathering rate (RCO) and annual CO₂ consumption (CO₂(SIW)) flux using red clay and loess–paleosol sequences from the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP). We demonstrate that variability in eolian mass accumulation rate (MAR), rather than intrinsic silicate weathering intensity (RCO), exerted the primary control on CO₂(SIW), reflecting persistently low to moderate chemical weathering across the CLP. Our results further reveal a rise in CO₂(SIW) from ~3.3 Tg C yr⁻¹ to ~12.3Tg C yr⁻¹ between 4.0 and 1.0 Ma, followed by a subsequent decline to ~9.0 Tg C yr⁻¹, broadly coincident with the late Pliocene decrease in atmospheric CO₂... These findings provide the first long-term quantitative budget of silicate weathering–mediated CO₂ drawdown in drylands and highlight the previously underrecognized role of semi-arid and arid eolian systems as negative feedback on atmospheric CO₂ over both million-year and orbital timescales.

How to cite: Zhang, C., Wu, H., Qiao, Y., and Guo, Z.: Quantification of silicate weathering CO2 consumption in semi-arid and arid eolian-dominated regions since the late Pliocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10497, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10497, 2026.

EGU26-10809 | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

A Greener but Less Productive Proterozoic Ocean 

Yonggang Liu and Peng Liu

Geological records suggest that marine phytoplankton might have arisen in the Proterozoic while zooplankton remained absent, and marine productivity was not excessively low. However, quantitative estimates of phytoplankton biomass and net primary productivity (NPP) remain elusive. Here, we use the Earth system model CESM1.2.2, modifyingbiological module and boundary conditions, to simulate marine biogeochemical cycles in the Proterozoic. The simulations demonstrate that, within the expected range of nutrient levels, phytoplankton at sea surface was >2 times denser than present, sustaining a greener ocean due to the absence of predators. Heavier surface chlorophyll in the Proterozoic would block sunlight from penetrating subsurface layers. This so-called self-shielding effect would decrease subsurface NPP significantly. Simulations show that, through the combined influence of low nitrate level under a low-oxygen environment, the absence of diatoms, and self-shielding, the Proterozoic NPP was only ~60% and 30% of the present level in warm (almost ice-free) and cold (sea-ice reaches ~30°N/S) periods, respectively.

How to cite: Liu, Y. and Liu, P.: A Greener but Less Productive Proterozoic Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10809, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10809, 2026.

EGU26-12349 | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Radiocarbon evidence for early deglacial changes in deep ocean upwelling near the Antarctic Divergence Zone in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean 

Julia Gottschalk, Cassandra Bartels, Robert F. Anderson, Xavier Crosta, Felix J. Elling, Oliver Esper, Daniel A. Frick, Jacqueline Hartmann, David A. Hodell, Samuel L. Jaccard, Yair Rosenthal, Luke C. Skinner, Sönke Szidat, and Lukas Wacker

Antarctic ice core evidence indicates that atmospheric CO2 levels increased during Heinrich Stadial (HS) 1 and the Younger Dryas (YD) during the last deglaciation. A substantial fraction of this carbon is believed to have stemmed from the ocean interior, released, in part, through enhanced wind-driven upwelling and air-sea CO2 exchange in the Southern Ocean. This was highlighted by two deglacial opal flux peaks identified in sediment core TN057-13-PC4 (53.17 °S, 5.13 °E, 2818 m water depth) from the Atlantic Southern Ocean south of the Polar Front, proximal to the Antarctic Divergence Zone (Anderson et al., 2009). However, there is limited information on changes in deep-ocean 14C ventilation and surface ocean hydrography in the Atlantic Antarctic Divergence, and their role in atmospheric CO2 variations during these two periods of deglacial CO2 rise. Here, we provide a new set of 12 mixed-benthic and 63 planktonic foraminiferal (i.e., Neogloboquadrina pachyderma) 14C ages obtained with a MIni-CArbon-DAting-System (MICADAS) in sediment core TN057-13-PC4, along with high-resolution multi-proxy (sub-)sea surface temperature reconstructions for the same site (N. pachyderma Mg/Ca ratios, TEX86, diatom assemblages). Our data help better constrain the nature, timing, and impacts of deep-ocean upwelling on surface ocean hydrography and on atmospheric CO2 exchange near the Antarctic Divergence of the Southern Ocean. Our data show strong (sub-)surface warming in the Antarctic Divergence during HS1 and YD that is accompanied by a rapid decline in benthic-minus-planktic 14C ages towards mean Holocene values at the onset of the deglaciation. We also observe millennial-scale increases in seawater d18O (paired N. pachyderma Mg/Ca-d18O analyses), hence local surface salinity and marked variations in 14C surface ocean reservoir ages that parallel changes in Antarctic sea ice extent. This corroborates previous evidence indicating increased upwelling of Circumpolar Deep Water in the Atlantic Antarctic Divergence during HS1 and YD, yet suggests an onset of strong Southern Ocean ventilation earlier than what is expected from increases in opal fluxes alone. Our data support a fundamental role of upwelling and CO2 outgassing in the Antarctic Divergence of the Southern Ocean in the two-step atmospheric CO2 rise during the last deglaciation, and further suggest that possible variations in CO2 solubility and sea-ice retreat amplified the effects of physical circulation changes on Southern Ocean air-sea CO2 exchange.

References: Anderson, R.F., Ali, S., Bradtmiller, L.I., Nielsen, S.H.H., Fleisher, M.Q., Anderson, B., Burckle, L.H., 2009. Wind-driven upwelling in the Southern Ocean and the deglacial rise in atmospheric CO2. Science 323, 1443–1448. doi: 10.1126/science.1167441

How to cite: Gottschalk, J., Bartels, C., Anderson, R. F., Crosta, X., Elling, F. J., Esper, O., Frick, D. A., Hartmann, J., Hodell, D. A., Jaccard, S. L., Rosenthal, Y., Skinner, L. C., Szidat, S., and Wacker, L.: Radiocarbon evidence for early deglacial changes in deep ocean upwelling near the Antarctic Divergence Zone in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12349, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12349, 2026.

EGU26-13087 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Revisiting radiocarbon production and the glacial carbon cycle during the Laschamps geomagnetic excursion 

Vincent Wall, Frank Lamy, Lester Lembke-Jene, Johannes Lachner, Stella Winkler, and Florian Adolphi

Reconstructions of atmospheric radiocarbon during the Laschamps geomagnetic excursion show a pronounced increase in Δ14C. The amplitude of this increase remains poorly reproduced by current carbon cycle models driven by independent 14C-production rates derived from 10Be ice-core records or geomagnetic field intensity reconstructions. This mismatch has commonly been attributed to uncertainties in cosmogenic 14C production rates, potentially arising from the underestimation of global production-rate changes in polar ice-core 10Be records during periods of strongly reduced geomagnetic field intensity.

Here we present a new global compilation of 10Be records from ice cores and marine sediments spanning the Laschamps event, providing an improved, globally integrated estimate of cosmogenic nuclide production for the period from 30,000 to 60,000 years BP. This compilation overcomes previous limitations of polar-only ice-core records, is more representative of global production, and is consistent with latest geomagnetic field intensity reconstructions. However, while the revised production rate implies larger 14C production-rate changes than previous estimates, it remains insufficient to reproduce the full amplitude of the observed Δ14C increase when implemented in carbon cycle models under conservative parameterization.

Using transient tuning of a simple carbon cycle model, we show that the remaining model–data mismatch is closely linked to signals observed in independent climate proxies, in particular ice-core δ18O records. This similarity suggests that the interactions between climate changes and carbon cycle dynamics during the glacial period are not adequately represented in current models.

Our results indicate that uncertainties in cosmogenic production alone cannot explain the radiocarbon anomaly associated with the Laschamps event. Instead, they point to a need for improved representations of climate–carbon cycle interactions under glacial conditions. This finding highlights the importance of revisiting carbon cycle dynamics, including carbon reservoir sizes, exchange rates, and circulation changes, in glacial climates, and demonstrates the value of globally integrated cosmogenic isotope records for disentangling production and carbon cycle effects in past radiocarbon variations.

How to cite: Wall, V., Lamy, F., Lembke-Jene, L., Lachner, J., Winkler, S., and Adolphi, F.: Revisiting radiocarbon production and the glacial carbon cycle during the Laschamps geomagnetic excursion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13087, 2026.

EGU26-13842 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Paleoclimate and Paleoenvironments of Early to Middle Miocene strata in West Turkana, Kenya: proxy records of forests, woodlands, and hydroclimate change 

William Lukens, Daniel Peppe, Susanne Cote, James Rossie, Alan Deino, Joslyn Herold, Ana Venters, Venanzio Munyaka, and Francis Muchemi

The Lothidok Range west of Lake Turkana, Kenya contains a rich paleontological record, including multiple well-preserved Miocene fossil ape taxa. Our work, as part of the West Turkana Miocene Project, seeks to integrate new paleontological surveys with modern tools in geologic mapping, stratigraphic analysis, geochronology, and proxy-based climatic and environmental reconstructions. The Early Miocene Moruorot and Kalodirr localities are well known for fossils of the ape taxa Afropithecus, Turkanapithecus, and Simiolus. Our work at Moruorot demonstrates that these ape taxa were coeval and are preserved in humid alluvial fan complexes. Paleovegetation proxies based on stable carbon isotope ratios in paleosol organic matter (δ13Com = -28 to -31 ‰) and pedogenic carbonates (δ13Cpc = -9 to -12 ‰) are consistent with C3 plants thriving in a forested ecosystem. This interpretation is bolstered by the presence of calcified branches and fruits in lahar deposits. We also use a paleosol bulk geochemical proxy for mean annual precipitation (MAP), which yields values of 1700-1900 mm, which requires intense seasonality of rainfall for pedogenic carbonate stability. In contrast to the Early Miocene paleoenvironments, nearby Middle Miocene deposits at Esha that contain at least one newly discovered fossil ape taxon preserve floodplain paleosols that suggest seasonal woodland conditions (δ13Com = -19 to - 27‰, δ13Cpc = -6.5 to -12 ‰) with a minor fraction of C4 plants in a C3-dominated biome. The paleosol bulk geochemical proxy yields MAP estimates of 500-1000 mm, notably drier than the Early Miocene paleosols. This multi-proxy investigation demonstrates that the West Turkana region experienced drying from the Early to Middle Miocene, and that both time intervals were much wetter than modern conditions. Our ongoing work is focused on refining the stratigraphy and geochronology at both known and newly discovered Early and Middle Miocene sites, and placing systematically collected fossils within a well resolved geological and paleoenvironmental framework across the southern Lothidok Range.

How to cite: Lukens, W., Peppe, D., Cote, S., Rossie, J., Deino, A., Herold, J., Venters, A., Munyaka, V., and Muchemi, F.: Paleoclimate and Paleoenvironments of Early to Middle Miocene strata in West Turkana, Kenya: proxy records of forests, woodlands, and hydroclimate change, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13842, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13842, 2026.

EGU26-14111 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Methane–Climate Interactions over Phanerozoic Timescales in an Earth System Modelling Framework 

Yixuan Xie, Paul Valdes, Peter Hopcroft, and Dan Lunt

Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas that plays an important role in Earth’s climate. However, its long-term evolution over deep-time remains poorly constrained. Consequently, methane is rarely treated as an explicit, dynamically evolving component in Earth system models, and its potential contribution to long-term climate variability has not been systematically explored.

Here we present a modelling framework coupled to the Earth System Model HadCM3, designed to investigate methane–climate interactions over multi-million-year timescales. The model represents major methane sources, with a particular focus on wetland emissions, and simulates methane sinks through an explicit atmospheric chemistry scheme, enabling a process-based calculation of atmospheric methane concentrations. Methane radiative forcing is subsequently derived from the simulated concentrations to evaluate its long-term climatic impact.

Our preliminary simulations indicate that methane variations exhibit nonlinear and systematic dependencies on background climate state and carbon cycle conditions. The persistent co-variation between CO₂ forcing and global temperature over the Phanerozoic, despite the gradual increase in solar luminosity, implies the presence of additional compensating forcings or feedback mechanisms. Our results indicate that methane radiative forcing alone is insufficient to provide this compensating influence, pointing to the involvement of additional long-term climate factors that are not yet fully understood.

How to cite: Xie, Y., Valdes, P., Hopcroft, P., and Lunt, D.: Methane–Climate Interactions over Phanerozoic Timescales in an Earth System Modelling Framework, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14111, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14111, 2026.

EGU26-14466 | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Decoupling of Neogene Seawater Lithium Isotopes from Uplift-driven Weathering 

Yudong Liu, Yibo Yang, Philip A. E. Pogge von Strandmann, Zhangdong Jin, and Xiaomin Fang

The ~9‰ increase in seawater lithium isotope composition (δ7Li) during the Cenozoic is widely interpreted as evidence for uplift-driven intensification of continental silicate weathering, particularly associated with major orogenic systems such as the Tibetan Plateau. However, this interpretation remains largely untested due to the lack of long-term riverine δ7Li records from tectonically active regions. Here we present the first Neogene paleowater δ7Li records spanning the past ~15 Myr from both the southern and northern Tibetan Plateau, a region that today contributes ~18% of the global riverine Li flux. Our dataset is derived from a 3500-m-thick fluvial sequence (15-5 Ma) in the Siwalik foreland basin (southern, monsoon-dominated Plateau) and a 1700-m drill core (7.3-0.1 Ma) from the Qaidam Basin (northern, arid Plateau). These two archives capture contrasting climatic, lithological and denudation regimes associated with Neogene uplift and cooling. Reconstructed paleowater δ7Li values reveal persistently low values in the southern Plateau and a long-term decrease in the northern Plateau, indicating reduced silicate weathering intensity under conditions of climatic cooling and rapid exhumation. These trends contrast with the coeval rise in seawater δ7Li, challenging the view that enhanced silicate weathering from uplifted mountain belts directly drives the marine lithium isotope record. By integrating our δ7Li reconstructions and reconstructed Li fluxes from the entire Tibetan Plateau into a global lithium cycle model, we show that continental silicate weathering from tectonically active mountains alone is unlikely to account for the observed Neogene increase in seawater δ7Li. Our results highlight the need for direct continental records from major orogenic systems to robustly constrain the links between tectonics, weathering, and the long-term carbon cycle.

How to cite: Liu, Y., Yang, Y., Pogge von Strandmann, P. A. E., Jin, Z., and Fang, X.: Decoupling of Neogene Seawater Lithium Isotopes from Uplift-driven Weathering, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14466, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14466, 2026.

EGU26-14764 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

A novel approach for quantifying the timing and volume of volcanic degassing in deep time: A case study from the Sinemurian – Pliensbachian Boundary Event 

Oliver Neilson, Isabel Fendley, Joost Frieling, Tamsin Mather, Stephen Hesselbo, Hugh Jenkyns, and Clemens Ullmann

Understanding deep-time climatic feedbacks relies on quantifying the initial drivers of Earth system perturbations. Earth system perturbations are highly sensitive to, among other parameters, the timing and duration of volcanic degassing. Currently, these input parameters are coarsely constrained, with volatile estimates coming from melt inclusion data and radiometric dating1. However, recent work has highlighted the power of combining sedimentary mercury (Hg), a volcanic tracer, and simple Hg cycle box models to estimate the tempo and volume of volcanic degassing in deep time2.

Here, we present a quantitative high-resolution degassing history through the Sinemurian - Pliensbachian Boundary Event (SPBE). This protracted negative “U-shaped” carbon isotope excursion lasted for over 3 million years in the Early Jurassic (ca. 190 Ma). We utilise over 1600 samples collected from the recently drilled core at Prees, Cheshire Basin, U.K., as part of the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program JET project, to create this history.

The SPBE is broadly coeval with increased rifting and the associated opening of the Hispanic Seaway, and potentially a late pulse of volcanic activity from the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province3–5, all of which may have contributed to its shape and duration. We quantify the tempo and volume of volcanic degassing during the SPBE using a novel geochemical machine-learning framework to isolate volcanically sourced Hg, followed by identification of the best-fit degassing scenarios using a global Hg box model.

The results of our method have implications regarding the sensitivity and feedbacks of the carbon cycle in deep time.  Specifically, we quantify the evolution of emissions during this enigmatic excursion. This will directly aid in understanding climate sensitivity during this period, where the protracted “U-shaped” change in carbon isotopes must now be reconciled with our evidence for distinct pulses of volcanic emissions throughout.

This work helps bridge the gap between the palaeoclimate modelling and proxy communities. By quantitatively linking Hg concentrations to volcanic degassing, we can provide volcanic inputs with a precision of a few thousand years to modellers aiming to simulate deep-time climate change.

References:

1. Hernandez Nava, A. et al. Reconciling early Deccan Traps CO2 outgassing and pre-KPB global climate. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118, e2007797118 (2021).

2. Fendley, I. M. et al. Early Jurassic large igneous province carbon emissions constrained by sedimentary mercury. Nat. Geosci. 17, 241–248 (2024).

3. Franceschi, M. et al. Early Pliensbachian (Early Jurassic) C-isotope perturbation and the diffusion of the Lithiotis Fauna: Insights from the western Tethys. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 410, 255–263 (2014).

4. Ruhl, M. et al. Astronomical constraints on the duration of the Early Jurassic Pliensbachian Stage and global climatic fluctuations. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 455, 149–165 (2016).

5. Jiang, H. et al. Large-scale volcanogenic Hg enrichment coincided with the Sinemurian-Pliensbachian boundary event (Early Jurassic). Geological Society of America Bulletin https://doi.org/10.1130/B37640.1 (2025) 

How to cite: Neilson, O., Fendley, I., Frieling, J., Mather, T., Hesselbo, S., Jenkyns, H., and Ullmann, C.: A novel approach for quantifying the timing and volume of volcanic degassing in deep time: A case study from the Sinemurian – Pliensbachian Boundary Event, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14764, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14764, 2026.

EGU26-15171 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

North Atlantic sea surface temperature evolution across the Oligocene–Miocene Transition from TEX86 paleothermometry 

Tobias Agterhuis, Heather Stoll, Thomas Tanner, Emily Hollingsworth, Gavin Foster, Bridget Wade, and Gordon Inglis

The Oligocene–Miocene Transition (OMT) includes a pronounced ~1‰ positive excursion in benthic oxygen isotope records (δ18O), reflecting Antarctic ice sheet expansion and/or deep ocean cooling, commonly referred to as the Mi-1 glaciation. At present, limited reconstructions of sea surface temperature (SST) evolution across the OMT have been published, leaving the magnitude of global cooling during Mi-1 uncertain. Here we present high-resolution (~10 kyr) SST reconstructions from IODP Site U1406 on the Newfoundland Margin (North Atlantic) using the lipid biomarker TEX86 proxy, based on isoGDGT distributions. Our record shows TEX86 values ranging from 0.64 to 0.76, with a ~0.04 decrease during the Mi-1 event. To assess potential non-thermal overprints on the TEX86 data, we calculated GDGT-based indices, including the Branched-to-Isoprenoid Tetraether (BIT) index. BIT values are relatively high (0.4–0.8), suggesting significant input of terrestrial GDGTs that could bias TEX86. However, TEX86 and BIT show weak correlation (R2 = 0.124), indicating limited terrestrial overprint on the TEX86 signal. Furthermore, a ternary plot of brGDGT compositions shows that the Newfoundland samples differ from modern soils and peats, suggesting marine production of brGDGTs as the source of the high BIT values. These findings suggest that the Newfoundland Margin was not influenced by substantial terrestrial organic matter input across the OMT, and that TEX86 provides a reliable record of SST. Translating TEX86 into temperature, our record indicates warm SSTs ranging from 25 to 31 °C, with a cooling of ~2 °C during the Mi-1 event, consistent with published low-resolution alkenone-derived (UK’37) estimates (Guitián et al., 2019). Future work will focus on determining whether the observed SST cooling at Site U1406 reflects a global climate signal or is driven by latitudinal shifts in the North Atlantic SST gradient. This could be addressed using seawater oxygen isotope (δ18Osw) reconstructions based on the combination of SST proxies and planktic foraminiferal δ18O to infer changes in surface ocean circulation, alongside comparisons with Earth System Model simulations.

How to cite: Agterhuis, T., Stoll, H., Tanner, T., Hollingsworth, E., Foster, G., Wade, B., and Inglis, G.: North Atlantic sea surface temperature evolution across the Oligocene–Miocene Transition from TEX86 paleothermometry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15171, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15171, 2026.

EGU26-15355 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Long-term climate dynamics and carbon cycling in eastern Australian from MIS5 to present 

Haidee Cadd, John Tibby, Jonathan Tyler, Cameron Barr, Matthew Forbes, Melanie Leng, Michela Mariani, Patrick Moss, Timothy Cohen, Bo Li, Sam Marx, Debashish Mazumder, Tsuyoshi Kobayashi, and Fabian Boesl

The last glacial cycle is a key period in the environmental and cultural history of the Australian continent, yet the climate of this time period remains poorly understood. Conflicting evidence from spatially disparate lacustrine records and discontinuous fluvial archives have hindered consensus on environmental change during this period. Here, we present two new, highly resolved organic sedimentary records from the Thirlmere Lakes (NSW) and Minjerribah (North Stradbroke Island, QLD) regions of eastern Australia that provide new constraints on long-term climate and environmental variability through the last glacial cycle.

Australian aquatic systems often deviate from biogeochemical frameworks developed largely from Northern Hemisphere environments. The prevalence of low-nutrient conditions results in unusual carbon isotope signatures, complicating the identification of organic carbon sources and their transport between terrestrial and aquatic reservoirs. Through characterisation of modern aquatic carbon isotopes, we develop alternative threshold values for distinguishing organic matter sources and, in turn, demonstrate the utility of sedimentary stable carbon isotopes as robust tracers of environmental and climatic change in southern mid-latitude systems.

Applying these newly developed isotope thresholds, we reconstruct millennial-scale climate variability in eastern Australia from Marine Isotope Stage 5 to the present. The resulting records reveal strong coupling between regional carbon cycling and Southern Hemisphere high-latitude climate, with limited evidence for Northern Hemisphere forcing. These findings highlight the importance of regionally calibrated carbon isotope frameworks and demonstrate the value of stable carbon isotopes for reconstructing past Earth system change in under-represented Southern Hemisphere environments.

How to cite: Cadd, H., Tibby, J., Tyler, J., Barr, C., Forbes, M., Leng, M., Mariani, M., Moss, P., Cohen, T., Li, B., Marx, S., Mazumder, D., Kobayashi, T., and Boesl, F.: Long-term climate dynamics and carbon cycling in eastern Australian from MIS5 to present, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15355, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15355, 2026.

Discovery of abundant lake ice-rafted debris (L‑IRD) coeval with dinosaurs in continental strata of the Late Triassic to middle Jurassic of northwestern China (Junggar Basin) led to reevaluation of paleolatitude for that region (1). The basin was inferred to lie north of the Arctic Circle during the Late Triassic/Early Jurassic, along with much of Northeast Asia, consistent with paleomagnetic reference frame data (2–4). Similarities in facies transitions through the Triassic and Jurassic in both the North and South China blocks, together with recent paleomagnetic interpretations, suggest amalgamation with the Siberian plate by the Late Triassic (5, 6), implying a giant Early Mesozoic Arctic continent dwarfing present-day Antarctica.

The L‑IRD shows that the southern margin of the Arctic had freezing winters despite high pCO₂, consistent with climate models (7), and the outsized Arctic continent would have had an enhanced continental climate with even colder winters. With lowlands freezing in winter in the southern Arctic, there were presumably significant mountain glaciers, perhaps even a small ice cap, as a background condition, consistent with glacioeustatic Triassic–Jurassic sea-level fluctuations (8).

The end-Triassic sea-level drop stands out in particular: a ∼10⁵‑year event on a multimillion-year rise, broadly coincident with the end-Triassic mass extinction (ETE) (9). This sea-level drop is coincident with the onset of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP), but modeling suggests that CAMP-related uplift would have had relatively local effects (10). An increase in glacial ice triggered by CAMP volcanic winters provides a possible mechanism (11). Perhaps enhanced via ice–albedo feedback and a consequent increase in Earth System sensitivity to polar orbital forcing, ice-sheet growth may have triggered a recently identified ~400 kyr switch in tropical orbital pacing from expected precession dominance to obliquity dominance and back (12), a temporary transition resembling the onset of the “40 kyr world” at the mid-Miocene transition, plausibly caused by growth of the Antarctic Ice Sheet to near-modern size (13).

This giant Arctic continent may have primed the Earth System to switch from a hothouse to a transient icehouse world during CAMP volcanic winters, causing an abrupt sea-level drop. The same cold perturbations may also have driven the extinction of all large non-insulated land animals, paving the way for dinosaur ecological dominance, as these insulated reptiles were already living in the freezing Arctic beforehand.

1) Olsen et al. 2022. Sci. Adv. 8, eabo6342; 2) Marcilly et al. 2021.  http://www.earthdynamics.org/climate/exposed_land.zip; 3) van Hinsbergen et al. 2014. paleolatitude.org; 4) Leonard et al. 2025. Commun. Earth Environ. 6, 508. 5) Yi et al. 2023. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 118143; 6) Olsen et al. 2024. Geol. Soc. Lond. Spec. Publ. 538, SP538–2023–2089; 7) Landwehrs et al. 2022. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 119, e2203818119; 8) Wang et al. 2022. Glob. Planet. Change 208, 103706; 9) Fox et al. 2020. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.; 10)  Austermann et al. 2015. EGU Gen. Assem. Abstr. 3073; 11) Schoene. 2010. Geology 38, 387–390; 12) Olsen et al. 2024. AGU24, Abstr. V22A-05; 13) Westerhold et al. 2020. Science 369, 1383.

How to cite: Olsen, P.: A Giant Arctic Continent During the Early Mesozoic:  its Climatic, Eustatic, and Biotic Implications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15949, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15949, 2026.

EGU26-16243 | Orals | CL1.1.1

 Impact of Ocean Physical Conditions on Ocean Carbon Pumps and Atmospheric CO2 

Miyano Nishida, Akira Oka, and Hidetaka Kobayashi

During glacial periods, atmospheric COconcentrations are known to have been about 90 ppmv lower than during interglacial. However, climate models have not been able to fully reproduce this decrease, partly due to large uncertainties in changes in ocean physical fields. In this study, we evaluate the impact of uncertainties in ocean physical fields on atmospheric pCOduring the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) using a single offline ocean biogeochemical model forced by 12 ocean physical states derived from PMIP.

The simulated glacial atmospheric pCOreduction is 40.3 ± 7.8 ppmv on average, with a large inter-model spread. This reduction mainly comes from the SST-dependent solubility effect (−30.1 ± 5.6 ppmv) and the enhanced efficiency of the organic matter pump (−21.6 ± 6.6 ppmv), cancelled somewhat by the response of the gas-exchange pump (+6.2 ± 9.4 ppmv). Our analysis suggests that the enhanced efficiency of the organic matter pump is associated with the older deep-water age in the glacial ocean and the response of the gas-exchange pump appears controlled by the SST contrast between the North Atlantic and the Southern Ocean.

We find that models with older radiocarbon deep-water ages exhibit more efficient sequestration of carbon transported by the organic matter pump into the deep ocean, leading to a larger glacial reduction in atmospheric pCO2. However, all models used in this study underestimate the deep-water radiocarbon ages suggested by Δ14C paleoclimate records. In addition, both the global mean SST and the global mean ocean temperature are tend to be underestimated in the model compared to paleoclimate proxy reconstructions, leading to the smaller contribution of the SST-dependent solubility effect to the pCO2 reduction. If such model biases (i.e. underestimation of deep-water ages and the SST cooling) are corrected, we estimate that the corrected model estimate of the glacial pCO2 reduction becomes up to ~65ppmv which is still not enough for 90 ppmv reduction obtained from ice core record. Our results imply that the improvement in the reproducibility of the glacial ocean physical field alone are insufficient to fully account for the glacial atmospheric COreduction and further improvements in the representation of ocean biogeochemical processes are also required under constraints including carbon isotope records.

How to cite: Nishida, M., Oka, A., and Kobayashi, H.:  Impact of Ocean Physical Conditions on Ocean Carbon Pumps and Atmospheric CO2, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16243, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16243, 2026.

EGU26-16785 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Quantifying spatiotemporal variability in Neogene organic carbon burial: a case for ocean model upsampling 

Aspen Sartin, Richard G. Stockey, Pam Vervoort, Eelco J. Rohling, and Thomas M. Gernon

3D biogeochemical ocean models such as cGENIE can explicitly model depth-dependent carbon cycle processes, such as remineralisation of organic carbon. This potential advantage of 3D models (in comparison to box ocean models) can, however, be limited by coarse spatial resolutions. In particular, continental shelves may be underresolved in 3D model bathymetric grids. Such grids are created by downsampling (palaeo)-digital elevation models (DEMs).

We develop an algorithm (here termed ‘DEM-based upsampling’) to project 3D ocean model output onto its associated DEM. This resolves depth-dependent quantities and fluxes at the seafloor at degree-scale and better captures shallow seafloor, including continental shelves. This is critical for modelling organic carbon cycling, as continental shelves receive more than half of the global flux of organic carbon to the seafloor. We validate the DEM-based upsampling algorithm using area-weighted errors between a modern-Earth model run and observational data (World Ocean Atlas 2023). Upsampling yields statistically significant reductions in error in modelled temperature, salinity, oxygen concentration, and phosphate concentration across bootstrap confidence intervals and paired non-parametric tests.

We then derive the first spatially-resolved model record of ocean organic carbon burial from 25 Ma – present using the PhanerO3D framework, driving cGENIE with SCION biogeochemistry and HadCM3L atmospheric physics. We obtain organic carbon burial flux by upsampling cGENIE’s organic carbon export flux and applying a simple burial scheme. We find the global burial rate peaks in the early Miocene, then declines over the remaining Neogene. This trend agrees well with geochemical records until the latest Miocene – Pliocene. We find global variability to be largely driven by regional changes; notably declining North Atlantic margin burial over the Miocene, and rising West Pacific burial in the Pliocene.

These results highlight the advantages of DEM-based upsampling as a tool in palaeoclimate modelling: better constraining depth-dependent ocean processes, facilitating deeper investigation of spatiotemporal patterns, and potentially facilitating more spatially precise proxy-model comparison.

How to cite: Sartin, A., Stockey, R. G., Vervoort, P., Rohling, E. J., and Gernon, T. M.: Quantifying spatiotemporal variability in Neogene organic carbon burial: a case for ocean model upsampling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16785, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16785, 2026.

EGU26-16908 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Late Ordovician Climate Reconstruction Based on State-Dependent Climate Sensitivity 

Qingteng Zhang and Junxuan Fan

The Hirnantian glacial maximum was a brief but intense glacial event that occurred during the latest Ordovician (~445-443 million years ago). It was characterized by global cooling, major ice-sheet expansion over Gondwana, and substantial perturbations to the carbon cycle. Previous studies have combined Earth system models with proxy records to investigate the magnitude of the cooling and to explore the mechanisms linking ocean deoxygenation to the Late Ordovician mass extinction. However, the results of these reconstructions exhibit considerable discrepancies, primarily due to the increasing uncertainty of proxy data with geological age and the difficulty of constraining boundary conditions required by models in deep time. Here we introduce state-dependent climate sensitivity, in which the radiative forcing of atmospheric CO2 increases with its concentration, to improve the Earth system modelling. We then perform a series of simulations with varying levels of greenhouse gases and nutrients to identify the climate-productivity conditions that plausibly drove the cooling during the Hirnantian glacial maximum. Applying rigorously screened Late Ordovician sea-surface temperature estimates derived from oxygen isotope studies as constraints, alongside a semi-quantitative constraint based on a new compilation of local redox proxies, we identify a plausible scenario of Hirnantian climate and redox changes. Our results show that deep-ocean deoxygenation during the Hirnantian was driven by a combination of cooling and changes in ocean nutrient inventory, and that temperature-driven microbial respiration can reconcile the spatial distribution of seafloor anoxia as reconstructed, providing new insights into the decoupling of redox conditions between the surface and deep waters. In addition, our simulations suggest that Late Ordovician atmospheric CO2 levels before cooling may have been substantially overestimated (up to 6,720 ppm according to previous studies), likely due to a fixed climate sensitivity assumed in previous modelling studies. This overestimation may not be limited to this event, but could also affect climate simulations of other periods.

How to cite: Zhang, Q. and Fan, J.: Late Ordovician Climate Reconstruction Based on State-Dependent Climate Sensitivity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16908, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16908, 2026.

EGU26-16949 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Multi-proxy reconstruction of late Maastrichtian surface-ocean dynamics in the tropical Pacific 

Alexa Fischer, Thomas Westerhold, Ursula Röhl, André Bahr, Silke Voigt, and Oliver Friedrich

The Late Cretaceous greenhouse climate experienced a pronounced cooling trend during the Campanian–Maastrichtian, potentially driven by declining atmospheric CO2 and ocean-gateway reorganization. Yet, low-latitude high-resolution reconstructions remain limited, hampering mechanistic interpretations of surface-ocean dynamics. Here, we present a new high-resolution planktonic Mg/Ca-derived sea-surface temperature (SST) record from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Sites 1209 and 1210 (Shatsky Rise, western tropical Pacific), spanning ~2.5 Myr (67.0–69.4 Ma). Reconstructed SSTs range between ~32 and 34 °C, consistently exceeding modern tropical surface-ocean temperatures. SSTs rise toward ~68.1 Ma before cooling in the youngest part of the record. While absolute Mg/Ca temperatures are higher than published TEX86 and planktonic δ18O-based SSTs, the major trends agree across proxies. To place these SST changes into a broader paleoceanographic framework, we integrate our record with new high-resolution planktonic δ13C and δ18O data from the same sites. The combined dataset enables evaluation of carbon-cycle perturbations, surface-water salinity variability (δ18Osw), and productivity-related vertical δ13C gradients, as well as their pacing on orbital timescales. Together, these results refine Maastrichtian low-latitude climate variability and highlight a trend toward increased meridional temperature gradients.

How to cite: Fischer, A., Westerhold, T., Röhl, U., Bahr, A., Voigt, S., and Friedrich, O.: Multi-proxy reconstruction of late Maastrichtian surface-ocean dynamics in the tropical Pacific, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16949, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16949, 2026.

EGU26-18128 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Refining Phanerozoic Extreme Climate Simulations with Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity (ECS) in cGENIE 

Qingteng Zhang and Junxuan Fan

Equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS), defined as the response of the global mean surface temperature response to a sustained doubling of atmospheric CO2 at equilibrium, is a key metric for quantifying the Earth’s climate sensitivity to greenhouse gas emissions. Accurate ECS estimates are therefore fundamental for reliable simulations of the long-term carbon cycle. cGENIE, as an Earth system model of intermediate complexity that integrates ocean circulation, atmospheric energy balance, and global biogeochemical cycling, is widely used to investigate cross-sphere carbon cycle evolution and long-term climate feedback mechanisms. However, previous cGENIE studies have assumed a fixed climate sensitivity (with a default radiative forcing of 4 W m-2 per CO2 doubling), which often led to inaccurate surface temperature estimates compared with proxy reconstructions, limiting the model’s ability to capture state-dependent climate feedbacks. Here we use fully coupled models (e.g., HadCM3 and CESM) to derive the relationship between atmospheric CO2 concentrations and ECS throughout the Phanerozoic. These simulations are considered to closely match proxy reconstructions of temperatures. We then incorporate state-dependent climate sensitivity into cGENIE to enhance its representation of climate feedbacks across varying CO2 levels. Our results show that temperature simulations using the unmodified cGENIE model exhibit substantial discrepancies for periods of rapid cooling and warming, such as the Late Ordovician and the PETM. However, incorporating state-dependent climate sensitivity substantially reduces the discrepancy between simulated and proxy-reconstructed surface temperatures. These findings highlight the importance of accounting for state-dependent climate sensitivity in Earth system models, both for accurately reconstructing past climate extremes and for improving projections of future climate change.

How to cite: Zhang, Q. and Fan, J.: Refining Phanerozoic Extreme Climate Simulations with Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity (ECS) in cGENIE, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18128, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18128, 2026.

EGU26-18315 | Orals | CL1.1.1

Pacific and Atlantic Modes of Overturning in the Miocene Climatic Optimum 

David Hutchinson, Katrin Meissner, Laurie Menviel, Nicky Wright, James Berg, Paul Acosta, and Benjamin Anthonisz

During the Cenozoic Era, the ocean's meridional overturning circulation (MOC) has alternated between North Pacific and North Atlantic sinking modes. The Miocene Climatic Optimum (17.0–14.7 Ma) is a key interval for reconstructing this history because there is partial and inconclusive evidence for both MOC modes during this period. Here we investigate the MOC during the Miocene Climatic Optimum using two different climate models, GFDL CM2.1 and ACCESS-ESM1.5. Simulations are forced with atmospheric CO2 levels of pre-industrial concentration (286 ppm), double (572 ppm) and triple (858 ppm) CO2- the latter two falling within proxy-based estimates for this period.

In the GFDL CM2.1 model, we find either North Pacific overturning or North Atlantic overturning modes at all three CO2 levels, depending on the details of the paleogeography. Arctic-Atlantic gateways are especially important in controlling the freshwater balance, and hence surface density, in the North Atlantic sinking regions. By contrast, in the ACCESS-ESM1.5 model, we find that North Atlantic overturning consistently occurs at pre-industrial CO2 only. At double or triple CO2, the model becomes increasingly stratified, leading to a weakening or collapse of the global overturning circulation. The more stratified regimes are linked to a significantly higher climate sensitivity in ACCESS-ESM1.5, with intensified surface buoyancy changes.  These markedly different overturning regimes have major implications for deep ocean oxygenation, with the stratified cases becoming largely hypoxic in the deep ocean, while cases with active overturning remain well oxygenated.

How to cite: Hutchinson, D., Meissner, K., Menviel, L., Wright, N., Berg, J., Acosta, P., and Anthonisz, B.: Pacific and Atlantic Modes of Overturning in the Miocene Climatic Optimum, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18315, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18315, 2026.

EGU26-18645 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Model-dependent latitudinal temperature gradient drives Late Ordovician climate stability 

Joseph Naar, Yannick Donnadieu, Guillaume Le Hir, Alexandre Pohl, and Jean-Baptiste Ladant

Among the five great extinction events of the Phanerozoic, the Late Ordovician stands out as it is
concomitant with a massive glacial event under high atmospheric pCO2. This apparent climate
paradox was addressed in numerous climate modeling studies. In particular, [1] showed that under
the specific palaeogeographical conditions of the Hirnantian (445 Ma), with an ocean-dominated
Northern Hemisphere, the climate system may undergo a “tipping point” where a small pCO2
variation leads to either glacial or ice-free warm equilibrium state.
Those results were obtained with the intermediate complexity Fast Ocean Atmosphere Model
(FOAM). We have conducted new simulations using the state-of-the-art coupled IPSL-CM5A2-LR
Earth System Model [2], spanning a wide range of pCO2 for the Hirnantian. We find that the climate
tipping point is entirely absent, and that the equilibrium climate sensitivity is strikingly linear in this
set of simulations.
We conducted a detailed model intercomparison and we have identified major differences between
the models in the representation of the radiative transfer, cloud cycle and oceanic eddy dynamics
which contribute to the qualitatively different model behaviors, enhanced under high atmospheric
pCO2 content. Specifically, the FOAM tipping point corresponds to an abrupt transition from a sharp
Northern latitudinal temperature gradient at low pCO2 (cold state) to a flattened gradient with warm
polar latitudes (ice-free warm state). In contrast, the IPSL-CM5A2 temperature gradient is relatively
constant across pCO2, with year-long sea ice confined in the Northern latitudes even under 15X
preindustrial pCO2 level (4200 ppm).
We propose a physical mechanism to link the warm FOAM flattened latitudinal temperature gradient
to the dramatic sea-ice albedo feedback sensitivity via the increased stratification of the superficial
ocean. Since this mechanism is independent of the physical parameterizations and relative
complexity of the models, and comparing our results with other scarce published climate simulations
of the Hirnantian [3,4], we propose that the latitudinal temperature gradient, seen as a model-
dependent emerging feature, may be the main driver of the previously unveiled sea-ice albedo
climate tipping point.
References:
[1] Pohl et al. (2014), Climate of the Past, 10, 6
[2] Sepulchre et al. (2020), Geoscientific Model Development, 13,7
[3] Pohl et al. (2017), Paleoceanography, 32, 4
[4] Valdes et al. (2021), Climate of the Past, 17, 4

How to cite: Naar, J., Donnadieu, Y., Le Hir, G., Pohl, A., and Ladant, J.-B.: Model-dependent latitudinal temperature gradient drives Late Ordovician climate stability, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18645, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18645, 2026.

EGU26-18913 | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Diapycnal mixing in the Early Eocene: insights from the DeepMIP intercomparison project phase 1 

Jean-Baptiste Ladant, Casimir de Lavergne, Wing-Le Chan, David Hutchinson, Dan Lunt, and Jiang Zhu

Tides are the main energy source for diapycnal mixing in the ocean interior. However, energy-constrained tidal mixing parameterizations are not routinely included in ocean models applied to the deep-time past of the Earth. Instead, diapycnal mixing is usually parameterised by a constant vertical diffusivity or a prescribed vertical profile of vertical diffusivity.

Here, by leveraging outputs from the DeepMIP project, we compute the power effectively consumed by parameterized diapycnal mixing in each DeepMIP model and for different CO2 concentrations. We show that this power slightly increases with increasing CO2 in simulations integrated to quasi-equilibrium but skyrockets in warming, out-of-equilibrium, simulations. This reflects the increased stratification in a warming ocean, even though in principle the same amount of tidal energy is available for mixing. We find no evident relationships between the intensity of the overturning circulation and the power consumed by diapycnal mixing across the DeepMIP models. Finally, we use coupled climate-biogeochemistry simulations performed with the IPSL-CM5A2 model to show that the marine biogeochemistry is largely impacted by the vertical mixing scheme employed, even if the total power consumed by diapycnal mixing remains similar.

How to cite: Ladant, J.-B., de Lavergne, C., Chan, W.-L., Hutchinson, D., Lunt, D., and Zhu, J.: Diapycnal mixing in the Early Eocene: insights from the DeepMIP intercomparison project phase 1, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18913, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18913, 2026.

EGU26-19757 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Variability and controls of organic and carbonate carbon burial on the West Australian shelf during the Late Pleistocene 

Arianna V. Del Gaudio, Or M. Bialik, Gerald Auer, and David De Vleeschouwer

The mid and late Pleistocene are marked by large-amplitude fluctuations in global ice volume and pronounced climatic variability. Around ~1 Ma, Earth’s climate system underwent a fundamental reorganization, as glacial–interglacial variability shifted from predominantly 41-kyr cycles to higher-amplitude, quasi-100-kyr oscillations. This transition was accompanied by enhanced atmospheric CO2 drawdown during glacial periods. However, how the global carbon cycle adjusted to this shift, and which reservoirs account for the lowered glacial atmospheric CO2 concentrations, remains not fully quantitatively constrained. In this context, marine carbon burial, particularly on continental shelves, represents a potentially important yet underexplored long-term sink for atmospheric CO2.

Here, we quantify variability in organic and carbonate carbon burial on the West Australian shelf and evaluate its potential contribution to Pleistocene atmospheric CO2 drawdown. We measured δ¹³C and calculated relative burial fractions and mass accumulation rates for organic and carbonate carbon in sediments recovered from IODP Expedition 356 Site U1460 (27°22′S, 112°55′E), spanning the last ~210 kyr (MIS 7–MIS 1). The site was drilled at ~214 m water depth in the northern Perth Basin and is situated in a dynamic oceanographic setting influenced by the interaction between the warm, oligotrophic Leeuwin Current (LC) and the cooler, nutrient-rich West Australian Current (WAC).

Our results reveal two pronounced maxima in organic carbon burial relative to carbonate during glacial MIS 6 (~168 ka) and MIS 2 (~26 ka), as well as a more moderate increase at ~109 ka across the MIS 5a–d to MIS 5e transition. These patterns are consistent with previous suggestions of enhanced shelf organic carbon burial during glacial periods (Auer et al., 2021). Variations in organic-to-carbonate burial ratios are paced by eccentricity-modulated glacial–interglacial sea-level changes and Milankovic-driven shifts in seasonality, both of which influence the strength of the LC and its interaction with the WAC. High sea level and enhanced seasonality strengthen the LC, restricting nutrient supply to the West Australian shelf. Conversely, low sea level and reduced seasonality weaken the LC, allowing the nutrient-rich WAC to dominate, thereby enhancing primary productivity and organic carbon burial.

Finally, we use organic carbon mass accumulation rates to place first-order constraints on the potential for carbon storage on the West Australian shelf during Late Pleistocene glacials. Although organic carbon burial increased during glacial intervals, limited accommodation space on the shelf likely restricted total organic carbon accumulation, preventing it from exerting a major influence on global glacial–interglacial atmospheric CO₂ variability.

How to cite: V. Del Gaudio, A., M. Bialik, O., Auer, G., and De Vleeschouwer, D.: Variability and controls of organic and carbonate carbon burial on the West Australian shelf during the Late Pleistocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19757, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19757, 2026.

EGU26-19878 * | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1 | Highlight

How old is the world’s oldest desert? Investigating the coevolution of landscape and climate in the development of the Namib Desert 

Bethany Allen, Jean Braun, Esteban Acevedo-Trejos, Christoph Böhm, and Georg Feulner

The Namib Desert in Southern Africa is likely the world’s oldest desert, experiencing arid to hyperarid conditions for most of the Cenozoic. The desert is inhabited by a unique flora and fauna, some of which has adapted to obtain water from fog, which develops along the Namibian coastline. However, our knowledge of the climatic history of this desert is fragmentary, based on evidence from lithology and geochemistry. Temporal constraints are often provided by biostratigraphy based on fossilised ratite eggshells, which only gives an approximate sequence of events.

In order to test different scenarios for the development of the Namib Desert, we employ FastScape, a landscape evolution model, combined with a model of orographic rainfall. We use this framework to reconstruct Southern African landscape evolution based on different hypotheses arising from geological data, and infer consequential climatic histories, over the last 100 million years. Modern-day remote sensing and weather station data are used to tune and test the fit of the final model timeslice. This allows us to determine which landscape evolution scenarios are most likely, providing novel insights into the onset and evolution of aridity in the Namib Desert.

How to cite: Allen, B., Braun, J., Acevedo-Trejos, E., Böhm, C., and Feulner, G.: How old is the world’s oldest desert? Investigating the coevolution of landscape and climate in the development of the Namib Desert, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19878, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19878, 2026.

EGU26-19938 | ECS | Orals | CL1.1.1

Reconstructing Late Palaeozoic Land-Ice Distributions: A Machine Learning Framework for Model-Data Comparison 

Sayon Beura, Thomas Gernon, Richard Stockey, and Dan Lunt

Deep-time glacial intervals provide critical benchmarks for assessing Earth System Model (ESM) performance under past climate states. However, most paleo-simulations lack dynamic icesheets, leaving this key component poorly constrained. Here, we introduce a machine learning approach for reconstructing global glacial extent across the Phanerozoic, integrating paleoclimate simulations, paleo-topography, and a global stratigraphic database of glacial deposits. This framework generates spatially explicit, probabilistic reconstructions that enable quantitative comparison between geological archives and climate model ensembles, highlighting regions of agreement and mismatch.

The Late Palaeozoic Ice Age (LPIA), a >100-million-year glaciation variously attributed to declining atmospheric CO₂, palaeographic changes, and tectonic activity, provides an ideal case-study considered here. A persistent enigma concerning the LPIA is its hemispheric asymmetry, whereby preserved glacial deposits are abundant in the Southern Hemisphere but sparse in the Northern Hemisphere. Whether this bipolarity reflects genuine climate asymmetry or preservation bias remains unresolved. We address this by modelling the distribution of land-ice using environmental predictors such as temperature, precipitation, transpiration, and topography, derived from HadCM3L simulations that do not include dynamic icesheets. This analysis yields time-slice specific probabilistic reconstructions that can be directly compared with the preserved sedimentary record. We calibrate our framework against modern glaciers and LPIA glacial deposits, and subsequently applying it to other Phanerozoic ice ages, producing a consistent reference dataset for model-data comparison. While our approach does not replace fully coupled ice-climate simulations, it highlights some key discrepancies between models and geological evidence and allows climate asymmetry to be distinguished from preservation bias. By quantitatively bridging paleo-archives and climate models, our framework provides a new means of evaluating ESM performance across diverse climate states, strengthening constraints on ice-climate feedback relevant to future projections.

How to cite: Beura, S., Gernon, T., Stockey, R., and Lunt, D.: Reconstructing Late Palaeozoic Land-Ice Distributions: A Machine Learning Framework for Model-Data Comparison, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19938, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19938, 2026.

Globally distributed data from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) indicate a significant depletion of radiocarbon in the ocean, equivalent to ~800 14Cyrs.  Some interpretations of these data have emphasized a slow-down of the North Atlantic overturning, as well as a reduction or even ‘reversal’ of overturning in the North Pacific.  While many model simulations have been able to produce a shoaled and weakened circulation in the Atlantic under glacial conditions, many others (and many of the same) produce a stronger overturning overall and in the Pacific.  If the glacial ocean circulation was indeed stronger, despite reduced radiocarbon ventilation, it would constrain the balance of contributions from marine ‘respired’ and ‘disequilibrium’ carbon pools to glacial atmospheric CO2 drawdown.  Here we show that global marine radiocarbon fields from the LGM and deglaciation are not consistent with the modern transport when taking into account past air-sea equilibration changes at the sea surface.  Rather, they imply a reduced and/or shoaled transport in the North Atlantic (consistent with most interpretations to date), and an enhanced transport throughout the Pacific.  Although the latter conflicts with some previous interpretations of LGM North Pacific radiocarbon data, it coheres with several key model simulations in suggesting an overall ‘faster’ glacial mass turnover despite weaker exchange of CO2 between the ocean and atmosphere.  This would emphasize the role of the disequilibrium carbon pool (and therefore ocean-atmosphere gas-exchange, influenced by upper ocean mixing, sea ice etc.) in determining the overall ocean’s overall sequestered carbon inventory during the last glacial period.

How to cite: Skinner, L. and Primeau, F.: Enhanced ocean transport despite reduced radiocarbon ventilation at the Last Glacial Maximum: were the models right all along?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21691, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21691, 2026.

The earliest Cenozoic Antarctic bryozoan fossil records (late Early Eocene) are well documented from the shallow-marine–estuarine clastic succession of the lower part (Telm1-2) of the La Meseta Formation of Seymour Island. In the 800-meters thick stratigraphical profile of the LMF in the basal facies of the (Telm1), the earliest – late Early Eocene bryozoans are represented by the internal moulds of the loosely encrusting, unizooidal, flexible articulated or rooted colonies belonging to cheilostome buguloids and catenicelloideans, which are taxonomically and morphologically different from the overlying fauna. At present, representatives of (Beanidae, Catenicellidae, Savignyellidae and Calwelliidae widely occur in the tropical-warm temperate latitudes in the shallow-marine settings (Hara, 2015). Higher in Telm1 the most common are spectacular in size, massive multilamellar colonies, showing a great variety of shapes dominated by cheilostome celleporiforms and cyclostome cerioporids (Hara, 2001). The stable isotopic δ18O analyses of the bryozoan skeletons from the lower part of the LMF show the temperature range from 13.4 to 14.6°C (Hara, 2022), what is consistent with the isotopic data of other marine macrofaunal fossil records (Ivany et al., 2008).

The distinct free-living lunulitiforms bryozoans, for the first time reported from Antarctica from the middle part of the LMF (Telm4-6, Cucullaea I-II; Ypresian/Lutetian) are represented by the disc-shaped colonies - characteristic for the temperate warm, shallow-shelf environment, with the bottom temperature, which are never lower than 10 to 12°C. The skeletons of Lunulites, Otionellina, and Uharella are formed by the intermediate-Mg calcite (IMC) with the 4.5 mol% MgCO3. Their bimineralic zoaria (with the traces of aragonite, calcite and strontium apatite) are indicative for the sandy, temperate shelf environment (Hara et al., 2018).

Contrary to occurrence of the rich bryozoans of the (Telm1–2), the Late Eocene bryozoans from the upper part of the LMF (Telm6–7), are represented by the scarce lepraliomorphs accompanied by the crustaceans, brachiopods and gadiform fish remains. The bryozoan-bearing horizon is composed of the single taxon tentatively assignated to Goodonia terminating the occurrence of the bryozoans, showing a sharp decline in their biodiversity between the lower and upper part of the formation (Hara, 2001), what is consistent with the overall pattern of Eocene cooling up to around 10,5°C in Telm6 and 7.

References

Hara U. 2001 – Bryozoa from the Eocene of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Palaeontologia Polonica. III, 60: 33–156.

Hara U. 2015. Bryozoan internal moulds from the La Meseta Formation (Eocene) of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. PPR, 36, 25-49.

Hara U., 2022 – Geochemistry of the fossil and Recent bryozoan faunas in the natural diagenetic environments and their significance for the reconstruction of biota and climatic regimes in Cenozoic. Archive PGI-NRI, nr. 5210/2022.

Hara U., Mors T., Hagstrom J., Reguero M.A., 2018 – Eocene bryozoans assemblages from the La Meseta Formation of Seymour Island, Antarctica. Geol. Quar., 62: 705–728.

Ivany L.C., Lohmann K.C., Hasiuk F., Blake D.B., Glass A., Aronson R.B., Moody R.M., 2008 – Eocene climate record of the high southern latitude continental shelf: Seymour Island, Antarctica. Geol. Soc. Amer. Bull., 120, 5–6: 659–678.

 

How to cite: Hara, U.: Palaeoenvironmental and climatic events (EECO-EOT) in the bryozoan fossil  records of the Early Cenozoic  of Antarctica, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21840, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21840, 2026.

EGU26-21846 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

The oxidation of petrogenic organic carbon: a source of CO2 during transient warming events? 

Emily Hollingsworth, Robert Sparkes, Jean Self-Trail, Gavin Foster, and Gordon Inglis

The terrestrial carbon cycle has long been discussed under a framework that focuses on inorganic carbon (i.e. the balance between solid Earth degassing and silicate weathering). Therefore, the role of organic carbon has remained poorly constrained in both the present and past. A recent study highlighted the importance of rock-derived “petrogenic” organic carbon (OCpetro), suggesting that the amount of CO2 released during the exhumation and mobilisation of OCpetro may be comparable to that from volcanism. To determine the response of OCpetro to future climate change, warming events in the geologic record can be investigated. For example, there are biomarker-based evidence for up to an order-of-magnitude increase in the burial of OCpetro in shallow-marine sediments dated to the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM; ∼56 Ma). However, estimates of the proportion of OCpetro lost via oxidation are unavailable due to the lack of suitable techniques.

Raman spectroscopy assesses differences in the crystallinity of OCpetro, allowing the distinction between graphitised and disordered carbon. Modern river systems have shown a shift towards a dominance of graphite downstream, as disordered carbon are more susceptible to oxidation. Here, we explore whether Raman spectroscopy can be used to reconstruct OCpetro oxidation in the past. During the PETM, there is an increase of graphite in the mid-Atlantic Coastal Plain, indicating enhanced OCpetro oxidation. This is consistent with signs of intensified physical erosion and enhanced OCpetro delivery. On the other hand, the distribution of graphitised carbon vs. disordered carbon (and biomarkers) do not change in the Arctic Ocean, implying spatial variability. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the utility of Raman spectroscopy as a novel tool to evaluate OCpetro oxidation in a geological context. Applying this approach to quantify oxidation rates require further ground truthing in settings with different degrees of weathering.

How to cite: Hollingsworth, E., Sparkes, R., Self-Trail, J., Foster, G., and Inglis, G.: The oxidation of petrogenic organic carbon: a source of CO2 during transient warming events?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21846, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21846, 2026.

EGU26-22682 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.1.1

Biogenic magnetite reveals marine deoxygenation during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum 

Victor Piedrahita, Andrew Roberts, Eelco Rohling, David Heslop, Simone Galeotti, Fabio Florindo, Liu Yan, and Jinhua Li

Magnetotactic bacteria produces biogenic magnetite in marine environments with low oxygen (O2) concentrations. These conditions are typical of past global warming events, which has led to generation of biogenic magnetite records that have been interpreted as proxies for O2 variability. However, biogenic magnetite is still poorly studied and there are no records of this mineral in land-based sections. Here, we present a new biogenic magnetite record for the Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum interval of the land-based Contessa Road section (Gubbio, Italy). We quantified biogenic magnetite in the marine sedimentary rocks of Contessa Road with new geochemical, rock magnetic and electron microscopy data, which indicate that biogenic magnetite contents increase during the PETM body phase and reduce in coincidence with the PETM recovery. These patterns are similar to those of the stable carbon/oxygen isotopes, and reveal warming-induced deoxygenation in the Contessa Road setting in the PETM peak phase, and gradual marine reoxygenation during the PETM interval of carbon uptake. Our results are compared to a new model that confirms strong coupling between the carbon and oxygen cycles during the PETM.

How to cite: Piedrahita, V., Roberts, A., Rohling, E., Heslop, D., Galeotti, S., Florindo, F., Yan, L., and Li, J.: Biogenic magnetite reveals marine deoxygenation during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22682, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22682, 2026.

The Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous represents a time span characterized by several unstandardized stages and includes the only Mesozoic system boundary still lacking a formal GSSP—the Jurassic/Cretaceous (J/K) boundary. Recent research has concentrated largely on continuous deep-marine Tethyan successions, yielding major advances in the calibration of pelagic bioevents. However, correlating these pelagic zonation schemes with those derived from neritic settings remains challenging.

Biostratigraphic evidence from marginal carbonate successions that contain fossils from both platform and basinal facies offers a critical bridge between these contrasting depositional realms. Such Upper Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous carbonates are extensively exposed in the Pontides, where they occur in association with coeval shallow- and deep-marine deposits. This study synthesizes biostratigraphic data from 17 stratigraphic sections across the Pontides Carbonate Platform (PCP), incorporating fossils representing a range of environments, including benthic and planktonic foraminifera, calpionellids, algae, microencrusters, and crinoids, and documenting 139 bioevent datums.

To address facies-dependent local biohorizons and to integrate datums from unrelated lineages and biofacies, the dataset is analyzed using Graphic Correlation (GC) and Unitary Association (UA) techniques. These methods yield a Composite Standard Reference Section (CSRS) and a set of UA Zones. GC produces facies-independent tie lines and requires only a sufficient number of shared taxa to establish reliable correlations with the CSRS. In contrast, the UA approach relies on complete fossil assemblages to define unique UA Zones, substantially reducing the lateral continuity of its subdivisions. While GC evaluates the superpositional ordering of calibrated bioevents, UA identifies discrete “maximal fossil assemblages” without resolving the internal ordering of their biohorizons, making GC more compatible with contemporary GSSP protocols.

Correlation of the Pontides CSRS with the Geological Time Scale clarifies the relative stratigraphic positions of both shallow- and deep-marine bioevents with respect to the Oxfordian–Hauterivian stage boundaries. The Tithonian/Berriasian (T/B) and Berriasian/Valanginian (B/V) boundaries are currently considered candidates for the J/K boundary and are distinguishable in pelagic sections through characteristic calpionellid bioevents. Equivalent synchronous bioevents in shallow-marine deposits, however, are lacking. The elevated origination rates during the Berriasian produce clusters of bioevents around the T/B boundary, providing stratigraphic brackets for both pelagic and neritic successions. In contrast, several last occurrences in neritic facies offer only weak constraints on the B/V boundary. Declining species richness from the mid-Berriasian onward reflects a broader trend of falling sea level from the Late Tithonian through the Valanginian, which suppressed shallow-marine carbonate production and contributed to widespread platform drowning during the Valanginian–Hauterivian in the northern Tethyan margin. This extinction-dominated interval further complicates identification of reliable origination datums within neritic environments.

How to cite: Atasoy, S. G., Altıner, D., and Özkan-Altıner, S.: Chronostratigraphic calibration of shallow and deep marine bioevents by quantitative biostratigraphy across the last unratified system boundary of the Mesozoic: A synthesis from the Pontides Carbonate Platform, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1210, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1210, 2026.

For the construction of age models of sedimentary sections, biostratigraphy remains a crucial tool. The emergence of astrochronology, and the ever-growing need for higher-resolution reconstructions of paleoclimate and paleoceanography now stimulates the biostratigraphic community to tie biostratigraphic zonations to astrochronological cycles (104–105 years). This foremost requires that the biostratigraphic community assesses the accuracy of the ages of microfossil ranges to that kind of temporal scale, and to what extent these are synchronous at such short timescales. This implies a review and revisit of previously published microfossils records, and perhaps the generation of new records. Over the past five years, I have been working towards a complete, open-access, FAIR, and iteratively updateable stratigraphic database for dinoflagellate cysts. Knowing that stratigraphic ranges of dinoflagellate cysts show considerable diachroneity (which creates uncertainty but also may represent a paleoceanographic signal) and that many taxa are provincial, the need arose for the development of regional calibrated dinoflagellate cyst stratigraphies. In other words: DINOSTRAT shows the stratigraphic range of taxa is per region. The continuously evolving stratigraphic framework over the past decades necessitated going back to original sources to avoid inherited errors, apply synonymy and recalibrate sequences to state-of-the-art time scales. Data entry in DINOSTRAT is in two ways. Sites from which stratigraphic ranges of dinocysts were published were added, with their modern geographic coordinates, age span and through that, their paleolatitudinal pathway. A qualification of the dinocyst-independent age control was added (other biostratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy, astrochronology). Then, for each site, the stratigraphic positions of first and last occurrences of dinocyst taxa relative to the independent age control were added. A lookup-file then calculates from that stratigraphic position the age, which enables future updating of the data. The paleolatitude of that age at that site is interpolated, creating regional context for that stratigraphic range. The database has multiple entries per taxa, creating a way of evaluating its regional synchroneity. DINOSTRAT now has at least best-guess ranges of all dinocyst taxa (over 18000 entries for ~6000 taxa), as well as regional calibrations of the mostly used stratigraphic taxa. Range charts can be plotted for all sites that were entered, as well as range charts per species, genus and on suprageneric level. The result is a holistic and still-augmented image of regional calibration of dinoflagellate cyst ranges, towards full application for the next-generation Geologic Time Scale. It shows which taxa are particularly synchronous and useful as biostratigrapic tool, and where. Output from DINOSTRAT is interactively coupled to the open taxonomic database palsys.org, that contains the species descriptions and images of dinoflagellate cysts. I will present the database structure and opportunities it creates, providing quality control of dinocyst biostratigraphic data.

How to cite: Bijl, P.: DINOSTRAT: towards accurate and complete regional calibration of the stratigraphic ranges of all organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2975, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2975, 2026.

The Earth's calendar, the geological timescale, provides guidance on periods and events of the past measured in thousands to millions of years. The Time Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences (TIMES) initiative aims to create an accurate, comprehensive timeline of climatic events from the past 100 million years. The main tool for synchronizing and placing all the targeted geological records on an extremely precise and accurate timeline will be astronomical tuning. It has also improved other stratigraphic methods and is key to calibrating the Geological Time Scale. The International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS), a body of the International Union of Geological Sciences, functions as the supervisory authority that ratifies Global Stratotype Sections and Points (GSSPs). GSSPs mark the starting point of a stage, which is a unit of rock strata representing a specific interval of geological time, forming part of the fundamental chronostratigraphic hierarchy of the Geological Times Scale. It seems logical that the efforts of TIMES and the ICS should be combined to create synergy with the goal to construct the ultimate Geologic Time Scale for the past 100 million years. How can this synergy be achieved? Here we will present how the TIMES objectives can help to refine GSSP ages and calibrate ages of events within stages more accurately by providing a detailed age model (astrochronology) for the interval between the base and top of a stage by using the cycles as astronomically dated astrochronozones. Combining astronomy and geology, from the present day back to 100 million years ago, can provide an accurate and precise dated framework with an unprecedented level of detail. This temporal framework will provide the base for the ultimate geological time scale, help to improve other numerical and relative dating methods and, importantly, synchronize archives of regional and global change.

How to cite: Westerhold, T., Erba, E., Hilgen, F., Kasbohm, J., Jurikova, H., and Henderson, C. M.:  The ultimate Geologic Time Scale for the past 100 million years – approaches to synergy between the Time Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences initiative and the International Commission on Stratigraphy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3026, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3026, 2026.

EGU26-5659 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.6

An update for understanding geological time 

Silke Aschauer, David De Vleeschouwer, and Theresa Nohl

Earth’s orbit varies due to gravitational interactions within the solar system, leading to cyclical changes in the distribution of incoming solar radiation. This astronomical forcing drives long-term climate variability, which in turn influences sediment production, transport, and accumulation. In the sedimentary record, these processes may be expressed as rhythmic lithological alternations, such as limestone–marl alternations (LMAs), that can potentially be linked to orbital climate cycles. Cyclostratigraphy aims to identify and interpret such cyclic patterns in sedimentary successions to estimate sedimentation rates and reconstruct geological time. However, diagenetic processes can modify, obscure, or even generate cyclic patterns independent of external environmental forcing.

A method to assess the extent of diagenetic alteration is the vector length method (Nohl et al., 2021), which quantifies differences in elemental ratios between lithological couplets. This approach can be transferred to (1) test for diagenetic overprint, and (2) assess variability in accumulation rates or sediment condensation.

IODP Site U1410 is characterised by rhythmic alternations of nannofossil ooze and clay-rich nannofossil ooze, which have previously been interpreted as dilution cycles. However, observed changes in Al/Ti ratios between the two lithologies indicate that the terrigenous input varies not only in amount but also in composition and source, adding further nuance. By comparing the results with common cyclostratigraphic analyses, we aim to assess the reliability of astronomically derived age models and improve estimates of the temporal resolution preserved in the geological record.

How to cite: Aschauer, S., De Vleeschouwer, D., and Nohl, T.: An update for understanding geological time, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5659, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5659, 2026.

EGU26-5680 | Orals | SSP2.6

Integrated stratigraphy and Bayesian age modelling at Tiout (Anti-Atlas, Morocco) constrain early Cambrian δ¹³C excursions and trilobite radiation 

Damien Pas, Matthias Sinnesael, Kamal Mghazli, Valenitn Jamart, Gerd Geyer, Ed Landing, Nasrrddine Youbi, Jihane Ounar, Hamdi Omar, Moulay Ahmed Boumehdi, Jarno J.C. Huygh, Anne-Christine Da Silva, and Allison Daley

The early Cambrian represents a critical interval in Earth’s history, marked by rapid biological innovation and major perturbations in global carbon cycle. However, the timing and relationships among these processes remain poorly constrained due to fossil provincialism, diachronous bioevents, and inadequate high-precision geochronology. The Tiout section (Anti-Atlas, Morocco) provides a unique opportunity to address these challenges, preserving a continuous 1205-m-thick succession with multiple volcanic ash beds, the lowest occurrence (LO) of trilobites, and a refined biostratigraphy in West Gondwana. We integrate high-resolution δ¹³Ccarb stratigraphy, elemental geochemistry, U–Pb geochronology and biostratigrahy within a Bayes­ian astrochronological age-depth model to provide numerical ages for carbon isotope excursions and biotic events. The new δ¹³Ccarb record from Tiout documents multiple global excursions, including the termination of the Shiyantou Carbon Isotope Excursion (SHICE), the excursions II and III, and the Early Atdabanian/Repinaella Zone Excursion (EAREZE or excursion IV). The EAREZE peaks below the LO of trilobites and is dated at 520.046 ± 0.097 Ma, providing the first direct numerical calibration of this excursion within a single stratigraphic record bracketed by two ash beds. These results establish a robust, multi-proxy framework that synchronizes global carbon cycle records with the onset of trilobite radiation, and positions Tiout as a candidate reference section for the Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) of Cambrian Series 2.

 

How to cite: Pas, D., Sinnesael, M., Mghazli, K., Jamart, V., Geyer, G., Landing, E., Youbi, N., Ounar, J., Omar, H., Ahmed Boumehdi, M., Huygh, J. J. C., Da Silva, A.-C., and Daley, A.: Integrated stratigraphy and Bayesian age modelling at Tiout (Anti-Atlas, Morocco) constrain early Cambrian δ¹³C excursions and trilobite radiation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5680, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5680, 2026.

EGU26-7043 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6

Reassessing Radiocarbon Chronologies in Arctic Ocean Sediments Using Calcareous Nannofossil Bioevents 

Mohammad Javad Razmjooei, Robert Spielhagen, Henning Bauch, Flor Vermassen, Martin Jakobsson, and Matt O’Regan

Radiocarbon chronologies for Arctic Ocean sediments remain widely debated due to low sedimentation rates, bioturbation, poorly constrained marine reservoir ages, and the presence of authigenic carbonate that can bias radiocarbon measurements. This debate is particularly critical for sediments overlying a regionally extensive glaciomarine diamict in the central Arctic Ocean, where radiocarbon ages approach the practical dating limit and interpretations range from Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3 to MIS 5.

Here we assess the reliability of Arctic radiocarbon chronologies by integrating new and published calcareous nannofossil assemblage data from the North Atlantic, Nordic Seas, and central Arctic Ocean with existing radiocarbon and oxygen isotope constraints. We focus on two key nannofossil bioevents: (i) the transition from assemblages dominated by Gephyrocapsa spp. to dominance by Gephyrocapsa huxleyi, and (ii) the Holocene abundance peak of Coccolithus pelagicus. These assemblage-based events are defined by relative abundance changes rather than first or last occurrences, making them less sensitive to sediment mixing over centimeter scales.

Our results show that the timing and stratigraphic ordering of these bioevents are broadly consistent across sub-Arctic and Arctic sites when evaluated against independent age controls. In particular, the Gephyrocapsa spp.–G. huxleyi transition occurs in sediments younger than MIS 4 in well-dated Nordic Seas records and is consistently observed above the Arctic last diamict interval, supporting a post-MIS 5 age for overlying sediments. While radiocarbon ages in Arctic cores display considerable scatter, likely reflecting mixing and diagenetic effects, the agreement between biostratigraphic markers and radiocarbon-based age estimates in multiple cores indicates that radiocarbon chronologies retain substantial utility when interpreted alongside independent stratigraphic constraints.

This study highlights the value of combining radiocarbon dating with calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy to improve confidence in Arctic sediment chronologies and provides a refined framework for interpreting late Pleistocene and Holocene paleoceanographic records from the Arctic Ocean.

How to cite: Razmjooei, M. J., Spielhagen, R., Bauch, H., Vermassen, F., Jakobsson, M., and O’Regan, M.: Reassessing Radiocarbon Chronologies in Arctic Ocean Sediments Using Calcareous Nannofossil Bioevents, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7043, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7043, 2026.

EGU26-7568 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.6

A multi-proxy stratigraphic approach to the Eocene-Oligocene Transition in the Paratethyan Realm 

Teodora Baboș and Mihaela Melinte-Dobrinescu

The Eocene–Oligocene Transition (EOT, aprox. 34.5 Ma) represents a major shift from greenhouse to icehouse conditions, with major effects on ocean circulation, sedimentation and biotic communities. The continuous successions in the Eastern Carpathians (Romania), within the Vrancea Nappe, Paratethys, provide an excellent archive to investigate the interaction between global and regional changes. This study integrates sedimentological observations, calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy and stable isotope (δ¹³C, δ¹⁸O) data to document environmental changes across the Eocene-Oligocene Transition.

Sedimentological analysis is used to characterise lithofacies, depositional processes and redox conditions, with particular attention to the transition from Upper Eocene turbiditic systems to Lower Oligocene hemipelagic deposits. Calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy provides a high-resolution age framework and allows the assessment of changes in assemblage composition, diversity and the occurrence of Paratethyan endemic taxa. Geochemical investigations include stable isotope analyses (δ¹³C, δ¹⁸O) and bulk geochemical parameters (e.g., TOC, CaCO₃) to track variations in carbon cycling, water-mass properties and depositional environments.

This study aims to integrate sedimentological, palaeontological and geochemical datasets to create a multi-proxy stratigraphic framework for the EOT in the Eastern Carpathians and it will place regional environmental evolution within the context of global climatic events. The results will contribute to a better understanding of how basin restriction, tectonics and palaeogeography can modify the local response to major climate transitions.

How to cite: Baboș, T. and Melinte-Dobrinescu, M.: A multi-proxy stratigraphic approach to the Eocene-Oligocene Transition in the Paratethyan Realm, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7568, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7568, 2026.

The Phanerozoic Eon is characterized by profound biological, climatic, and tectonic changes that are recorded in the stratigraphic record through both fossil successions and physical Earth-system signals. Index fossils play a central role in defining and correlating stratigraphic boundaries, yet their distribution and stratigraphic significance are often presented separately from the broader chronostratigraphic framework. This contribution presents the 2025 Phanerozoic Index Fossil Timescale, a reference chart designed to integrate key biostratigraphic markers with formally defined stage boundaries throughout the Phanerozoic.

The chart compiles approximately 70 globally significant index fossil taxa representing major fossil groups, including trilobites, graptolites, conodonts, ammonoids, planktonic foraminifera, and calcareous nannofossils. These taxa are directly linked to Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points (GSSPs) and calibrated using the most recent (2024/12) International Chronostratigraphic Chart. In addition to fossil first and last appearances, the reference chart incorporates complementary stratigraphic criteria such as magnetic polarity reversals, stable isotope excursions, geochemical anomalies, and major climatic transitions.

By combining biological and non-biological stratigraphic markers within a single visual framework, the timescale provides an integrated view of Phanerozoic biostratigraphy and chronostratigraphy. The chart is intended to serve both as a practical research reference for stratigraphic correlation and as an academic teaching tool that illustrates the temporal distribution of index fossils and the evolution of life through deep time. This integrated approach highlights the multidisciplinary foundations of modern stratigraphy and facilitates cross-disciplinary communication within the geosciences.

How to cite: Kaminski, M. A. and Korin, A.: The 2025 Phanerozoic Index Fossil Timescale: An Academic Teaching Tool for Paleontology and Stratigraphy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8978, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8978, 2026.

EGU26-9577 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6 | Highlight | SSP Division Outstanding ECS Award Lecture

Onset of strong Iceland-Scotland overflow water 3.6 million years ago 

Matthias Sinnesael and Boris Theofanis Karatsolis and the Expedition 395 Scientists

North Atlantic DeepWater (NADW), the return flow component of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), is a major inter-hemispheric ocean water mass with strong climate effects but the evolution of its source components on million-year timescales is poorly known. Today, two major NADW components that flow southward over volcanic ridges to the east and west of Iceland are associated with distinct contourite drift systems that are forming off the coast of Greenland and on the eastern flank of the Reykjanes (mid-Atlantic) Ridge. Here we provide direct records of the early history of this drift sedimentation based on cores collected during International Ocean Discovery Programme (IODP) Expeditions 395C and 395. We find rapid acceleration of drift deposition linked to the eastern component of NADW, known as Iceland–Scotland Overflow Water at 3.6 million years ago (Ma). In contrast, the Denmark Strait Overflow Water feeding the western Eirik Drift has been persistent since the Late Miocene. These observations constrain the long-term evolution of the two NADW components, revealing their contrasting independent histories and allowing their links with climatic events such as Northern Hemisphere cooling at 3.6Ma, to be assessed.

How to cite: Sinnesael, M. and Karatsolis, B. T. and the Expedition 395 Scientists: Onset of strong Iceland-Scotland overflow water 3.6 million years ago, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9577, 2026.

EGU26-10523 | Posters on site | SSP2.6

Deciphering the Cretaceous Lower Saxony Basin: Lithostratigraphic and geochemical insights from a 1,500-m composite record 

André Bornemann, Martin Blumenberg, Tina Kollaske, and Jochen Erbacher

The Lower Cretaceous sediments of the central Lower Saxony Basin (LSB) are primarily composed of thick, CaCO₃-poor mudstones and siltstones. These deposits exhibit a continuous increase in CaCO₃ content during the Albian–Cenomanian interval, culminating in chalky deposits in the upper Cenomanian. The sedimentary system is predominantly controlled by two contrasting processes: carbonate production and the input of fine-grained siliciclastics from the hinterland.

This study presents a 1,500-meter composite stratigraphic record spanning the late Berriasian to the middle Turonian, derived from 14 drill cores. All cores are located in the Hannover area, which served as the depocenter of the LSB during the Early to mid-Cretaceous. In addition to a published long-term carbon isotope stratigraphy (Bornemann et al., 2023), we generated high-resolution CaCO₃ and total organic carbon (TOC) data. Our objective was to evaluate whether the lithostratigraphic units can be clearly differentiated from adjacent units based on these parameters.

As a case study, we revisit the lithostratigraphic subdivision of the Albian – Cenomanian transition using CaCO₃ and TOC, but also X-ray fluorescence core scanning data from the Anderten 1 and 2 cores.

References:
Bornemann, A., Erbacher, J., Blumenberg, M., Voigt, S., 2023. A first high-resolution carbon isotope stratigraphy from the Boreal (NW Germany) for the Berriasian to Coniacian interval—implications for the timing of the Aptian–Albian boundary. Front. Earth Sci. 11, 1173319. https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2023.1173319

How to cite: Bornemann, A., Blumenberg, M., Kollaske, T., and Erbacher, J.: Deciphering the Cretaceous Lower Saxony Basin: Lithostratigraphic and geochemical insights from a 1,500-m composite record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10523, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10523, 2026.

EGU26-10935 | Posters on site | SSP2.6

Towards community guidelines for best practices in age model assessment and data processing 

Jorijntje Henderiks, Deborah N. Tangunan, Weimin Si, and Robin B. Trayler

A fundamental task in stratigraphy is to understand how observations in the depth-domain translate to geological age. Initial depth-to-age conversions typically rely on stratigraphic control points (tie-points) with numerical ages, either via directly dating volcanic ash-layers or via identifying other geological events, such as magnetic reversals, first/last occurrences of fossils, or isotopic excursions, that have been calibrated to numerical time through correlation with radioisotopic dating or astrochronological methods. How the associated observational and calibration uncertainties are accommodated and propagated in the construction of age-depth models, largely depends on the statistical approaches used. Establishing accurate age-depth models is a multidisciplinary effort upon which many disciplines across the Earth Sciences depend. It is also an evolving science and therefore the critical evaluation of published age models (chronologies) should be a straightforward and routine step for anyone studying Earth’s history. As part of the Time Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences (TIMES) community initiative, the members of Working Group 9 (Age Model Assessment and Data Processing) aim to review best practices and develop guidelines for standardized, reproducible, and community-driven approaches for constructing and assessing age models. A key need is improving the reproducibility, accuracy, and transparency of comparisons among marine and terrestrial sediment archives, as well as across different biogeographical regions. Important steps towards this goal, in line with the FAIR principles, include:

  • Establishing standardized approaches for reporting, propagating, and visualizing age-depth model uncertainty across different stratigraphic datasets, making data, metadata, and methodologies findable and accessible to the broader scientific community.
  • Defining clear protocols for consistent storage of original age-depth model data, including uncertainties and associated metadata, so that datasets are interoperable across different platforms and disciplines, and can be reused effectively.
  • Providing transparent documentation of workflows for age-depth model construction, to promote critical assessment and reproducibility of published chronologies, and to ensure that workflows are accessible for reuse in future research efforts.

At the meeting, we will present these objectives in detail and extend the invitation to join WG9.

How to cite: Henderiks, J., Tangunan, D. N., Si, W., and Trayler, R. B.: Towards community guidelines for best practices in age model assessment and data processing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10935, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10935, 2026.

EGU26-12790 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6

Astronomical pacing of Early to Middle Devonian anoxic events at multi‑Myr timescales (Oued Ferkla, SE Morocco) 

Jarno Huygh, Amine Talih, Hamdi Omar, Dhoha Boukhalfa, Justin Gérard, Loïc Sablon, Michiel Arts, Ahmed El Hassani, Michel Crucifix, and Anne-Christine Da Silva

The Devonian was marked by numerous ocean anoxic events, many of which are associated with sea-level fluctuations, carbon-cycle perturbations, and faunal turnovers. Yet the mechanisms driving these events and the factors controlling their recurrence remain poorly understood and strongly debated. Growing evidence suggests that astronomical forcing influenced the timing and pacing of Late Devonian anoxic events, most notably through the ~100‑kyr eccentricity (e.g., Kellwasser Crisis) and ~2.4‑Myr grand‑eccentricity (e.g., Annulata, Dasberg, Hangenberg events) Milankovitch cycles. Earlier events, however, remain largely understudied despite their importance in contributing to protracted environmental stress and their resemblance to later, more severe extinction events. We present evidence from the Early to Middle Devonian Oued Ferkla section, which spans the global Daleje, Choteč, Kačák, and pumilio events. New high‑resolution geochemical analyses (XRF) show strong variability in total detrital input and redox-sensitive elements, suggesting distinct shifts in the hydrological cycle and depositional environment. Cyclostratigraphic analysis of the detrital signal reveals strong astronomical control by precession, obliquity, and eccentricity, confirming visual identification of lithological patterns identified on the field. An ~18-Myr floating astrochronology was constructed by tuning to the 405-kyr long eccentricity metronome and placed into global context using δ13Ccarb chemostratigraphy. A conspicuous ~6-Myr cycle was identified that appears to exert primary control on the timing of the anoxic events investigated here. While the Daleje, Choteč, and Kačák event intervals are characterized by stark increases in total detrital input, paced by local ~6‑Myr maxima, the pumilio events occur around a minimum of this long‑period cycle and show only minimal, coarse detrital input. These observations suggest that the recurrence of Early to Middle Devonian anoxic events was paced by a previously unrecognized ~6-Myr astronomical cycle, hinting at the possible role of long-period Milankovitch cycles in shaping Paleozoic climate variability.

How to cite: Huygh, J., Talih, A., Omar, H., Boukhalfa, D., Gérard, J., Sablon, L., Arts, M., El Hassani, A., Crucifix, M., and Da Silva, A.-C.: Astronomical pacing of Early to Middle Devonian anoxic events at multi‑Myr timescales (Oued Ferkla, SE Morocco), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12790, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12790, 2026.

EGU26-13112 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.6

Astronomical Tuning of Pleistocene Sediments from North Atlantic Drift Deposits recovered by IODP Expedition 395 

Oliver Weisser, Matthias Sinnesael, Sidney Hemming, Claire Jasper, Boris Theofanis Karatsolis, Katharina Hochmuth, Anita Di Chiara, Sara Satolli, Ross Parnell‑Turner, Anne Briais, and Leah LeVay and the Expedition 395 Scientists

IODP Expeditions 395 and 395C drilled six sites on and adjacent to three major sediment drift bodies—the Gardar, Bjørn, and Erik Drifts—in the North Atlantic Ocean along an east–west transect at ~60°N, south of Iceland (Parnell-Turner et al., 2025). The development of high-resolution age models is essential for robust palaeoenvironmental reconstructions from these sedimentary archives. This study reports progress in constructing astronomically-tuned Pleistocene age models for sedimentary sequences recovered during IODP Expedition 395 east of the Reykjanes Ridge.

As an initial step, magnetic susceptibility records from the newly drilled sites were compared with reference records from ODP Leg 162, with particular emphasis on sites within the Bjørn (ODP Site 984) and Gardar (ODP Site 983) Drifts. Individual glacial–interglacial cycles were identified and correlated across sites, providing a stratigraphic framework for age-model development.

Pleistocene sedimentation rates derived from the new age models for the Bjørn and Gardar Drift records reveal distinct spatial patterns. ODP Site 984 and IODP Site U1554, both located on the Bjørn Drift, exhibit remarkably similar sedimentation rates. In contrast, ODP Site 983 and IODP Site U1564 on the Gardar Drift show substantial divergence. This difference may suggest more spatially homogeneous sedimentation on the Bjørn Drift and greater regional variability on the Gardar Drift, potentially reflecting contrasting ocean current dynamics.

Despite these differences, both drift systems exhibit common large-scale features, including a pronounced decrease in sedimentation rates between ~850-900 ka. Such shared signals possibly reflect basin-wide oceanographic or climatic processes and provide insight into large-scale changes in sediment transport and circulation across the North Atlantic.

 

Parnell-Turner, R.E., Briais, A., LeVay, L.J., and the Expedition 395 Scientists, 2025. Reykjanes Mantle Convection and Climate. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 395: College Station, TX (International Ocean Discovery Program). https://doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.395.2025

How to cite: Weisser, O., Sinnesael, M., Hemming, S., Jasper, C., Karatsolis, B. T., Hochmuth, K., Di Chiara, A., Satolli, S., Parnell‑Turner, R., Briais, A., and LeVay, L. and the Expedition 395 Scientists: Astronomical Tuning of Pleistocene Sediments from North Atlantic Drift Deposits recovered by IODP Expedition 395, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13112, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13112, 2026.

EGU26-13244 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6

AstroGeoFit in action. Towards an Eccentricity-Based Astronomical Time Scale for 40–100 Ma 

Yujing Wu, Jacques Laskar, Thomas Westerhold, Nicolas Thibault, Arsen Sultanov, Nathan Hara, and Pau Bujons

Changes in Earth’s orbit and axial tilt affect the distribution of solar radiation across the planet’s surface, influencing climate and leaving recognizable imprints in sedimentary layers over time. These recurring patterns, known as Milankovitch cycles, arise from gravitational interactions with other bodies in the Solar System. Their preservation in stratigraphic records allows the construction of continuous and precise age–depth models based on astronomical orbital cycles, helping to compensate for the discontinuities and uncertainties associated with other absolute dating methods.

In this study, we examine several tens of stratigraphic records spanning 40–100 Ma to establish and refine astronomical time scales by extracting signals related to Earth’s orbital eccentricity. We apply our newly released tool, AstroGeoFit (https://www.astrogeo.eu/astrogeofit/), which accommodates flexible time-varying sedimentation rates within stratigraphic sequences and quantifies associated uncertainties by combining genetic algorithm optimization with Bayesian approaches.

Beyond improving age–depth models at the scale of individual sections or cores, our results contribute towards a more systematic reconstruction of Earth’s eccentricity evolution from 40 to 100 Ma, derived primarily from stratigraphic records, providing intrinsic geological insights into the behavior of planetary orbits in deep time.

How to cite: Wu, Y., Laskar, J., Westerhold, T., Thibault, N., Sultanov, A., Hara, N., and Bujons, P.: AstroGeoFit in action. Towards an Eccentricity-Based Astronomical Time Scale for 40–100 Ma, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13244, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13244, 2026.

EGU26-14840 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6

Launching TIMES: A Time-Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences 

Jennifer Kasbohm, Thomas Westerhold, Adriane Lam, Bärbel Hönisch, Anna Joy Drury, and Deborah Tangunan

Age models for many sediment records are imprecise at best and inaccurate at worst, hindering our ability to closely compare different proxy records, track variations in regional responses to climate change, and understand how Earth’s climate sensitivity changed through time. We must tackle the challenge of imprecise age models if we are to make significant advances in paleoclimatic reconstructions and near-future climate projections. A coordinated, global, cross-disciplinary research network is required to address the immense challenges of establishing accurate age calibrations for sedimentary records covering the past 100 million years of Earth's climate history.

We have launched an international, coordinated effort to revise, recalibrate, and synchronize the dating tools available to paleoclimatologists – i.e., local and regional information obtained from chemo-, bio- and magnetostratigraphy, as well as radioisotopic geochronology – by unifying these approaches with astrochronology. Synchronizing proxy data at orbital-scale resolution is critical as it allows for detailed reconstructions of climate variability and for resolving the sequence of events in climate-relevant processes over millions of years in the past. Our nascent initiative, the Time-Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences (TIMES) program, will facilitate the interaction of the climate proxy and modeling communities with the timescale-generating community and astronomers, to deliver highly synchronized, accurate, and precise timelines for these sedimentary climate records.

We will share insights from our Kickoff Workshop in August 2025, at which the TIMES working group began defining key components of a Science Plan for the first five-year long phase of TIMES. We invite further involvement of members of the timescale- and proxy-generating communities, as well as climate modelers, to contribute to our efforts to tackle this colossal scientific challenge as we build our inclusive international collaboration.

How to cite: Kasbohm, J., Westerhold, T., Lam, A., Hönisch, B., Drury, A. J., and Tangunan, D.: Launching TIMES: A Time-Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14840, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14840, 2026.

EGU26-16648 | Posters on site | SSP2.6

Toward a Plio CLIMAP Project: Enhanced Astronomical Chronologies and Global Paleoceanographic Mapping of the Pliocene 

Masao Iwai, Keiji Horikawa, Daisuke Kuwano, Yuki Haneda, and Kenji Matsuzaki

Assessments by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) indicate that the Earth is experiencing steady warming and that urgent mitigation measures are required. However, climate model simulations continue to show considerable diversity, and discrepancies remain between observational records and model outputs, highlighting the need for improved model validation. Paleoenvironmental data from multiple geological time slices represent an effective means of testing model performance, yet global reconstructions of sea-surface temperature and salinity have largely been restricted to the CLIMAP project for the Last Glacial Maximum.

The Pliocene epoch (≈2.6–5.3 Ma) has emerged as a crucial warm-period analog for future Earth conditions. Despite atmospheric CO₂ concentrations similar to modern values, global temperatures were 2–3°C higher, accompanied by dynamic ice-sheet behavior and transitions in dominant climate-variability periodicities. Comparative studies of Pliocene paleo–oceanographic data and climate simulations have been advanced by the USGS-led PRISM project, focusing primarily on the 3.0–3.3 Ma interval.

Recent geological evidence from IODP Expeditions 318 (Wilkes Land) and 379 (Amundsen Sea) indicates that earlier Pliocene intervals experienced even warmer conditions. Our preliminary work, based on astronomically tuned, high-resolution chronostratigraphic correlations, further suggests distinct responses of the East and West Antarctic Ice Sheets during this time.

We therefore propose a new Pliocene CLIMAP-style initiative grounded in a highly accurate astronomically tuned timescale, aimed at generating improved global paleoceanographic reconstructions to enhance next-generation climate model validation.

How to cite: Iwai, M., Horikawa, K., Kuwano, D., Haneda, Y., and Matsuzaki, K.: Toward a Plio CLIMAP Project: Enhanced Astronomical Chronologies and Global Paleoceanographic Mapping of the Pliocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16648, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16648, 2026.

EGU26-17265 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.6

Filling gaps in the geological record – Early–Middle Jurassic climate and environmental dynamics 

Alicia Fantasia, Hana Jurikova, Thierry Adatte, Jorge E. Spangenberg, Emanuela Mattioli, Stéphane Bodin, Stephen P. Hesselbo, Nicolas Thibault, Léonard Gavillet, Guillaume Suan, and Thomas Letulle

The Early–Middle Jurassic was a pivotal interval in Earth history, encompassing the expansion of calcifying plankton, the diversification of dinosaurs, and major evolutionary turnovers. This period was marked by profound changes in continental and oceanic configurations, the emplacement of large igneous provinces, and major environmental perturbations. These included the collapse of shallow-marine carbonate platforms, first- and second-order mass extinctions, episodes of eutrophication and marine anoxia, and major disruption to the global carbon cycle. Over recent decades, research has focused primarily on the causes and consequences of major Jurassic crises, such as the Triassic–Jurassic boundary, the Pliensbachian–Toarcian transition, the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event and the Bajocian crisis. However, this emphasis has often overshadowed inter-crisis time intervals that shaped the broader background environmental conditions of the Early–Middle Jurassic. Although advances in modelling and geochemical proxy application have improved our understanding of the overall environmental states, atmospheric CO2 levels, and temperature, important gaps and unresolved questions remain. Studies often focus on individual events, thus limiting a comprehensive understanding of the Earth system and its long-term evolution. How far can these events be explored without losing sight of the broader context? Here, we present a new multiproxy, multi-million-year record of environmental, climatic, atmospheric CO2 proxies derived from globally distributed marine sites spanning the Toarcian–Aalenian and Bathonian–Callovian time intervals. This compilation allow us to reconstruct conditions before, during and after the major crises and discuss the triggering mechanisms, and place these events within a broader environemental and climatic framework.

How to cite: Fantasia, A., Jurikova, H., Adatte, T., Spangenberg, J. E., Mattioli, E., Bodin, S., Hesselbo, S. P., Thibault, N., Gavillet, L., Suan, G., and Letulle, T.: Filling gaps in the geological record – Early–Middle Jurassic climate and environmental dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17265, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17265, 2026.

EGU26-17547 | Orals | SSP2.6

Multidimensional XRF–informed Cyclostratigraphy for High–Resolution Geological Time Modelling 

Tais W. Dahl, Iris Fernandes, Klaus Mosegaard, and Aske L. Sørensen

Sedimentary successions preserve the imprint of climatic, geochemical, and ecological change across Earth history, yet extracting high–precision temporal information from these archives remains a central challenge for integrated stratigraphy. Classical astrochronologic approaches typically resolve time only to the scale of precession, limiting our ability to interrogate the rates and durations of environmental perturbations that shaped the geological past.

High–resolution X–ray fluorescence (XRF) core scanning potentially offers an opportunity to overcome these constraints by providing 20–30 elemental series at ~0.2 mm spacing across intervals spanning numerous Milankovitch cycles. These multidimensional datasets capture coherent astronomical pacing signals embedded within chemically diverse sedimentary components, opening the door to a new generation of stratigraphic tools.

Here, we present a multidimensional cyclostratigraphic framework designed to advance the stratigraphic and paleoenvironmental toolbox. Our new cyclostratographic algorithm, AstroComb, employs a probabilistic, covariance–based approach to detect Milankovitch periodicities across multiple elemental series and to quantify uncertainty in inferred sedimentation accumulation rates. Building on such lower–resolution astrochronologic models, we present a second algorithm, ProBE4T  (pronounced "Pro Beat"), which integrates these astronomical constraints with lithotype–specific sedimentation behaviour, inferred through unsupervised clustering of elemental and mineralogical estimates and Bayesian inversion under total–duration constraints. This probabilistic workflow distributes time across sedimentary successions at the resolution of the geochemical data itself and explicitly tests the hypothesis that chemically distinct lithotypes accumulate at distinct rates, thereby extending age–model refinement beyond the conventional precession limit.

The resulting age–depth models reveal substantial heterogeneity in time recorded per unit thickness, enabling precise temporal localization of paleoenvironmental signals, such as rapid climatic events, shifts in geochemical cycling, and changes in oceanic redox structure applicable from the Archean to the Holocene. By leveraging the full multidimensionality of XRF data and embedding probabilistic inference at each step, this approach expands the range of sedimentary archives amenable to high–resolution sediment accumulation rate determination and provides a generalizable methodology for integrating geochemical, lithological, and astronomical information. 

The resulting age–depth models reveal substantial heterogeneity in time recorded per unit thickness, enabling precise temporal localization of paleoenvironmental signals, including rapid climatic events, shifts in geochemical cycling, and changes in oceanic redox structure, from the Archean to the Holocene. By leveraging the full multidimensionality of XRF data and embedding probabilistic inference at each step, this approach expands the range of sedimentary archives amenable to high–resolution sediment accumulation rate determination and provides a generalizable methodology for integrating geochemical, lithological, and astronomical information. The ProBE4T framework enhances our ability to explore temporal variability with uncertainties in sedimentary archives, opening new avenues for investigating climatic, geochemical, and ecological change at finer temporal scales across Earth history.

How to cite: Dahl, T. W., Fernandes, I., Mosegaard, K., and Sørensen, A. L.: Multidimensional XRF–informed Cyclostratigraphy for High–Resolution Geological Time Modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17547, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17547, 2026.

EGU26-18130 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.6

stratapy: a Novel Tool for Automated Stratigraphic Log Visualisation 

Ruaridh Alexander, Jack Smith, and Christina Antoniou

Stratigraphic logs are the fundamental interface between geological observation and scientific interpretation. They are a crucial tool which enables scientists to transform field observations of outcrops or boreholes into a graphical representation. Despite their importance, the creation of these logs is a significant bottleneck in geological workflows and lack reproducibility. Manual digitisation of logs can be an extremely time-consuming and tedious process, and often results in highly specialised outputs that are not easily understood between different geoscience communities. The limited range of existing tools for digitisation of stratigraphic logs are typically tailored to specific fields and applications, with many unable to provide core functions such as automatic legend creation, and commonly involve a steep learning curve for the user.

We present stratapy: a new Python package which we have developed to be an accessible tool for rapid, high-quality log digitisation. The package enables scientists across a range of disciplines within the geosciences (e.g., sedimentology, geology and volcanology) to efficiently generate publication-quality stratigraphic logs with basic text- or spreadsheet-based inputs, from three lines of code. The package caters to non-programmers while being highly customisable in both style and function, incorporating standardised lithological patterns and curated geological features and symbols. Easy to change parameters (e.g. grain-size axes, legend configuration) enable more tailored visualisation of logs for a multidisciplinary audience. Furthermore, automatic correlation with the chronostratigraphic column and precise sample location markers, as well as built-in multi-panel visualisation and stratigraphically correlated logs provides enhanced functionality for more complex figures.

With applications in research, industry and education & outreach, stratapy creates a standardised framework for log illustration and digitisation, streamlining scientific workflows, improving the quality of stratigraphic logs, and contributing towards improved uptake of digital practices in the geosciences.

How to cite: Alexander, R., Smith, J., and Antoniou, C.: stratapy: a Novel Tool for Automated Stratigraphic Log Visualisation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18130, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18130, 2026.

EGU26-20946 | Orals | SSP2.6

Strengthening the TIMES Community: Who we are and what we want to become 

Alexandra Villa, Julio Sepúlveda, Kasia Śliwińska, Jennifer Kasbohm, Adam Woodhouse, and Elizabeth Sibert

The TIMES (Time Integrated Matrix for Earth Sciences) community is composed of over 300 scientists worldwide with a common goal of building an accurate timescale for the last 100 million years of Earth’s history (Westerhold et al. 2024). By generating an improved timeline of events, we can better comprehend the forcings and feedback mechanisms controlling the Earth-climate system. This effort is essential as the consequences of human‑induced climate change are ongoing and unavoidable, with significantly varying impacts across regions, environments, and communities. To achieve this goal we need a broad set of global perspectives, scientific specialties, regional datasets, and proxy methods; moreover, we must support the people who conduct Earth Science research – the TIMES Community.

Here, we present the results of a benchmark survey distributed to the TIMES mailing list during the first hybrid Kickoff Workshop which took place in Washington D.C., USA in August 2025. The survey was designed to gauge the demographics, values, interests, and agreements of the TIMES community near its inception and use those results to create a living roadmap towards a more globally inclusive scientific community. From the collected data, we underscore the current imbalances in the TIMES community and identify a starting point that centers the values, interests, aspirations and community commitments of TIMES. We call on every member of the TIMES initiative and invite the geoscience community to join us in shaping this roadmap of who we are and what we aspire to become.

 

How to cite: Villa, A., Sepúlveda, J., Śliwińska, K., Kasbohm, J., Woodhouse, A., and Sibert, E.: Strengthening the TIMES Community: Who we are and what we want to become, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20946, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20946, 2026.

EGU26-21472 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.6

Tracing Ancient Warmth: Stable Isotope and Sedimentological Insights into the PETM of the Muthaymimah Formation, United Arab Emirates 

Alanoud Al Ali, Alexander Whittaker, Gregory Price, Osman Abdelghany, Mahmoud Faris, Marc Davies, Richard Reynolds, and Mahmoud Abu Saima

The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) represents a short (ca.100 - 200 k years) but intense warming episode that resulted in a significant perturbation in the Earth’s climate and carbon cycle 56 million years ago.

The Arabian Platform occupies an important low latitude site for recording this episode, however, there are limited geochemical and sedimentological records of the PETM from this region. High-resolution sampling and integrated approaches are necessary to understand how low latitude, shallow marine deposits respond to abrupt climate change such as the PETM. To address this gap in the records, we integrate sedimentological and stable isotope data with global stratigraphic models to document the depositional and sedimentological changes across the Paleocene-Eocene interval within the Muthaymimah Formation (UAE) and establish the first high-resolution chemostratigraphic record of the PETM from the Arabian Platform

We focus on two chronologically well-constrained stratigraphic sections, the Qarn El Barr outcrop in the central region of Sharjah Emirate and the Mundassah outcrop southeast of Al Ain city, Abu Dhabi Emirate. The Paleocene/Eocene boundary is located between the biozones NP 9a and NP 9b using the Calcareous nannoplankton biozonation scheme.

We examined 49 samples from Qarn El Barr stratigraphic section and 495 samples from the Mundassah stratigraphic section. This data has enabled us to more accurately identify the Paleocene-Eocene transition in the UAE.

We performed stable Carbon (δ13C) and Oxygen (δ18O) isotope analysis on bulk carbonate across both sections.  The timing and position of the PETM in both sections was established by preliminary stable isotope analysis of the sediments. Subsequent high-resolution stable isotope analysis confirms this signal, documenting the first record of the PETM in the UAE. Our δ13C stratigraphy reveals a 2.5‰ negative excursion, consistent with the published negative carbon excursions for the PETM in shallow marine environments elsewhere. We further explore temperature changes and faunal turnover within this interval.

Interestingly, field observations do not show any dramatic changes in the sedimentological characteristics: At the Qarn El Barr outcrop the PETM is located near the top of the thin-bedded grey marls, just below the transition to a yellow marly unit, while in Mundassah section, the PETM is located at a thin-bedded wackestone interval above a calciturbidite horizon and thin-bedded mudstone. We integrate our nannoplankton and geochemical records with these sedimentological observations to shed new light on the PETM environments in the UAE.

How to cite: Al Ali, A., Whittaker, A., Price, G., Abdelghany, O., Faris, M., Davies, M., Reynolds, R., and Abu Saima, M.: Tracing Ancient Warmth: Stable Isotope and Sedimentological Insights into the PETM of the Muthaymimah Formation, United Arab Emirates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21472, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21472, 2026.

EGU26-5991 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.7

VARG-Tools: Browser-Based Software to Streamline Tephra Correlation and Bayesian Age Modelling 

Matthew Bolton and Britta Jensen

Volcanic ash (tephra) layers are potent tools for correlating sedimentary records and constructing robust Quaternary chronologies. However, rapidly growing glass geochemical datasets present new challenges. Traditional scatter plots show only two elements at a time, forcing analysts to examine many variable pairs to see the whole picture. Many samples may contain poor analyses or mixed glass populations from complex eruptions, reworked sediment, or temporally close events, which require careful filtering before correlation. In addition, building the sophisticated Bayesian age models now standard in the field remains time-intensive, even for experienced researchers. These challenges motivate tools that streamline repetitive tasks while preserving the expert judgment essential for accurate tephra work.

To address these needs, we developed VARG-Tools, an open-source software suite for glass compositional data analysis and the generation of age model (OxCal) code, accessible entirely through a web browser. The software guides researchers through the complete tephrochronological workflow via three interconnected modules:

  • The Processing Module prepares glass geochemical data for examination. It handles missing values, applies compositional data transformations, and uses Gaussian Mixture Modelling (GMM) to identify distinct glass populations and automatically flag statistical outliers. It then applies a dimensionality reduction technique called Uniform Manifold Approximation and Projection (UMAP) to project multi-element oxide chemistry into a simplified two-dimensional space where compositionally similar samples plot together. UMAP enables rapid visual assessment of likely volcanic sources or other compositional groupings. Users can also interactively select points directly in plots and assign custom labels, such as population groups or quality flags (e.g., “feldspar-contaminated analysis”).
  • The Visualization Module generates publication-quality figures interactively. Features include custom plotting of point data and density fields (with options for filtering, variable selection, and styling), automatic identification of the most discriminating element pairs, and tools for visualizing UMAP-projected values against depth or age. Tie points identified between sites can be exported directly for chronological modelling.
  • The Chronology Module automates the generation of Bayesian age-model code for OxCal. From simple spreadsheet inputs, VARG-Tools generates code for depositional models and linked multi-site models that use tephra correlations to calculate shared ages, potentially significantly reducing age-model setup time.

VARG-Tools also introduces the “VARG26 UMAP,” a pre-calculated compositional coordinate system built from tephra across the northern Pacific Ring of Fire (Kamchatka, Alaska, and Japan). Researchers can project their data onto this standardized coordinate system, providing a stable comparative baseline for future studies. Users can also create and save custom reference projections based on their uploaded datasets. Fixed randomization seeds ensure identical results when analyses are repeated, supporting reproducible, FAIR-compliant tephra research. We demonstrate the workflow using peat records from Anchor Point, Alaska, where linking sites through tephra correlations substantially improves chronological precision.

How to cite: Bolton, M. and Jensen, B.: VARG-Tools: Browser-Based Software to Streamline Tephra Correlation and Bayesian Age Modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5991, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5991, 2026.

EGU26-6045 | Orals | SSP2.7

Applying tephra stratigraphy best practices through integration of field collection forms, database archives, and open-source data visualization tools 

Matthew Loewen, Kristi Wallace, Abigail Nastan, Cheryl Cameron, Jessica Novak, and Nathan Novak

Building interoperable data systems requires coordinated effort across the scientific community to establish common terms, definitions, and data structures. Within the diverse disciplines of the tephra community, more than a of decade of work has gone into standardizing field data collection, metadata, and terminology.  This effort culminated in the release of a formal best practices publication in 2022 (Wallace et al., 2022, Scientific Data). To put these principles into practice, we have adopted a three-pronged implementation.

We have developed a dedicated tephra module within the StraboField app to streamline tephra data collection in the field. This module includes predefined fields and picklists designed to capture the core tephra layer metadata outlined in community best practices. The tephra module is part of the StraboSpot ecosystem—a suite of interconnected data collection applications built to support FAIR data principles across the geosciences. Because of this integration, the module works seamlessly with field projects beyond tephra stratigraphy, including mapping or structural geology.

At the same time, we built a data structure within the Alaska Volcano Observatory’s geologic database, “GeoDIVA,” to archive essential tephra metadata in a relational format.  A key enhancement is the addition of a “layer data” component, which captures key attributes such as thickness, type, grainsize, and other aspects of stratigraphic layers in order to capture the full context and complete assembled of a measured section. This layer data is also linked to an integrated framework for samples, stations, source volcanoes, eruptions, field projects, and publications.

Finally, we have released an open-source R package, avstrat, that enables data processing and visualization of data collected with the StraboField application or stored in the database structure. This package produces graphical outputs comparable to tools such as SedLog or SDAR, but allows for more flexible data inputs, including describing stratigraphy by layer thickness and relative order or by absolute depths within a section. Avstrat integrates easily with age-depth models like rbacon and Bchron, and its source code will be freely available on GitLab for user modification.

How to cite: Loewen, M., Wallace, K., Nastan, A., Cameron, C., Novak, J., and Novak, N.: Applying tephra stratigraphy best practices through integration of field collection forms, database archives, and open-source data visualization tools, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6045, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6045, 2026.

EGU26-6865 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Linking composition and emplacement mechanisms of volcaniclastic mass transport deposits offshore Fogo, Cabo Verde 

Janne Scheffler, Steffen Kutterolf, Emma Hadré, Ricardo Ramalho, Andreas Klügel, Josephin Wolf, Johanna Schenk, and Sebastian Krastel

Volcanic flank collapses represent one of the most hazardous mass-wasting processes at ocean-island volcanoes due to their potential to generate large tsunamis. Fogo volcano, located within the Cabo Verde Archipelago off the coast of West Africa, is a highly active volcanic system associated with multiple geohazards, including explosive eruptions, seismicity, landslides, and tsunamis caused by flank collapses. These processes result in the widespread submarine deposition of volcaniclastic material. However, the source mechanisms, emplacement dynamics and spatial distribution of these deposits remain poorly understood.

Here we present 12 sediment cores, recovered proximal to distal from Fogo during research cruise M155 aboard RV Meteor, which contain multiple volcanogenic event layers. These layers provide archives for reconstructing mass-wasting activity and offer potential for stratigraphic correlation in marine records.

This study unravels the mechanisms responsible for the formation of volcanogenic turbidites and establishes diagnostic criteria for distinguishing different types of volcaniclastic mass-transport deposits. Thereby emphasis is placed on identifying characteristic sedimentological and compositional features associated with individual event layers. We use a combined approach of structural analyses on sediment epoxy peals, quantitative sediment petrography coupled with glass-chemistry and age-modelling. This unique approach allows assigning the compositional and structural variations of volcaniclastic material to primary deposits related to flank collapses, landslides, and pyroclastic density currents from Fogo, and secondary deposits generated by other mass-wasting events and tsunami backwash in the region. Furthermore, these findings contribute to a better understanding of submarine volcanic processes and associated geohazards at ocean-island volcanoes.

How to cite: Scheffler, J., Kutterolf, S., Hadré, E., Ramalho, R., Klügel, A., Wolf, J., Schenk, J., and Krastel, S.: Linking composition and emplacement mechanisms of volcaniclastic mass transport deposits offshore Fogo, Cabo Verde, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6865, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6865, 2026.

EGU26-9805 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.7

 Revising the tephrostratigraphy of Riparo l’Oscurusciuto, gravina di Ginosa, Apulia (Italy) 

Lorenzo Monaco, Paul Albert, Paolo Boscato, Biagio Giaccio, Christina Manning, Ivan Martini, Vincenzo Spagnolo, Anna Maria Ronchitelli, Giovanni Zanchetta, Omry Barzilai, Stefano Benazzi, Francesco Berna, and Francesco Boschin

Riparo l’Oscurusciuto (Ginosa, Apulia, Italy) hosts a rich Middle Paleolithic stratigraphic record, consisting of structures, fireplaces, lithic and faunal assemblages, and was occupied by Neanderthals during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3. The part of the stratigraphic record excavated so far encompassed a ~20-25 kyr time interval, spanning between ~42.7 BP and ~65 ka, based on i) 14C age determinations of bone collagen at the base of the uppermost stratigraphic unit (SU-1), ii) OSL dates, and iii) the correlation of SU-14 with the Mount Epomeo Green Tuff (MEGT)/Y-7 tephra layer derived from Ischia volcano in the Bay of Naples. Recent studies suggest that the MEGT and the Y-7 tephra potentially represent two, geochemically similar but temporally distinguished eruptive events on Ischia, dated between ~56 ka (MEGT) and ~60 ka (Y-7) respectively, with this having implications for the age model of Riparo l’Oscurusciuto sequence. Furthermore, ongoing excavations revealed the presence of further tephra layers underlying SU-14, with the excavated part of the Riparo l’Oscurusciuto sequence likely extending to the end of MIS 4. To better chronologically constrain the Riparo l’Oscurusciuto record further tephrochronological investigations are required.

A new sampling campaign for tephra and cryptotephra analysis, including both glass and minerals major, minor (EPMA), and trace element (LA-ICP-MS) composition determination, has been undertaken. Eight samples have been taken from SU-14 and the underlying macroscopic volcanic ash deposits in SU-19 and SU-24/26. Analyses performed on the macroscopic samples revealed the occurrence of Na-Fe pyroxene (aegirine) in SU-24/26, but not in SU-14. The aegirine phase is absent in the MEGT deposits and subsequent, younger eruptive units on the island, but is present in the distal Y-7 deposits and older eruption units, thus SU-14 is confirmed to belong to the MEGT, whilst SU-24/26 can be correlated to either the Y-7 or another pre-MEGT eruption on Ischia. This is supported also by trace element analysis of the glass, where SU-14 shows wider ranges of Th and Y concentrations (i.e., Th = 14-58 ppm; Y = 27-73 ppm) relative to SU-24/26 (Th = 30-50 ppm; Y = 45-69), and similar to other MEGT proximal and distal samples. Concerning SU-19, trace element analysis also reveal concentrations similar to SU-14, however without wide ranging Th content (i.e., Th = 30-72 ppm) making its attribution to a temporally separate Y-7 still unclear.

 

How to cite: Monaco, L., Albert, P., Boscato, P., Giaccio, B., Manning, C., Martini, I., Spagnolo, V., Ronchitelli, A. M., Zanchetta, G., Barzilai, O., Benazzi, S., Berna, F., and Boschin, F.:  Revising the tephrostratigraphy of Riparo l’Oscurusciuto, gravina di Ginosa, Apulia (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9805, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9805, 2026.

EGU26-9808 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.7

Unveiling hidden Holocene explosive activity at Teide volcano through Data-Driven tephra correlation 

Olaya Dorado, Adelina Geyer, Adrià H. Pineda, and Joan Martí

Reconstructing the eruptive history of active volcanic complexes is essential for carrying out a proper long-term volcanic hazard assessment. This reconstruction relies on the accurate correlation of volcanic deposits (e.g. tephra layers), which is often hampered by compositional overlaps between units. Traditional methods (e.g. comparison of samples using harker diagrams of two elements) often struggle with the high-dimensional nature of geochemical data. On the other hand, data-driven approaches (e.g. cluster analysis) offer a robust solution by using statistical algorithms to objectively identify subtle geochemical signatures.

The lack of extensive and homogeneous datasets prevents using data-driven approaches for tephra correlation studies, as it is the case of the Teide-Pico Viejo (T-PV) volcanic complex (Tenerife, Canary Islands). Despite posing a significant threat to a densely populated island, T-PV's eruptive dynamics remain only partially constrained: current models attribute high-explosivity (sub-plinian) events primarily to satellite felsic domes (e.g., Montaña Blanca, Pico Cabras), whereas activity at the main Teide stratocone is widely assumed to be limited to moderate-intensity, violent Strombolian eruptions. However, stratigraphic constraints on Teide’s northern flank remain limited, as the source vents for a significant number of tephra deposits have not been identified yet.

To link these unidentified deposits to their source vent, we constructed a geochemical dataset of 74 samples that integrates reference material (lavas and tephras with source vents confirmed by geological mapping) with the target unidentified tephra layers. We analyzed the complete suite for whole-rock geochemistry and micro-analytical phases (phenocrysts and glasses) in some selected samples. We then developed a two-stage data-driven workflow: first, we performed an agglomerative Hierarchical Cluster Analysis (HCA) on whole-rock major and trace elements to group the unknown tephras with chemically affine reference lava and/or tephra samples. Second, these potential correlations were validated through petrographic assessment and a second HCA on the electron probe microanalyses (EPMA) of glass and minerals. The accuracy of our methodology is evidenced by the correct attribution of reference lava-tephra pairs from known eruptions (e.g. Montaña Blanca and Montaña Majúa).

When applied to the unidentified deposits, this method enabled the correlation of three previously unidentified tephra deposits: one with Montaña Reventada eruption, and two with the central Teide vent. Both Teide-sourced eruptions, dated to <10 ka, reveal that the Teide stratocone has hosted significant sub-plinian activity during the Holocene. This finding suggests that the explosivity of the central vent has been historically underestimated, necessitating a re-evaluation of volcanic hazard assessment for the island.

This research was partially funded by E.G., grant EVE (DG ECHO H2020 Ref. 826292), the Intramural CSIC grant MAPCAN (Ref. 202130E083), and Sub-Project 1 ‘Canary Islands, destiny of Volcanoes’, funded by PROMOTUR SA through Next Generation EU funds, PRTR. 2024krQ00nnn. OD was supported by an FPU grant (FPU18/02572) and a complementary mobility grant (EST19/00297) from the Ministry of Universities of Spain.

How to cite: Dorado, O., Geyer, A., H. Pineda, A., and Martí, J.: Unveiling hidden Holocene explosive activity at Teide volcano through Data-Driven tephra correlation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9808, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9808, 2026.

EGU26-10964 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Tracing 430,000 Years of Explosive Volcanism in Central Italy: Tephrostratigraphy and Tephrochronology of the Fucino Basin 

Niklas Leicher, Lorenzo Monaco, Biagio Giaccio, Paul G. Albert, Alison Pereira, Sebastién Nomade, Danilo M. Palladino, Gianluca Sottili, Mario Gaeta, Ilenia Arienzo, Massimo D’Antonio, Paola Petrosino, Elizabeth M. Niespolo, Paul R. Renne, Giovanni Zanchetta, and Bernd Wagner

The Fucino Basin in central Italy hosts a thick, continuous lacustrine sedimentary succession documenting the environmental history from the Early Pliocene to recent historical times. This distinguishes it as a unique archive within the Central Apennines and an extraordinary record within the Mediterranean region and on a global scale. Over the past decade, drilling operations have recovered several sediment successions from the Fucino Basin to ascertain the viability of the sediment archive for palaeoenvironmental, palaeoclimatic, tectonic and volcanic studies. The overarching ambition is to initiate an ICDP deep-drilling campaign (MEME project) recovering the complete basin history. The basin is located downwind of most Italian volcanic districts (< 150 km). This promotes its potential to explore the past explosive volcanic activity of the peri-Tyrrhenian volcanoes and to establish an outstanding tephrostratigraphic and tephrochronological record for the Central Mediterranean region. Here tephrostratigraphic and -chronological results from two drill sites (F1-F3, F4-F5) of the central part of the basin are presented, whose composite record comprises more than 140 tephra layers identified within the last 430 ka. The geochemical fingerprint of 116 of these tephra layers was successfully characterized by major and minor element glass compositions and extended for specific tephra layers by trace element and isotope data of glass and/or mineral phases. The geochronology of the Fucino tephra record is constrained by 47 radioisotopic ages, of which 18 represent 40Ar/39Ar ages directly obtained from tephra layers within the Fucino succession. This makes the Fucino record currently the most precisely dated Mediterranean Middle-Upper Pleistocene tephra archive. The combination of geochemical, stratigraphic and chronological data facilitates the unravelling the volcanic origin of tephra layers and the establishment of a robust tephrostratigraphic framework integrating proximal volcanic, but also other (mid)distal sedimentary tephra records. The Fucino tephra record provides unique insights into the different active phases of the respective Italian volcanic districts and centres, identifying prominent known and many previously unknown eruptions. Most tephra layers originate from the Latium volcanoes, which underwent their prime activity during the Middle Pleistocene, while, after 200 ka the main explosive activity of the Neapolitan volcanoes is also recorded.

The overall resulting tephrochronological information allows the construction of a comprehensive age-depth series of the Fucino sedimentary succession. This facilitates a reassessment of existing eruption ages and provides ages for previously undated tephra layers. Based on the improved chronology and more complete knowledge of volcanic activity, volcanic recurrence rates can be refined, but also climate-volcano interactions may be investigated. Furthermore, the Fucino tephrochronology provides a robust and independent chronology for the multiproxy series, allowing the Quaternary paleoclimatic-environmental dynamics to be explored independent of any a priori assumptions on response times to climate forcing and feedback.

How to cite: Leicher, N., Monaco, L., Giaccio, B., Albert, P. G., Pereira, A., Nomade, S., Palladino, D. M., Sottili, G., Gaeta, M., Arienzo, I., D’Antonio, M., Petrosino, P., Niespolo, E. M., Renne, P. R., Zanchetta, G., and Wagner, B.: Tracing 430,000 Years of Explosive Volcanism in Central Italy: Tephrostratigraphy and Tephrochronology of the Fucino Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10964, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10964, 2026.

EGU26-11708 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Neural network model detection of tephra horizons in lake sediments using XRF elemental composition data 

Megan Edwards, Marco Antonio Aquino-López, Christine Lane, Céline-Marie Vidal, Maarten van Daele, and Dirk Verschuren

Tephra is a key tool for constructing stratigraphic and chronological frameworks that enable the precise correlation of palaeoclimate, palaeoenvironmental, and archaeological records. Cryptotephra, with its greater dispersal potential, can extend these frameworks to an intercontinental scale, which helps constrain rapid regional climatic and environmental transitions. Even very low-concentration tephra layers can play a significant role in refining these records, making it crucial to identify all tephra layers within a sediment record. Here, we aim to develop a novel method for detecting tephra within sediment records that is rapid, non-destructive, and capable of producing a comprehensive record.

Currently, cryptotephra layers are identified through laboratory methods, which can take anywhere from several months to years to process extensive lake sediment records (10s-100s of metres in length). To complement these methods, core scanning techniques (e.g. X-ray fluorescence (XRF), magnetic susceptibility, X-ray CT) are utilised to expedite the identification of tephra layers. Still, they can face limitations when identifying cryptotephra layers that share similar physical characteristics with the host sediment.

To build upon these identification methods, we have developed an AI neural network model. This model is trained on elemental compositions from a 1 mm resolution XRF scanning (AVAATECH) dataset, from the diatom and organic-rich varved sediment record of Lake Chala (Kenya/Tanzania). This model is designed to complement existing identification techniques by more efficiently predicting the presence of both visible and cryptotephra layers, surpassing the capabilities of standard statistical data reduction methods. It has undergone multiple training iterations and demonstrates the capability to predict all laboratory-identified tephra layers within a test subsection of the record. Additionally, the model has undergone sensitivity tuning to improve the accuracy of these predictions.

This model will enable more efficient screening of sediment cores and prioritisation of samples for laboratory analysis. By accelerating the detection process without compromising the completeness of the tephra record, the model supports the development of regional tephrostratigraphic frameworks, correlation of regional palaeorecords, and development of complete volcanic eruption records. Future work will focus on expanding the model’s applicability across diverse sedimentary records with different background-sediment compositions. We anticipate that this model will contribute to a more efficient and accessible approach to tephra detection in extended lake sediment records.

 

How to cite: Edwards, M., Aquino-López, M. A., Lane, C., Vidal, C.-M., van Daele, M., and Verschuren, D.: Neural network model detection of tephra horizons in lake sediments using XRF elemental composition data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11708, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11708, 2026.

EGU26-11745 | Orals | SSP2.7

Discriminating tephra layers in loess–paleosol sequences by combining rock magnetic and mid-infrared spectroscopic approaches 

Christian Laag, France Lagroix, Yohan Guyodo, Neli Jordanova, and Diana Jordanova

Multi-proxy reconstructions of past environmental and climatic changes critically depend on robust age models. In loess–paleosol sequences (LPSs), the limited temporal range of commonly applied radiometric dating methods (< ~250 ka) hampers high-resolution chronologies. The identification of widespread marker horizons, such as visible or hidden (cryptic) tephra layers, offers an effective means to improve geochronological control.

Eastern European LPSs are located downwind of several highly explosive volcanic provinces, including the western Italian volcanic ridge and the Aeolian Islands, and may also have received volcanic ash from the Eastern Carpathians and Anatolia under different atmospheric circulation patterns. Consequently, volcanic glass shards are expected to be preserved in these archives over at least the last 1 Ma.

We present a high-resolution, multi-disciplinary investigation of the Pleven LPS in northern Bulgaria, integrating magnetic, colorimetric, mid-infrared (ATR-FTIR), and granulometric data. The 27 m thick sequence was sampled at 2 cm resolution (1,336 samples). Magnetic and colorimetric measurements were obtained for all samples, while ATR-FTIR and grain-size analyses were performed at lower resolution.

Mineralogical and grain-size–sensitive magnetic parameters, together with ATR-FTIR–derived smectite contents, reveal several preserved (crypto)tephra layers, of which only one is macroscopically visible. Preliminary correlations suggest equivalents in well-dated regional archives. These results demonstrate the potential of integrated multi-proxy approaches for identifying cryptotephra horizons in Eastern European LPSs and improving regional stratigraphic correlations and paleoclimate reconstructions.

How to cite: Laag, C., Lagroix, F., Guyodo, Y., Jordanova, N., and Jordanova, D.: Discriminating tephra layers in loess–paleosol sequences by combining rock magnetic and mid-infrared spectroscopic approaches, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11745, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11745, 2026.

EGU26-13494 | Orals | SSP2.7

Developing a tephrostratigraphic framework for the Azores and Canary Islands to correlate and date archaeological and palaeoenvironmental records in NW Africa 

Victoria Smith, Danielle McLean, Eloise Wilkinson-Rowe, Emma Horn, Adriano Pimentel, José Pacheco, Richard Brown, Simone Aguiar, Caves Project Members, and Nick Barton

Archaeological sites in NW Africa spanning the last ~300 kyrs are rich in human fossils and artefacts and have emerged at the forefront of evolutionary studies. However, these records lack a precise chronology, preventing robust assessments of the drivers of cultural and behavioural transitions. Investigations reveal that numerous volcanic ash (tephra) layers are interbedded within the Palaeolithic cave sequences and these likely originated from large volcanic eruptions in the Azores and Canary Islands. These tephra layers are also preserved in offshore marine records that have palaeoclimate data, and these can be used as time-stratigraphic markers to correlate the sedimentary proxy records in this region.

The explosive eruption histories of the Azores and Canary Islands have been studied, but prior to our investigations, there were limited glass chemistry data for the large explosive eruptions over the last 300 kyrs. Here we present and discuss the major and trace element glass compositions of the deposits from the Azores and Canary Islands. These data provide insights into melt storage and eruption at these ocean island volcanoes. Furthermore, we use these glass chemistry data to correlate the proximal eruption deposits with distal tephra identified in marine records and cave sites. This integrated tephrostratigraphy allows us to refine the timing and dispersal of major felsic eruptions and to precisely link volcanism, climate, and Palaeolithic cultural records, thus permitting their interrelationships to be interrogated.

How to cite: Smith, V., McLean, D., Wilkinson-Rowe, E., Horn, E., Pimentel, A., Pacheco, J., Brown, R., Aguiar, S., Project Members, C., and Barton, N.: Developing a tephrostratigraphic framework for the Azores and Canary Islands to correlate and date archaeological and palaeoenvironmental records in NW Africa, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13494, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13494, 2026.

EGU26-13685 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Managing, visualising, and archiving geochemical datasets for tephra correlation using the IntChron Integration Tool 

Victoria Smith, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, Danielle McLean, Emma Horn, and Gavin Kane

There is now a wealth of glass-shard geochemical data for volcanic ash (tephra) layers from a wide range of volcanoes and eruptions, providing invaluable datasets for tephrochronology. However, compiling published data to assess tephra correlations leads to unwieldy files and requires careful management to keep records of sources and other associated metadata. Here we show that a project within the IntChron Integration Tool (Ramsey et al., 2019), an open-access and versatile online application, can be used to effectively store and manage tephra information, geochemical data, and relevant metadata, while also providing visualisation and statistical tools.

The visualisation functionality allows sites to be plotted on a variety of base maps, enables the plotting of tephra concentrations through a sequence, and generates biplots of major and trace elements. The statistical tools are similarly invaluable for investigating compositional variability and relationships, and for assessing the probability that datasets correlate. Many of these tools were developed for the RESET database (Ramsey et al., 2015) and have since been updated and incorporated into the IntChron Integration Tool.

Project files use a JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) text-based file structure, meaning the files remain small, even for large datasets, and are human readable. Moreover, these data files can be easily read by other tools, code, and can be readily uploaded to repositories. An IntChron Integration Tool project supports the entire workflow, from sample and data collection through analysis and interpretation, to the generation of publication-ready plots.

Here we present an example project structure, and exhibit the functionality using published data from distal tephra layers in the Lake Suigetsu core, and proximal eruption deposits from large explosive eruptions of volcanoes across Japan. This project contains over 7000 geochemical analyses from eleven journal articles, demonstrating the power of the IntChron Integration Tool to manage, visualise, and archive comprehensive geochemical datasets.

References:

Ramsey, C.B., Blaauw, M., Kearney, R., Staff, R.A., 2019. The Importance of Open Access to Chronological Information: The IntChron Initiative. Radiocarbon 61, 1121–1131. https://doi.org/10.1017/rdc.2019.21

Ramsey, C.B., Housley, R.A., Lane, C.S., Smith, V.C., Pollard, A.M., 2015. The RESET tephra database and associated analytical tools. Quaternary Science Reviews 33–47. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.11.008

How to cite: Smith, V., Bronk Ramsey, C., McLean, D., Horn, E., and Kane, G.: Managing, visualising, and archiving geochemical datasets for tephra correlation using the IntChron Integration Tool, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13685, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13685, 2026.

EGU26-15261 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

The Tephra Information Portal (TIP): A Community-Driven Approach to Facilitating Access and Reuse of FAIR Tephra Data and Samples 

Kerstin Lehnert, Abigail Nalesnik, Juan David Figueroa, Sean Cao, Mollie Celnick, Scott Crass, Dain Harmon, Andrei Kurbatov, Abigail Nastan, Anthony Newton, Nathan Novak, Kristi Wallace, Victoria Smith, and Stephen Kuehn

Over the past decade, communities within the geosciences have formed around the development of best practices for sharing data and samples, driven by the need to make access and reuse of data easier and to grow confidence and trust in research results through transparency and reproducibility. But moving principles to practices encounters challenges and communities specifically identified problems with finding data and tools relevant to the community, and lack of resources to create reliable and sustainable infrastructure for storing, archiving, and reusing data. Aiming to help communities overcome these challenges, the NSF-funded IEDA2 data facility established ‘EarthChem Communities’ as a platform to promote community specific FAIR-compliant data best practices and to facilitate access to the data. EarthChem’s ‘Tephra Community’ has been the most active and mature one. In 2024, this community embarked on a collaborative project with IEDA2 to develop a more scalable and comprehensive set of resources for communities to improve their data sharing practices - the Framework for FAIR Data Communities (FFDC). The new NSF Tephra Information Portal (TIP) project now serves as a development prototype and test case for the FFDC.

The TIP has two main objectives: 1. to provide a central point of discovery and access of data in currently distributed and disconnected tephra data resources, and 2. to offer guidance and tools for researchers to adopt the best practices of the Tephra Community, publishing their data in a way that ensures they are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (= FAIR). For its first version, the TIP has been working with existing cyberinfrastructure resources relevant to tephra research (EarthChem, PetDB, GeoDIVA, SESAR, TephraBase, StraboSpot) to connect these to the central search and access hub. Work has so far focused on designing and developing interoperability between external systems and the central data discovery hub, and on the development of the user interface for data search and display. A dedicated TIP API has been developed to function as a proxy and data-aggregation layer, integrating mapped data from partner systems through a federated architecture, in which a single client request triggers concurrent queries across participating services. The TIP user interface reuses core search components developed for the EarthChem PetDB project, including the map interface, dynamic filter selection, point-selection popovers, responsive layouts, and MUI-based data tables.  In this presentation, we will present the first version of the TIP Search Interface, which connects tephra data in EarthChem’s PetDB database, data in the GeoDIVA database of the Alaska Volcano Observatory and SESAR (System for Earth Sample Registration). Work is still ongoing to connect TephraBase data. We will also report on lessons learned so far. Semantic misalignment across sources, conflicting vocabularies, overloaded or ambiguous metadata fields, and duplicates are major challenges that present roadblocks to the hub development.

How to cite: Lehnert, K., Nalesnik, A., Figueroa, J. D., Cao, S., Celnick, M., Crass, S., Harmon, D., Kurbatov, A., Nastan, A., Newton, A., Novak, N., Wallace, K., Smith, V., and Kuehn, S.: The Tephra Information Portal (TIP): A Community-Driven Approach to Facilitating Access and Reuse of FAIR Tephra Data and Samples, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15261, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15261, 2026.

EGU26-15461 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.7

Troublesome Tephra and Ambiguous Age Models: The Challenges of Volcanic Records From North Pacific Ice Cores 

Hanaa A.K. Yousif, Britta J.L. Jensen, Kira M. Holland, Alison S. Criscitiello, Kathleen R. North, Joseph R. McConnell, Stephen C. Kuehn, Erich C. Osterberg, Sophia M. Wensman, Nathan J. Chellman, and Duane G. Froese

Ice cores drilled in the North Pacific provide important records of ocean-atmosphere interactions. However, their potential to document volcanic activity remains underexplored, an oversight that is somewhat surprising given proximity to many active volcanoes in the Pacific Ring of Fire. The few studies that have investigated volcanism in North Pacific ice cores have largely been limited to electrical conductivity and sulfate measurements. As such, tephra data from ice cores in the region are limited. This is particularly significant because traditional ice core dating methods (e.g., seasonal variations in stable water isotopes) have proven unreliable in some North Pacific records, thus tephra are an important alternative and underexploited chronological tool.

A 325 m ice core drilled from the summit plateau of Mt. Logan, southwest Yukon, in 2022 (60.604°N, 140.493°W; 5,334 m asl) presents an opportunity to revisit the characteristics and sources of tephra in a North Pacific ice core. An annual chronology has been developed using seasonal variations in H₂O₂, NH₄⁺, Na, and insoluble particle concentrations. Annual layers have been counted to 1911 CE, which corresponds to a depth of ~ 257.4 m, or ~ 80% of the core length. Although the basal age of the core remains unconstrained, preliminary age-depth modelling suggests the record spans one to two millennia at most. However, an abrupt and distinctive change in the seasonal cycle of the proxies used for annual layer counts, together with an absence of independent tie-points between 257 – 325 m, has complicated an accurate chronology. Here, we present our efforts to complete the age-depth scale for the 2022 Mt. Logan ice core. In doing so, we outline some challenges and successes encountered thus far in working toward the first high-resolution tephrochronology for a North Pacific ice core.

One approach is to compare the 2022 Mt. Logan record with the limited but important volcanic records available for ice cores from elsewhere in the North Pacific region. Sites include an earlier record drilled on Mt. Logan, the 2002 Prospector Russell Col ice core, which is one of the few sites in the North Pacific reported to contain pre-Holocene ice. Additional locations include the Begguya plateau (Mt. Hunter, Alaska), which similarly preserves pre-Holocene ice, and the Eclipse Icefield located close in proximity to Mt. Logan in the St. Elias Mountains. Volcanic records, if correlated across the sites and/or to well-dated eruptions, may provide a means to constrain the age of the 2022 Mt. Logan ice core.

How to cite: A.K. Yousif, H., J.L. Jensen, B., M. Holland, K., S. Criscitiello, A., R. North, K., R. McConnell, J., C. Kuehn, S., C. Osterberg, E., M. Wensman, S., J. Chellman, N., and G. Froese, D.: Troublesome Tephra and Ambiguous Age Models: The Challenges of Volcanic Records From North Pacific Ice Cores, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15461, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15461, 2026.

EGU26-15650 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

GLAAS, a FAIR data information system for tephra laboratory research 

Stephen Kuehn, Abigail Nalesnik, Student Implementation Teams, and Debra Parcheta

A prominent barrier to adopting open science and FAIR data practices is the workload required for generating and sharing standards-following well-documented data. The Geological Laboratory Analytical Archive System (GLAAS) is aimed at directly minimizing this barrier by facilitating the operational capture of metadata while following and supporting laboratory workflows. This approach greatly eases the process of archiving and publishing FAIR data with rich contextual metadata following research community best practice standards. This system is inspired by Sparrow (https://sparrow-data.org/) for analytical lab documentation and Strabo (https://strabospot.org/) for field data capture and documentation.

The current schema includes people, projects, funding sources, physical sample cataloging, sample and sub-sample curation, sample preparation, analytical target cataloging, bulk and in-situ microanalytical geochemistry, analytical methods and instruments, grain size analysis, volcanological componentry, optical images, SEM images, and resulting publications. An authenticated-access, user-friendly web interface allows users to access and record their data from any secure network/facility. The designated PI or owner can manage their overall project and sample visibility (denoting projects as public or private), and they can configure multiple levels of project data access and management for their team of collaborators and for members of the public. Datasets designated public are accessible to all other researchers, helping to foster and promote open science. 

The development of this multi-component system and database gained valuable insight and direction from previous tephra community workshop participants, NSF-supported best practices development (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-022-01515-y), IEDA EarthChem and SESAR collaborations, and early stage Concord University undergraduate student contributions. These helped to refine the schema design and workflow support for FAIR data practices. Prototypes are being tested at Concord University with the intention to eventually make this tool available for the broader tephra-mineralogy-petrology and analytical lab community. The creation, dissemination, and wider adoption of this data system will strengthen user-driven, user-controlled documentation of research samples and data thus help to make much more science information readily Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable.

How to cite: Kuehn, S., Nalesnik, A., Teams, S. I., and Parcheta, D.: GLAAS, a FAIR data information system for tephra laboratory research, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15650, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15650, 2026.

EGU26-17221 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.7

Reliance or Resilience? Volcanism and the Ancient Maya 

Danielle McLean, Ikuko Kitaba, Kenichiro Tsukamoto, Takayuki Omori, Takeshi Nakagawa, Victoria Smith, Hiroo Nasu, Miguel Mollinedo, Flory Pinzón, Kazuyoshi Nagaya, Tania Torres, Takeshi Inomata, Alexander Geurds, José Luis Macias, and Maya Varves Project Members

The ancient Maya, renowned for their remarkable cultural achievements and complex societal structures, prospered for over a millennium within the volcanic landscapes of Mesoamerica (a region that today includes Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras and El Salvador). Although interwoven into Maya history, and possibly even a contributing cause for their decline during the Terminal Classic Period (AD 800–1000), the precise nature of this relationship with volcanism remains unresolved. Volcanic ash (tephra) is known to have frequently blanketed the Maya lowlands, yet previous evidence has been limited to spatially patchy records with poor chronological control. This project utilises the cryptotephra record of newly recovered, annually laminated (varved) lake sediment sequences from the Yucatán Peninsula (Lake San Claudio in Mexico and Lake Petexbatún in Guatemala) to reconstruct the sub-annual timing and dispersal of eruptions for the first time. In parallel, we geochemically analyse volcanic ash preserved as ceramic temper in pottery from the Classic Maya site of El Palmar (Mexico), providing a direct archaeological record of tephra exploitation and use. Together, these complementary datasets link environmental records of volcanism with archaeological evidence for the use of volcanic ash in material culture. This integrated approach offers new insight into the climatic and societal impacts of eruptions and how Maya communities may have responded to, engaged with, and utilised volcanic products.

How to cite: McLean, D., Kitaba, I., Tsukamoto, K., Omori, T., Nakagawa, T., Smith, V., Nasu, H., Mollinedo, M., Pinzón, F., Nagaya, K., Torres, T., Inomata, T., Geurds, A., Macias, J. L., and Project Members, M. V.: Reliance or Resilience? Volcanism and the Ancient Maya, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17221, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17221, 2026.

EGU26-17274 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.7

Marine tephrochronology at Stromboli volcano: reconstruction of flank collapses and tsunami hazards over the last 10,000 years 

Serena Da Mommio, Alessio Di Roberto, Marija Voloschina, Antonella Bertagnini, Mauro Rosi, Armin Freundt, Steffen Kutterolf, Rosanna De Rosa, Paola Donato, Michael Marani, and Marco Pistolesi

Over the last two decades, tephrochronology has become a fundamental tool for high-resolution stratigraphy, providing constraints for dating, correlation, and synchronization applicable to various Earth sciences disciplines. In coastal and island volcanic settings, the analysis of the texture, mineralogy, and geochemistry of volcanic particles allows the identification of the source volcanoes and the reconstruction of eruptive histories, also providing crucial information on associated hazards, such as slope collapse and tsunamis.

In this study, we applied an integrated tephrochronological, sedimentological, and geochemical approach to three marine sediment cores collected ~30–43 km northwest of Stromboli volcano (southern Tyrrhenian Sea). Marine sedimentary sequences are particularly valuable in this context because they preserve both turbidite sequences produced by past volcanic flank collapses and tephra deposits from nearby volcanoes, providing essential chronological constraints. The cores consist of epiclastic sediments and hemipelagic muds intercalated with volcaniclastic deposits, which were divided into three main types: (a) primary tephra (and cryptotephra) layers, representing direct fallout deposits from explosive eruptions; (b) mono-magmatic volcaniclastic turbidites that were directly linked to collapse events of the north flank of Stromboli; (c) multi-magmatic volcaniclastic turbidites resulting from the mixing of materials from multiple volcanic sources during transport through the Stromboli channel. We focused on the upper 2 m of the cores, representing the Holocene period, where sedimentological and geochemical analysis allowed the identification of three primary tephra layers, which could be correlated with well-known eruptions on land. These include the Vallone Gabellotto rhyolitic tephra (~9–8.7 ka) at the base of the investigated sections and which constrains the record to the last ~10 kyr, a high-K trachyandesitic tephra related to Neostromboli explosive activity (~8.7–6 ka), and the Monte Pilato rhyolitic tephra (~1.2 ka BP) near the top of the cores. Together, these markers provide a solid time frame for constraining the ages of the intercalated volcaniclastic deposits. Within this framework, at least 8 mono-magmatic volcaniclastic turbidites were identified that are geochemically correlated with the main eruptive periods of Stromboli. Due to their homogeneous compositions, we interpreted these turbidites as genetically related to collapse events at the flank of Stromboli, implying that at least 8 large-scale landslide events have occurred at Stromboli during the Holocene. Compared with the 2002 tsunamigenic landslide (~30 × 10⁶ m³), the landslide volumes estimated from the turbidite thicknesses (~45 × 10⁶ to ~58.5 × 107 m³) suggest that all were of higher magnitude and potentially tsunamigenic.

This study highlights how marine tephrochronology represents an effective tool to reconstruct volcanic events and associated risks, providing crucial data for hazard assessment and mitigation strategy development in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea.

How to cite: Da Mommio, S., Di Roberto, A., Voloschina, M., Bertagnini, A., Rosi, M., Freundt, A., Kutterolf, S., De Rosa, R., Donato, P., Marani, M., and Pistolesi, M.: Marine tephrochronology at Stromboli volcano: reconstruction of flank collapses and tsunami hazards over the last 10,000 years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17274, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17274, 2026.

EGU26-17801 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Tephrochronology of the NDT09 core (Marsili Basin): Unraveling the style, timing, and frequency of peri-Tyrrhenian volcanism 

Alessio Di Roberto, Giuseppe Re, Donatella Domenica Insinga, Bianca Scateni, Chiara Caricchi, Maurizio Petrelli, and Patrizia Macrì

The Tyrrhenian Basin is a natural laboratory for tephrochronology, serving as an exceptional, nearly-proximal archive for the eruptive products of several highly active volcanic provinces. Investigations in this region have proven exceptionally productive for correlating and synchronizing geological records and reconstructing the explosive history of the Central Mediterranean region; however, continuous, high-resolution records are still requisite for fully resolving complex eruptive sequences. Within this context, we present a detailed characterization of the 5.7 m long NDT09 marine sediment sequence retrieved from the Marsili Basin, conducted as part of the AMUSED project (https://progetti.ingv.it/index.php/it/amused). By integrating textural analyses (SEM) with high-precision glass geochemistry (EMPA and LA-ICP-MS), radiocarbon dating, and paleomagnetic data, we established a robust age-depth model for the NDT09 core, spanning the last ca. 15 ka. This multiproxy approach facilitated the identification of 20 distinct tephra and cryptotephra layers. Chemical fingerprinting correlates these deposits unequivocally to the Campi Flegrei, Somma-Vesuvius, Aeolian Islands, and Ischia volcanic complexes. In particular, we identified the following eruptions for Campi Flegrei: Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT), La Pigna 1, Soccavo 1, Pomici Principali, Fondi di Baia, and at least three undetermined eruptions. For the Somma-Vesuvius volcano, we recognized eruptions of Mercato, AP3, and 512 A.D.. For the Aeolian Islands, we recognized the activity of Vallone del Gabellotto of Lipari and an eruption within the Upper Brown Tuff phase of Vulcano. Lastly, we identified tephra from Cannavale and Arso eruptions sourced by Ischia. Furthermore, the stratigraphy highlights the presence of turbiditic deposits, potentially resulting from mass-wasting events originating on the flanks of insular volcanic edifices.
Crucially, this sedimentary record provides novel insights into eruptive frequencies and dispersal patterns. Rather than merely confirming established stratigraphies, our results delineate previously unrecognized explosive events and refine the temporal recurrence interval of major volcanic phases.
This high-resolution reconstruction provides a fresh perspective on the dynamics and recurrence rates of peri-Tyrrhenian volcanism, allows the refinement of age constraints, and the recognition of new and intriguing insights for deciphering the volcanic history of peri-Tyrrhenian volcanoes.

How to cite: Di Roberto, A., Re, G., Insinga, D. D., Scateni, B., Caricchi, C., Petrelli, M., and Macrì, P.: Tephrochronology of the NDT09 core (Marsili Basin): Unraveling the style, timing, and frequency of peri-Tyrrhenian volcanism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17801, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17801, 2026.

EGU26-19866 | ECS | Orals | SSP2.7

Electron Probe Microanalysis of Extremely Fine-Grained Tephras: New Protocols and Insights for Analyses at the 1 µm Scale 

Celeste Smith, Andrea Burke, Richard Streeter, Ian Lawson, Sally Law, and William Hutchison

Volcanic ash (tephra) from large eruptions is dispersed over broad regions and serves as an important chronostratigraphic marker at regional to hemispheric scales. In ultra-distal (>1500 km) archives such as polar ice cores and marine sediments, the preserved tephra is typically <10 μm in diameter, making accurate major-oxide analysis a persistent challenge for characterizing and correlating these deposits. Although advances in tephra extraction techniques have increased glass shard recovery from these archives, the analytical limitations of characterizing extremely fine-grained glass remain a primary constraint.

This study develops and evaluates a 1 μm/1 nA EPMA–WDS method, implemented without additional external software, that achieves high spatial resolution without inducing significant Na or K migration across low-, intermediate-, and high-silica reference glasses. Method performance strongly depends on the element-to-spectrometer configuration and element-specific count times. Without optimization, both factors induce alkali migration resulting in an up to 6% decrease from standard reference values for either Na or K, particularly in high-silica or alkali-rich compositions. Following parameter optimization, the 1 μm/1 nA configuration yields major-oxide results that deviate by less than 3% from reference values for concentrations exceeding 1 wt.% and 10 wt.% when concentrations are less than 1 wt.%The method improves precision by up to a factor of seven for extremely fine-grained shards compared with existing approaches, including the 3 μm/1 nA configuration, the 3 μm small-beam overlap method, and SEM–EDS at 1 nA.

The optimized configuration exceeds the performance reported in previous assessments of a 1μm/1 nA setup, indicating that the recommended current-density thresholds may be overly conservative. Applied to in-situ, ice-core cryptotephra, the method resolves compositional differences at sufficient granularity to distinguish separate eruptions and discrete eruptive phases. As ultra-distal deposits often contain sparse populations of <10 μm shards, by increasing the quantity of analyzable shards using a reliable 1 μm method, we improve the statistical power of correlation tests between proximal tephra deposits and distal to ultra-distal tephras.

The optimized approach thus facilitates integration of multiple depositional environments within the global tephrochronological framework and provides a reliable analytical method applicable across laboratories with differing instrumental capabilities. The optimized approach facilitates the integration of multiple depositional environments within the global tephrochronological framework while providing EPMA analysts with a reliable, high spatial resolution method.

How to cite: Smith, C., Burke, A., Streeter, R., Lawson, I., Law, S., and Hutchison, W.: Electron Probe Microanalysis of Extremely Fine-Grained Tephras: New Protocols and Insights for Analyses at the 1 µm Scale, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19866, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19866, 2026.

EGU26-19986 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Redefining Eastern Anatolian Tephrochronology: insights from Nemrut and Süphan volcanoes 

Markus J Schwab, Rebecca Kearney, Jeremy Goff, Victoria Smith, Yavuz Özdemir, Özgür Karaoǧlu, Valby van Schijndel, Matthew Thirlwall, Dan Barfod, Oona Appelt, Christina Günter, Jan Fietzke, Nadine Pickarski, Ina Neugebauer, Achim Brauer, and Rik Tjallingii

The Eastern Anatolian Volcanic Province (EAVP) has a highly fragmented and understudied eruption history. The volcanoes of Nemrut and Süphan are known to be major sources of volcanic ash in the eastern Mediterranean region. Numerous distal tephra and cryptotephra layers originating from these two volcanoes are found within important archaeological and palaeoenvironmental records across the region. However, the limited availability of robust glass geochemical data and well-constrained eruption histories has so far prevented these tephra layers being used to their full tephrochronological potential.

Here, we present a refined tephrochronological framework for Nemrut and Süphan, as part of the DFG funded TephroMed and TephroBridge projects. We investigated all the visible tephra layers (V-layers) of the ICDP Ahlat Ridge core, Lake Van (Turkey), focusing on the last Interglacial to glacial period (30-130 ka). The volcanic glasses from these V-layers have been geochemically characterised by using major and minor (EPMA) with the addition of trace element analysis (LA-ICP-MS). This data is combined with glass geochemical analyses of proximal tephra deposits from dated tephra outcrops surrounding Lake Van.

The results reveal the volcanic origins of the 107 V-layers. Integration of this data with new geochemical correlations to dated proximal deposits allows ages to be assigned to key eruption events. This refined tephrochronological framework provides a foundation for investigating interactions between volcanic activity and climatic variability, while significantly improving chronological control of paleoenvironmental and archaeological records. Ultimately, this work enables improved regional synchronisation across the eastern Mediterranean and advances the development of Mediterranean tephrochronology, helping to bridge a critical gap in current knowledge.

How to cite: Schwab, M. J., Kearney, R., Goff, J., Smith, V., Özdemir, Y., Karaoǧlu, Ö., van Schijndel, V., Thirlwall, M., Barfod, D., Appelt, O., Günter, C., Fietzke, J., Pickarski, N., Neugebauer, I., Brauer, A., and Tjallingii, R.: Redefining Eastern Anatolian Tephrochronology: insights from Nemrut and Süphan volcanoes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19986, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19986, 2026.

EGU26-21027 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Tephrochronological constraints indicate a MIS 7 age for the middle Pleistocene glacial maximum in far northeastern Asia 

Vera Ponomareva, Egor Zelenin, Maxim Portnyagin, Natalia Bubenshchikova, Maria Pevzner, and Oleg Dirksen

Large-scale glacial deposits are widespread across far northeastern Asia; however, their ages remain poorly constrained, limiting understanding of the glacial history of Western Beringia and its relationship to other Northern Hemisphere glacial records. A key challenge is correlating glacial deposits from sites separated by hundreds of kilometers. Geochemically characterized tephras provide an opportunity to link glacial deposits from different localities and, in addition, to correlate onshore glacial records with marine paleoenvironmental archives and the LR04 oxygen-isotope curve. We present new tephrochronological constraints on glacial deposits from Western Beringia, including the Kamchatka Peninsula and the northeastern Asian mainland, and correlate these records with marine sediment cores using geochemically fingerprinted ash layers.
The Kamchatka Peninsula is located on the northeastern edge of Eurasia and is bordered by the Okhotsk Sea to the west and the Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea to the east. Kamchatka hosts two volcanic belts that were active throughout the Quaternary and produced large explosive eruptions, dispersing tephra over hundreds of kilometers. A series of tephra-bearing sediments, including glacial till, is exposed along the right bank of the Kamchatka River, which marks the maximum known advance of the Sredinny Range glaciers, approximately 100 km from the source area. The lowermost exposed unit of the sequence was dated to 350-250 ka, providing a minimum age constraint for the overlying till. Five tephra layers bracketing the till were correlated with tephras found in four marine cores from the Okhotsk Sea and the Pacific Ocean. Based on the core age models, the tephra sequence spans 230 to 177 ka BP, corresponding to MIS 7d – 6d. The till at its most distal position is sandwiched between ~230 ka and 205 ka old tephras indicating that the glacier reached its maximum extent during MIS 7d. The youngest ~177 ka old Rauchua tephra overlies the till closer to the source area, suggesting a slow glacier retreat toward MIS 6d.
The same ~230 ka tephra is preserved between regionally extensive glacial till and overlying glaciofluvial deposits on the northeastern Asian mainland, about 750 km northwest of the Kamchatka sites. This indicates a synchronous glacial advance and presence of large ice masses across vast areas of far northeastern Asia during MIS 7d. Based on published data, these deposits represent the most extensive glaciation in the region, whereas younger MIS 6 glaciations were confined to mountainous areas. Our findings challenge the conventional view of MIS 7 as a warm interglacial and underscores the significance of MIS 7d as a major cold stadial within the Penultimate Interglacial.

How to cite: Ponomareva, V., Zelenin, E., Portnyagin, M., Bubenshchikova, N., Pevzner, M., and Dirksen, O.: Tephrochronological constraints indicate a MIS 7 age for the middle Pleistocene glacial maximum in far northeastern Asia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21027, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21027, 2026.

EGU26-21509 | Posters on site | SSP2.7

Deep-sea intraplate paleoseismicity recorded in tephrostratigraphy of ODP Site 881 

Maxim Portnyagin, Egor Zelenin, and Vera Ponomareva

Deep-sea cores are pivotal in constructing long tephrochronological frameworks. Correlations of tephra layers between cores improve their individual age models and enables the compilation of composite tephrochronological model using a Bayesian age modeling approach. Subsequently, tephra layers with new or refined age estimates may provide an age reference for previously undated deposits or events.

The Kuril Island Arc is the least studied volcanic belt of the northern Pacific because of its remoteness and the limited exposure of volcanic edifices above sea level. Our recent deep-sea tephrochronological studies in the NW Pacific, near the Kamchatka peninsula, have produced a 6.2 Ma chronology of large volcanic eruptions mostly from Kamchatka volcanoes. To the south, only one site of the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 145 Site 881 provides a long sedimentary sequence likely recording volcanic eruptions of the Kurils. To construct the tephrochronological model for Site 881, visible tephra layers from Holes 881A to 881D were sampled, geochemically fingerprinted using single-shard EMPA and LA-ICP-MS analyses, correlated among the cores and then matched to the Detroit Seamount reference chronology.

Although studied tephra layers appear undisturbed, the depth interval between 92 and 122 m (depth below sea floor in core 881B) hosts four tephra sequences that contain sets of ash layers repetitively redeposited as coherent units from deeper levels (122-148 m). The original sequence and three redeposited intervals are sandwiched between undisturbed tephra layers correlating to the DS61 and DS69 tephras from the Detroit Seamount reference chronology with the ages of 1.27 Ma and 1.61 Ma, respectively. We interpret this previously unknown stratigraphic repetition as the result of stacking within a subaqueous landslide occurred at ~1.29 Ma.

The Site 881 is located in a footwall of a normal fault revealed by seismic profiling, approximately 800 m south of the fault scarp (Rea et al., 1993). Although the fault was previously considered inactive, an onboard seismic-lithological correlation permitted to trace fault plane through subunit 1B of presumed Late Miocene – Pliocene age. We consider a slip on this fault to be the most possible trigger of the landslide, indicating fault activity in the Quaternary.

These results allowed us to resolve the tephrostratigraphy of ODP Site 881 and to establish a reliable age model based on dated tephra layers. The refined model adjust the original age model within the redeposited interval by up to 300 ka. This case illustrates that detailed geochemical studies of tephra layers in marine cores can substantially improve age model accuracy and are crucial to avoid misinterpretation of chronology in sedimentary sequences.

How to cite: Portnyagin, M., Zelenin, E., and Ponomareva, V.: Deep-sea intraplate paleoseismicity recorded in tephrostratigraphy of ODP Site 881, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21509, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21509, 2026.

SSP3 – Sedimentology: processes, products, diagenesis

EGU26-4452 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

Contrasting the postglacial morphodynamic evolution of Alpine and Apennine river systems in the central Po Valley, Italy 

Laura Simoncelli, Luca Colombera, and Giorgio Basilici

Understanding how fluvial systems respond to geological controls is challenging due to their sensitivity to a wide range of environmental conditions. These factors determine the characteristics of preserved stratigraphic successions, which may not be accounted for by traditional continental sequence-stratigraphic models. Such models tend to be overly simplistic in the way they consider morphodynamic behaviours, especially for setting where distinct river systems, fed by distinct sediment sources and exhibiting different geomorphic dynamics, interact with each other. Moreover, the extent to which different geomorphological river types are preserved in the stratigraphic record has not been fully documented.

This study aims to elucidate the dynamic interactions and contrasting evolution of adjoining axial and transverse river systems through the study of Quaternary successions and geomorphic elements across a transect of the central Po Valley (Northern Italy). The Po Basin is an asymmetric alluvial foredeep basin and represents an excellent laboratory for this purpose, because it records the geological history of rivers draining the Alps and the Apennines, and converging in the axial Po River channel belt.

A comprehensive geological dataset is constructed by integrating field-based mapping of geomorphological, sedimentological and pedological features with shallow-subsurface borehole observations and remote-sensing data. Petrographic and micromorphological data are being collected with which to undertake analyses of sediment provenance and pedogenetic processes. A chronostratigraphic framework is being erected based on radiometric and luminescence dating, palaeomagnetic data and archaeological evidence.

The results shed light on the contrasting geomorphological and stratigraphic features in the postglacial fluvial evolution of the central Po Plain. The northern alpine tributaries are characterized by incision-dominated dynamics, driven by a marked decrease in sediment supply following the transition from proglacial outwash systems to the postglacial configuration, in which the development of pre-Alpine lakes has been of considerable importance, effectively trapping detritus from upstream catchments.

By contrast, southern rivers draining Apennine catchments have built a postglacial unit dominated by widespread aggradation, characterized by the coalescence of small fluvial fans traversed by alluvial ridges linked with a topographic control on sediment distribution via repeated avulsions.

This asynchronous evolution of aggradational and degradational phases reflects contrasting sedimentary and geomorphic trends driven by differences in sediment supply rates and delivery mechanisms. Indeed, these findings provide a valuable framework for interpreting the stratigraphic architecture of Quaternary successions of the Po Basin, and for comparing the observed post-15 ka evolution with traditional sequence stratigraphic models (LST–TST–HST transition).

This research enables a critical evaluation of the applicability of sequence stratigraphic models in continental settings, emphasizing the necessity for more sophisticated models that account for spatial and temporal variability in fluvial responses to external forcings. Current work seeks to expand this study to successions and landforms recording the earlier Pleistocene evolution of these river systems. By highlighting these processes, this study focuses on the key role of source-to-sink approaches for understanding fluvial system dynamics in continental settings.

How to cite: Simoncelli, L., Colombera, L., and Basilici, G.: Contrasting the postglacial morphodynamic evolution of Alpine and Apennine river systems in the central Po Valley, Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4452, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4452, 2026.

EGU26-4544 | Orals | GM5.2

Thresholds, Memory, and a Physical Mechanism for the Sadler Effect in Geomorphic Systems 

Sean Gallen, Jeremy Rugenstein, Abigail Axness, Kate Drobnich, Ashlesha Khatiwada, Phillip Kondracki, Ana Maria Perez, Owen Richardson, and Chenchao Xu

The Sadler effect is defined as a systematic decrease in estimated rates with increasing measurement interval and is widely observed in stratigraphic and geomorphic systems. In natural systems, statistics themselves do not cause phenomena; rather, physical processes operate across landscapes, generating responses that can be characterized by statistics. However, it is statistical phenomena (a heavy-tailed distribution via random walks or stochastic memory formulations) that are frequently invoked to explain the Sadler effect, which provides no insight into the physical processes that generate a heavy-tailed distribution. Here, we explore how the Sadler effect might arise in a system where thresholds must be exceeded to produce an erosive event. We argue that apparent heavy-tailed hiatus distributions can emerge naturally when considering physically reasonable geomorphic dynamics. Using a simple stream power-based stochastic threshold-incision framework, we show that systems governed by static thresholds and stationary forcing produce exponential hiatus distributions. In such circumstances, a Sadler-like effect is observed, but only over a finite time span set by the characteristic hiatus return time, after which rates remain constant. In contrast, when thresholds evolve through time—either via event-driven perturbations with recovery (system memory) or through temporal changes in the forcing distribution (e.g., climate variability)—the system samples a sequence of exponential hiatus distributions with distinct characteristic timescales. The superposition of these exponential hiatus distributions produces an apparent heavy tail and sustains Sadler-like scaling across multiple orders of magnitude in time. This framework provides a physically interpretable alternative to purely statistical explanations of the Sadler effect and highlights the central role of variable threshold magnitude, recovery timescales, and climate variability in controlling signal preservation in geomorphic systems. Importantly, these concepts likely extend to interpreting the Sadler effect in the stratigraphic record. The results suggest that apparent long-memory behavior in erosion and deposition records may reflect evolving thresholds and forcing regimes, rather than intrinsic heavy-tailed dynamics.

How to cite: Gallen, S., Rugenstein, J., Axness, A., Drobnich, K., Khatiwada, A., Kondracki, P., Perez, A. M., Richardson, O., and Xu, C.: Thresholds, Memory, and a Physical Mechanism for the Sadler Effect in Geomorphic Systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4544, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4544, 2026.

EGU26-5053 | ECS | Orals | GM5.2

Plio-Pleistocene and modern erosion rates in the Himalaya from paired cosmogenic radionuclides  

Sohini Bhattacharjee, Bodo Bookhagen, and Rajiv Sinha

To understand sediment transport from the Himalayan source regions to the foreland basin over multi-millennial timescales, it is essential to quantify both hillslope erosion rates and sediment storage times within the mountain belt. In this study, we estimate paleo-erosion rates of the Himalaya using paired cosmogenic radionuclide (10Be and 26Al) concentrations from 62 alluvial sediment samples collected from drill cores and riverbeds across four major Himalayan-River basins. By correcting the nuclide concentrations for sediment storage time, we show that neglecting storage-effects can lead to a systematic overestimation of erosion rates.

Paleo-erosion rates of Himalayan hillslopes derived from all four river basins show a consistent, near-linear increase through time from the late-Pliocene to the present. This trend is observed from the western Himalaya (modern riverbed samples from north of the Main Frontal Thrust and the paleo-Sutlej) through the central Himalaya (paleo-Yamuna and Ganges) to the central-eastern Himalaya (Kosi). In the Sutlej basin, erosion rates increase from ~0.07 mm/y at 2.95 Ma to 1.79 mm/y at present. The paleo-Yamuna records a rise from ~0.2 mm/y at 3.3 Ma to 1.9 mm/y at 0.6 Ma. Similarly, the Ganges basin shows an increase from ~0.24 mm/y at 3.7 Ma to 2.04 mm/y at 0.9 Ma, while the Kosi basin exhibits the strongest acceleration, from ~0.12 mm/y at 4.42 Ma to 4.37 mm/y in modern samples.

We attribute the temporally increasing trend of the paleo-erosion rates on glacial erosion. Expansion of glaciers in the high altitudes of the Himalayan region occurred after ~2.7 Ma, due to the growth of the northern hemispheric icesheet. Additionally, the increased seasonality of the south-east Asian monsoon and initiation of the Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycle possibly have led to higher glaciation, which in turn resulted in higher erosion rate in the Himalaya after ~2 Ma.

How to cite: Bhattacharjee, S., Bookhagen, B., and Sinha, R.: Plio-Pleistocene and modern erosion rates in the Himalaya from paired cosmogenic radionuclides , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5053, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5053, 2026.

Located in the central Sichuan Basin, the Tianfu Gas Field exhibits multi-storied gas-bearing features within the Shaximiao Formation. However, the exploration and development of its tight gas reservoirs remain at a preliminary stage, necessitating enhanced understanding of the formation's depositional systems and sandstone distribution patterns.Therefore, this study focuses on the Sha21 submember in the Jinqian 5H well block of Tianfu Gas Field as the research target. Integrating regional geological background with 3D seismic data, drilling/logging data, and laboratory analyses, using a well-seismic combined approach,we systematically investigated the planar distribution and evolutionary characteristics of the depositional system in the study area. the study provides a reference case for sequence architecture analysis and reservoir prediction in similar fluvial sedimentary regions.

Research has shown that paleosoil geochemical analysis and mineral characteristics indicate that the Sha21 submember was in an arid to semi-arid climate environment. Field profiles and on-site core observations show that this period was a typical fluvial sedimentary structure,the entire sequence formed in a regressive depositional setting, accompanied by periodic fluctuations of the base level. Stratigraphically, the submember can be divided into four 4th-order sequences (medium-term cycles: MSC1-MSC4), corresponding to four sandstone units (F1 through F4) respectively. During the deposition of the F1 sand unit,the base level began to drop, and the source supply was relatively stable, mainly consisting of meandering rivers or low-sinuosity channels . During this stage, the accommodation space was relatively high, the channel incision was deep but lateral migration was limited, and the sand bodies showed relatively narrow (mostly <1km), consistent continuity and clear striped distribution characteristics. The F2 sandstone unit deposition period witnessed rapid base-level drop with markedly increased sediment supply and reduced accommodation space. During this phase, channels exhibited intense lateral migration and aggradation, resulting in significantly widened fluvial sandbodies (reaching 2-3 km in width) with extensive distribution and excellent continuity. During the F3 sandstone unit depositional period, the base-level drop slowed down and even experienced short-term rises while sediment supply decreased, leading to weakened fluvial energy. Local tectonic activity caused the migration of the channel system westward, forming relatively narrow (mostly <1km) yet still continuous channel sandbodies. During the deposition of the F4 sandstone unit, the base level had dropped to its lowest position with sharply reduced accommodation space, while fluvial energy significantly weakened and sediment supply further decreased. These conditions restricted sediment transport to distal areas, forcing lateral expansion and vertical stacking, resulting in proximal concentration of sandbodies with shortened lateral extension.

The sedimentary evolution in the study area was primarily controlled by three interrelated factors: (1) phased base-level changes within a regressive background, (2) fluctuations in sediment supply, and (3) the consequent dynamic feedback mechanisms affecting fluvial energy and channel morphology.The variations in channel width and morphology, along with their planar migration patterns, comprehensively document the fluvial system's response to changes in the accommodation-to-sediment supply ratio (A/S).

Keywords: Jinqian 5H well block; Sha21 Submember; sedimentary characteristics; sandstone distribution patterns

How to cite: Zhang, Z., Wang, Z., and Jurado, M. J.: Research on Fluvial Depositional Evolution and Sandbody Distribution Patterns of the Sha21 Submember in Jinqian 5H Well Block, Tianfu Gas Field, Sichuan Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6524, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6524, 2026.

EGU26-6689 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

Catchment and fan geometry controls on grain size fining in northwestern Namibia 

Amanda Wild, David Mair, Ariel do Prado, Rocio Jaimes Gutierrez, Marine Prieur, Nahin Rezwan, Benjamin Mapani, Andreas Nduutepo, Janek Walk, Julian Krieger, Fiona Guhe, Alhaji Chatty, and Frank Lehmkuhl

Located at the entrance to the sedimentary basin, alluvial fans are key depositional systems in which fluvial responses to external forcing are commonly preserved in the gravel and sand fraction of the stratigraphic record. It has long been observed that upstream catchment area has an impact on fan extent, incoming sediment flux, and subsequent deposition rates (Bull, 1977). Numerical modelling results suggest that catchment size can affect the autogenic dynamics of channel incision and mobility inducing high topographic variation across the fan, transient deposition, and more rapid grain size fining in systems where the downstream drainage area is greater than the upstream source catchments (Wild et al. 2025). However, the extent to which these internal dynamics are expressed in real-world fan grain size records and any geometric thresholds within the landscape remains poorly constrained. In an area with comparable external forcing (e.g. limited tectonic activity, comparable lithology and base-level, and comparable mean annual precipitation) producing fans in a state of sediment bypass near Kowarib, Namibia, we tested additional internal dynamics and geometric (e.g. catchment area and topographic) correlations with grain size fining.

The goal of our approach is to quantify internal controls observed within the landscape evolution model, GravelScape (Wild et al. 2025), on the gravel grain size fining record of real-world unconstrained alluvial fans. We implemented a geospatial analysis of high resolution (1 m) DEM, multispectral remote sensing imagery, and analysis of field captured channel bed images and bank measurements. To measure gravel grain sizes, we implemented the machine learning ImageGrains algorithm (Mair et al, 2024) on field sampled imagery from the main channel of three fans in the northern interior of Namibia. We expanded the geospatial analysis to nine Kowarib fans draining the same mountain range as the field sampled fans to provide greater geometric context on the area. Preliminary results indicate a difference in fan profile shape (convex vs concave) draining larger catchments (> 1 km2) with less grain size fining in these systems even after normalization by depositional length. The concave fans draining the smaller catchments (<1 km2) often displayed steeper topography, patches of exposed bedrock in their main channel, patches of thick sedimentation, high rugosity (variation across the fan surfaces-channel incisions), and more rapid grain size fining. The convex fans draining the larger catchments (>1 km2), displayed a more consistent sedimentation layer throughout the main channel, less topographic variation (down and across) the fan and less grain size fining. A landscape evolution model is  then used to compare downstream responses in fan development and grain size fining across different catchment–basin geometries, isolating the effects of variations in sediment supply and fan evolution time or internal, autogenic, depositional dynamics within the fan.

Bull (1977). Progress in Physical Geography: 1(2). doi.org/10.1177/030913337700100202

Mair et al. (2024) ESPL :49(3). doi.org/10.1002/esp.5755

Wild et al. (2025) ESurf: 13(5). doi.org/10.5194/esurf-13-889-2025

How to cite: Wild, A., Mair, D., do Prado, A., Jaimes Gutierrez, R., Prieur, M., Rezwan, N., Mapani, B., Nduutepo, A., Walk, J., Krieger, J., Guhe, F., Chatty, A., and Lehmkuhl, F.: Catchment and fan geometry controls on grain size fining in northwestern Namibia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6689, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6689, 2026.

In the study of rift basins, the source-to-sink system theory offers a fundamental framework for deciphering sedimentary filling processes and sandbody distribution patterns. This system is strongly influenced by the basin’s structural architecture, paleogeomorphic evolution, and base-level cycles. The spatiotemporal dynamic coupling of three key elements—sediment supply, transport pathways, and depositional convergence—directly governs sandbody formation and distribution, providing important theoretical insights for hydrocarbon reservoir prediction. This study focuses on sediment transport processes through sandbody pathways in complex rift basins and evaluates their differential controls on sandbody convergence within braided-river delta and lacustrine depositional systems under varying base-level cycles. Data from the Shenxian Sag in the Bohai Bay Basin, including extensive core samples, well logs, 3D seismic data, and laboratory analyses, support this investigation.Based on these data, the paleogeomorphology of key sequences was systematically reconstructed. Five valley types, three major slope-break zones, and four categories of accommodation zones were identified, with their controls on sedimentary pathways analyzed in detail. Significant differences were observed between the steep-slope and gentle-slope belts in terms of sediment supply, sandbody scale, and distribution patterns. Under the guidance of the source-to-sink theory, a spatiotemporal sand-control mechanism was established, with base-level cycles acting as the primary regulatory factor and paleogeomorphic elements serving as spatial carriers. This mechanism integrates three core components: sediment supply, transport pathways, and depositional convergence.The study further systematically elucidates four coupling modes and their corresponding sedimentary effects across different tectonic stages and structural units. Sediment supply provides the material basis for reservoir sandbody development, with its volume and intensity modulated by base-level fluctuations. The transport system is mainly constrained by paleogeomorphic features such as paleo-valleys, slope breaks, and accommodation zones. Among these, valleys demonstrate high sand-transport efficiency during base-level lowstands, which diminishes considerably during rising phases. Slope breaks in the northern gentle-slope belt are jointly controlled by base-level cycles and tectonic activity, whereas composite slope breaks in the southern steep-slope belt play a redistributive role in sandbody dispersion. The classification and sand-controlling functions of accommodation zones vary with the characteristics and configuration of syndepositional faults. The convergence system is regulated by cyclic changes in accommodation space driven by base-level movements. During base-level rise, lake-level expansion and increased accommodation space promote the development of retrogradational sequences, whereas base-level fall reduces accommodation space and favors progradational sequences. The transport and convergence systems are spatially linked and interact dynamically, with their functional relationships capable of shifting under the influence of base-level cycles.These findings provide effective guidance for predicting favorable sedimentary facies belts and sandbody distributions in the study area, leading to the identification of four prospective exploration targets. Subsequent drilling results have confirmed their potential. The research outcomes offer a new theoretical foundation and practical model for hydrocarbon exploration and sandbody prediction in analogous complex rift basins.

Keywords: source-to-sink system, sand-controlling mechanism, base-level cycle, palaeogeomorphology, Shenxian Depression, Shahejie Formation

How to cite: Li, X. S.: Sediment Control Mechanisms Under the Regulation of Base-Level Cycles in Complex Rift Basins: Spatiotemporal Coupling of "Source-to-Sink" Systems —A Case Study of the Middle - Deep Zone in the Shenxian Sag, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8498, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8498, 2026.

EGU26-10082 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2 | Highlight

Source-to-sink of natural arsenic in Neogene sedimentary systems of the south western Paris Basin 

Louis Alus, François Guillocheau, Éric Lasseur, Justine Briais, Cécile Robin, Julie Lions, and Catherine Lerouge

Natural arsenic concentrations in groundwater locally exceed drinking water standards, raising public health concerns. Preventing its release requires identifying its 3D distribution in rocks and water–rock interactions. We address this through a source-to-sink approach applied to predicting arsenic distribution in Miocene sedimentary deposits of the southwestern Paris Basin, where geogenic arsenic is present and monitored in aquifers (e.g., lacustrine deposits of Beauce Fm. – Aquitanian) underlying sedimentary cover (fluvial deposits of Sables et Argiles de Sologne Fm. – Burdigalian to Pliocene).

Our approach combines source-to-sink tools, chiefly geomorphology and sedimentology, with arsenic geochemistry in order to trace arsenic transfer from source areas to sedimentary reservoirs. It involves: (1) identifying sources coupling the reconstruction of paleoreliefs from planation surfaces and paleodrainage areas and characterizing arsenic concentrations in the drainage areas using pXRF ; (2) characterizing depositional environments, including sedimentary facies and their actual and past physicochemical conditions, and the associated arsenic content in terms of abundance, speciation, carrier phases within each facies (pXRF, sequential extractions, μXRF and ICP-MS), and mechanisms of arsenic retention (sorption, complexation and mineral precipitation).

Two source-to-sink systems have been identified in our study: (i) an Aquitanian endorheic lake system and (ii) a mid-Miocene terrigenous system. The Aquitanian system is fed by the surrounding reliefs, leading to the remobilization of arsenic contained in older sedimentary series. Arsenic is sequestered in deep-lake facies, where it is mainly trapped by framboidal pyrite and organic matter under reducing conditions. The mid-Miocene system reflects a reorganization of the drainage basins, resulting in the recycling of older formations and material derived from the northern Massif Central (MCF). Arsenic is predominantly carried by pyrite in reduced floodplain facies. Tectono-hydrogeological destabilizations since the Tortonian have promoted the oxidation of these reduced sedimentary reservoirs, the release of arsenic in groundwater and partial precipitation of secondary arsenic carrier phases.

This study highlights the role of geomorphology and sedimentology in controlling arsenic drainage and trapping, and establishes a link between initial trapping and current groundwater quality. (ANR-22-PEXO-0010 – PEPR One Water Eau bien commun research program).

How to cite: Alus, L., Guillocheau, F., Lasseur, É., Briais, J., Robin, C., Lions, J., and Lerouge, C.: Source-to-sink of natural arsenic in Neogene sedimentary systems of the south western Paris Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10082, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10082, 2026.

EGU26-10334 | Orals | GM5.2

Sources and sinks for dust in Europe: Examples for climatic and geomorphological induced changes in the European loess and its deposition  

Frank Lehmkuhl, Wolfgang Römer, Christian Zeeden, and Frank Sirocko

The local geomorphological setting of sink areas strongly influences the distribution, preservation and thickness of loess sequences. For example, high accumulation and preservation occurs in depressions or on the leeward slope of topographic barriers. The sediment availability depends on the distance to source areas, such as large river systems, dry shelves, and glacio-fluvial outwash plains at the margins of ice sheets and glaciers. Vegetation density in these areas also governs the amount of dust that can be deflated, as vegetation increases surface roughness and acts as a dust trap, fixing the sediment. The most well-developed loess sequences were formed where alluvial terraces intersect slopes in stepped terrace systems, as seen in the valleys of the Dnieper, Danube and Rhine rivers in Europe, among others1. Deflation of dust from various source areas, followed by deposition and reworking in different geomorphological settings results in a mixture of the accumulated material, which complicates the reconstruction of the original source areas.

Under favorable preservation conditions, such as in the Dehner Dry-Maar, heavy mineral analysis of lacustrine sediments has enabled the distinction of phases of dust inputs from local, regional and remote source areas2. During phases with denser vegetation and forest cover, local sources are important; however, during the last 40 k years, when vegetation was mostly less dense, distant dust sources such as the dry North Sea shelves and reworked loess deposits played a major role. Loess deposits exhibit different facies due to processes associated with the geomorphological setting which controls reworking by different processes such as periglacial and fluvial processes. The geomorphologic position of loess sequences is one of the key-factors controlling its role as silt sink – in both a temporal and spatial context..

1 Lehmkuhl, F. et al. Loess landscapes of Europe – Mapping, geomorphology, and zonal differentiation. Earth-Science Reviews 215, 103496 (2021).

2 Römer, W., Lehmkuhl, F. & Sirocko, F. Late Pleistocene aeolian dust provenances and wind direction changes reconstructed by heavy mineral analysis of the sediments of the Dehner dry maar (Eifel, Germany). Global and Planetary Change 147, 25–39 (2016).

How to cite: Lehmkuhl, F., Römer, W., Zeeden, C., and Sirocko, F.: Sources and sinks for dust in Europe: Examples for climatic and geomorphological induced changes in the European loess and its deposition , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10334, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10334, 2026.

EGU26-10601 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

Regional stratigraphic and geomorphic evolution of the Paleocene - Early Eocene in the Central North Sea  

Kenneth Mangersnes, Rob L. Gawthorpe, Tor O. Sømme, and Ritske S. Huismans

The Paleocene and Early Eocene stratigraphic succession in the central North Sea records a period of substantial tectonic uplift and several climatic perturbations in the adjacent hinterland. Eastern progradation of the UK shelf and a series of turbidite deposits have previously been linked to several phases of inferred regional uplift. The regional uplift phases caused major increases in sedimentation rates in the North Sea basin and an extensive reorganization of the sediment routing systems. The relative importance of allogenic and autogenic forcings on the sediment supply, depositional patterns and basin-wide geomorphology, however, remains debated. Several authors have suggested that the uplift is a response to activity of the Icelandic Plume.

This study incorporates high-resolution 3D seismic and well-log data to conduct a regional reconstruction of the Paleocene – Early Eocene stratigraphic succession in the central North Sea. We investigate key stratigraphic surfaces to link the temporal along-strike variability of erosion and deposition in the Montrose and Moray Groups. Seismic attribute analysis of over 90 000 km2 of 3D seismic data is used to investigate the geomorphology and paleogeography of several interpreted intervals, including clinoform geometry, shelf-edge trajectories, submarine channels, and deep-marine fan systems, providing insights into sediment transport pathways and depositional processes.

Preliminary results indicate pronounced along strike variability throughout the Paleocene and Early Eocene in sediment thickness and geomorphology. In the earliest Paleocene the basin was dominated by deep-marine sedimentation, with several submarine fans being deposited in the Moray Firth, Southern Viking Graben and Central Graben. Throughout the Paleocene, the shelf prograded and the basin was infilled. Thick clinoforms, large submarine fans, and extensive shelf progradation during key stratigraphic intervals indicate increased sediment input, suggesting changes in sediment connectivity between hinterland source areas and offshore sinks driven by variations in erosion and runoff. The presence of erosional fluvial networks incised into older marine sediments indicates subaerial conditions during the latest Paleocene to Early Eocene in the Moray Firth. The subaerial erosional networks are associated with a progradation of the coast by tens of kilometers, suggesting a major base-level change, driven by extensive tectonic uplift. This enables detailed observations of geomorphic responses to tectonic and climatic forcings in the entire fluvial to deep-marine sediment routing system.

How to cite: Mangersnes, K., Gawthorpe, R. L., Sømme, T. O., and Huismans, R. S.: Regional stratigraphic and geomorphic evolution of the Paleocene - Early Eocene in the Central North Sea , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10601, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10601, 2026.

EGU26-11505 | Orals | GM5.2

Hothouse hydrology: new insights from water and sediment transport patterns in the Eocene Pyrenees  

Jonah McLeod, Alexander Whittaker, Gary Hampson, Rebecca Bell, Marine Prieur, Oliver Fuller-Field, Luis Valero, and Xiang Yan

Deciphering how Earth’s surface has responded to the extreme climates of the past is vital for understanding the impacts of global warming on our planet in the present and future, including flood and drought risk worldwide. Rivers are the most significant conduits of water, sediment and nutrients across Earth’s continents, and the patterns of river water and sediment transport through time, or river intermittency, are thought to be highly sensitive to geomorphic bounding conditions such as climate and tectonics. Determining the intermittency of rivers in ancient hothouse climates provides a unique lens through which to investigate this question. However, this requires strong constraints on sediment and water discharges and volumetrics from source to sink, which are rare due to the challenges of estimating bankfull and average water and sediment fluxes at continental scale. We reconstruct the evolving source-to-sink dynamics of the lower Eocene Montllobat (52.0 – 50.5 Ma) and Castissent (50.5 – 49.7 Ma) Formations, in the dynamic tectono-climatic setting of Southern Pyrenees during the Eocene Hothouse. By estimating fluvial morphodynamics and discharges in the Tremp and Ager Basins, in addition to depositional fluxes in the underfilled Ainsa and Jaca Basins, we estimate water and sediment intermittency in these systems for the first time. Sediment intermittency factors (Is) in the Montllobat Formation average 0.009-0.029, implying annual sediment loads could have been completed with as little as 1 week of transport at bankfull capacity. The overlying Castissent Formation, characterized by enhanced braiding and sediment discharge, has higher Is values of 0.012-0.036. Water intermittency factors (Iw), on the other hand, decreased from 0.25 in the Montllobat interval to 0.15 in the Castissent interval, implying perennial rivers almost halved their activity at c. 50.5 Ma. This suggests river discharge rapidly became more extreme and infrequent, whilst sediment became transported more efficiently. Coeval to a pulse of uplift in the Pyrenean hinterland, we reveal the deposits of the Montllobat and Castissent rivers record strong competing climatic and tectonic signals which drove over 20 km of fluvial progradation. Further, in comparison to modern systems, the Eocene rivers of the Pyrenean foreland have higher sediment intermittency factors than anticipated, transporting sediment more efficiently than similar rivers today. This suggests hothouse climates can cause reduced sediment export timescales, with important implications for source-to-sink dynamics in today’s evolving climate.

How to cite: McLeod, J., Whittaker, A., Hampson, G., Bell, R., Prieur, M., Fuller-Field, O., Valero, L., and Yan, X.: Hothouse hydrology: new insights from water and sediment transport patterns in the Eocene Pyrenees , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11505, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11505, 2026.

EGU26-11898 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

Sediment grain size vs. parent rocks lithology: insights from the Avisio River and its drainage area (Dolomiti, Italy)  

Samuele Pezzoli, Giuliana Testa, Matteo Giovanni Foletti, Niccolò Menegoni, Andrea Stefano Di Giulio, and Giovanni Toscani

Grain size of clastic sediment is generally regarded as the product of physical processes active during transport and deposition. Here we investigate the influence of the parent rock lithology on the original grain-size of daughter sediments by combining in situ and laboratory analyses of outcrop, detritus and sediments.

As study site we chose a relatively small catchment area (147,7 km2 planar, 185,4 km2 accounting for elevation) located in Valle di Fassa (Dolomites, IT). This is done to consider the analysed samples representative of the sediment produced at the source, disregarding the effect of sediment transport. In this area three main lithologies outcrop, all in similar proportions: (a) dolostones, (b) mafic to intermediate volcanics and (c) limestones and sandy limestones. We: i) quantified the source rock distribution with a GIS-based geospatial analysis, ii) analysed the outcrops of these lithologies with 3D drone photogrammetry and in-situ Schmidt hammer rebound test to estimate fractures, bedding and rock strength, iii) performed image analysis and sieving to obtain grain-size of detritus collected at the base of outcrops, and iv) finally, performed both grain-size and compositional analyses of each grain-size fraction between 16 cm and 0.075 mm on the sediment samples collected from a sandy-gravelly fluvial bar of the Avisio River reaching sediments from the studied outcrops.

The results obtained show a significant relationship between outcrops fracture spacing, grain size of detritus, and grain size and composition of river sediment: dolostones tend to be over-represented in the gravelly sediments, while volcanic grains dominate the sandy grain-size. Still, none of the sediment samples analysed has a similar proportion between the three lithologies, as the one of the GIS-derived catchment area‘s.

These findings suggest that sediment grain size at the origin is strongly controlled by lithology-dependent weathering processes, active on parent rocks. This is expected to have a significant effect on facies development along the routing systems of clastic sediments. In addition, different grain-sizes preserve very different images of the same source area. Therefore the control of parent-rocks lithology on daughter sediment grain-size must be carefully considered  when approaching provenance studies aimed at paleo-geological reconstructions as well as for facies tract predictions.

How to cite: Pezzoli, S., Testa, G., Foletti, M. G., Menegoni, N., Di Giulio, A. S., and Toscani, G.: Sediment grain size vs. parent rocks lithology: insights from the Avisio River and its drainage area (Dolomiti, Italy) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11898, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11898, 2026.

EGU26-12041 | ECS | Orals | GM5.2

Quaternary alluvial fan evolution in the western Atacama Desert, North Chile 

Janek Walk, Joel Mohren, Andrés Quezada, Bárbara Blanco Arrué, Jaime Roas, Pablo Schwarze, Julian Krieger, Amanda Wild, Ariana Binnie, Steven Binnie, Benedikt Ritter-Prinz, Pritam Yogeshwar, Dominik Brill, Helmut Brückner, and Lehmkuhl Frank

The Atacama Desert is considered the driest and oldest non-polar desert on Earth featuring numerous indications for an Early Miocene onset of its hyperaridity. Despite vast evidence for long-term hyperaridity dominating the landscape evolution of the desert’s core, younger Quaternary fluvial modification has been deduced from various archives across the Atacama Desert. Located within the N-S-extending Coastal Cordillera, a significant portion (>10%) of the western Atacama Desert’s surface geology is recognized as Quaternary deposits predominantly related to past alluvial fan activity. However, only few and patchy stratigraphic and geochronological constraints exist on the formation of those depositional landforms. We therefore systematically studied the alluvial fans across the Coastal Cordillera at ~21°S by combining DEM-based morphometric assessment, establishing morphochronological frameworks by in situ terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide dating, and stratigraphic analyses by geophysical surveys and sedimentological-pedological analyses of a soil pit. Significant fan-catchment morphometric relationships indicate intact source-to-sink connectivity and signal propagation. The youngest and last abandoned surface generations of four multi-stage alluvial fans were dated by 10Be exposure dating, complemented by reappraisal of 10Be data from an alluvial fan system published by Baker et al. (2013). Site-specific timing of terminal fan aggradation dates to the late Middle Pleistocene and beginning of the Early–Middle Pleistocene Transition (EMPT) for the youngest and penultimate stages, respectively. Interpreted in the form of a regional geochronological compilation, fluvial-alluvial activity shows additional peaks during the Last Interglacial Complex. Late and Middle Pleistocene palaeoclimatic signals are largely in agreement with other Quaternary sediment records from the central Atacama Desert. While alluvial fan evolution within the Coastal Cordillera is rooted in the tectonic evolution of the basin settings, integrated results strongly indicate a close coupling between Quaternary fluvial activity and palaeoclimatic variability. Our study provides first evidence for a major fluvial modification during the EMPT. Moreover, we can infer a dominant effect of the maximum inland extent of advective fog on preventing long-term landscape stabilisation and conservation.

Reference
Baker, A., Allmendinger, R.W., Owen, L.A., Rech, J.A. (2013). Permanent deformation caused by subduction earthquakes in northern Chile. Nature Geoscience 6, 492–496. https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo1789

How to cite: Walk, J., Mohren, J., Quezada, A., Blanco Arrué, B., Roas, J., Schwarze, P., Krieger, J., Wild, A., Binnie, A., Binnie, S., Ritter-Prinz, B., Yogeshwar, P., Brill, D., Brückner, H., and Frank, L.: Quaternary alluvial fan evolution in the western Atacama Desert, North Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12041, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12041, 2026.

EGU26-12650 | ECS | Orals | GM5.2

Magnetostratigraphy of the middle Miocene La Muela section: a chronostratigraphy across the central Ebro basin lacustrine units 

Pello Arriolabengoa, Luis Valero, Concha Arenas, Elisabet Beamud, Estefania Maestre, and Miguel Garcés

During the early Miocene, the Ebro Basin evolved as an endorheic depression bounded by the Pyrenees, the Iberian Range, and the Catalan Coastal Ranges. In its central sector, extensive and laterally continuous lacustrine systems developed under variable climatic conditions, including warm-humid phases such as the Miocene Climatic Optimum. The La Muela section is composed of lacustrine sediments from the southern margin of the Ebro Basin’s central lake. The La Muela section documents significant geochemical changes in the lake system, beginning with mudflat environments, followed by evaporitic conditions, and subsequently a return to carbonate-dominated deposition. The well-exposed outcrops and the possibility to correlate this record with other sectors of the basin make it an ideal site for reconstructing environmental variations of the complete system and understanding its geochemical changes. Achieving an accurate correlation between the different sedimentary records requires very fine time correlation lines.
To address this correlation problem, we present a local magnetostratigraphy for the La Muela section based on the analysis of 155 samples distributed over a thickness of 190 meters. A correlation with the Global Geomagnetic Polarity Timescale allows us to propose a new chronology that includes the early to middle Miocene transition. By means of basin-wide magnetostratigraphic correlations, we determine local sedimentation rates across the different sectors. Finally, we discuss the timing and relevance of the major compositional changes in the lacustrine settings, which, constrained by isotopic records, reveal the environmental evolution of the basin.

How to cite: Arriolabengoa, P., Valero, L., Arenas, C., Beamud, E., Maestre, E., and Garcés, M.: Magnetostratigraphy of the middle Miocene La Muela section: a chronostratigraphy across the central Ebro basin lacustrine units, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12650, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12650, 2026.

EGU26-14675 | ECS | Orals | GM5.2

Increasing debris-laden flow volumes at Plansee (AT): Comparing the lacustrine sedimentary archive with the terrestrial sediment budget from historical aerial imagery 

Carolin Kiefer, Natalie Barbosa, and Michael Krautblatter and the ALPHA Lakes Team

Climate forcing influences the frequency and magnitudes of debris-laden flows (including hyperconcentrated flows and debris flows), which are controlled by intense local precipitation events. Reconstructing debris flow activity is challenging due to incomplete archives, a lack of historical evidence, and unrepresentative precipitation data of local rainfall intensity.  To reconstruct past activity and infer future precipitation thresholds, we need robust archives that include a wide range of temporal and spatial scales. Plansee (Tyrol, Austria) is a relatively pristine and virtually closed source to sink system. Sediment is transferred from 54 transport-limited Hauptdolomit catchments to the lake-adjacent fans. Debris-laden flows regularly enter the lake as underflows, creating turbidites in the basin. Lacustrine sediment cores taken from the fan delta towards the depocenter offer a 4000-year archive with 138 debris-flow-induced turbidites. The photogrammetric reconstruction of historical aerial imagery since 1952 enables the quantification of elevation changes in the active debris flow channel, allowing for the estimation of the sediment budget at each fan. In this contribution, we compare the in-lake deposition rates from the sediment cores with the terrestrial erosion, deposition, and net volumes at each surrounding fan, to conclude that both calculations match.

The frequency of debris-laden flows has increased significantly since 1920, with a most recent peak after the 1980s observed in the terrestrial record. The terrestrial inventory reveals varying activity over the decades on all fans, providing a better understanding of the mechanisms and controlling factors of sediment propagation in pre-alpine catchments. This contribution presents for the first time the integration of lacustrine and terrestrial records to reconstruct historical debris flow activity and outline trends in frequencies and magnitudes.

This research is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation – Project number 558963977) and the Austrian Science Fund (FWF, grant https://doi.org/10.55776/PIN7180424)

How to cite: Kiefer, C., Barbosa, N., and Krautblatter, M. and the ALPHA Lakes Team: Increasing debris-laden flow volumes at Plansee (AT): Comparing the lacustrine sedimentary archive with the terrestrial sediment budget from historical aerial imagery, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14675, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14675, 2026.

EGU26-18123 | Orals | GM5.2

Upper Pleistocene–Recent Coastal-Fluvial Terrace Deposits of the Polis Graben, NW Cyprus: Implications of New Luminescence Dating 

Christina Antoniou, Alastair Robertson, Tim Kinnaird, and Aayush Srivastava

Traditional tools for coastal-fluvial terrace correlation (e.g. height above sea level, terrace morphology, sedimentary facies) are useful but often insufficient to resolve the complex interplay of tectonic, glacio-eustatic sea level and climatic changes that control the formation of terraces. Absolute age constraints are therefore essential to quantify the external signals and landscape changes, and to link with regional- to global-scale palaeoenvironmental changes. Here, we present a multidisciplinary study of shallow-marine, to littoral, to fluvial sediments of the three lowermost terraces (<5 m, 8-12 m, 15-35 m) that are exposed along the coastal plain of the Neogene Polis graben in NW Cyprus. We utilise new quartz luminescence dating of littoral to fluvial fine-grained sands, and existing uranium-series dating of solitary corals, together with sedimentological and geomorphological analysis of the terrace deposits. Our main aim is to establish a chronological framework for the terrace development and to aid regional mapping of the terrace surfaces. Previous terrace correlations (coastal to inland) suggest that the three lower shallow-marine terraces correspond to marine isotopic stages (MIS) 7 (c. 185-219 ka), 5e (c. 116-141 ka) and younger. Our new luminescence dating of inland littoral to fluvial terrace deposits reveals substantially younger ages of c. 45-63 ka, corresponding to overall regression during MIS 4-3. Luminescence dating and profiling results establish a detection limit of c. 1.22 ka (MIS 1), representing the youngest resolvable coastal sediment age. Assuming these dated deposits accumulated near sea level, uplift rates of 1.35-1.65 mm/year are implied. This contrasts with uplift rates (0.2-0.5 mm/year), as calculated from previous uranium-series dating of solitary corals from marine terraces correlated with MIS 5-7, elsewhere in Cyprus. However, there is no reason for greatly increased uplift rates after c. 45-63 ka, particularly within the active Polis graben, in which subsidence is indicated by localised modern marine erosion of older non-marine deposits (e.g. terra rossa palaeosols). Instead, we hypothesise that the luminescence-dated littoral-fluvial sediments accumulated up to c. 1 km inland, either in a contemporaneous setting and/or involving reworking of older shallow-marine terrace deposits, and that this was followed by downslope fluvial reworking of mixed siliciclastic-bioclastic sediments. Shifts from cooler, semi-arid conditions to warmer, wetter conditions during MIS 4-3 regressions repeatedly enhanced continental runoff. Alluvial fans prograded seawards episodically, followed by partial marine erosion. Later stage eustatic sea-level changes (MIS 3-2) culminated in erosional downcutting to near present sea level. Coastal sands near present-day sea level accumulated during MIS 1 transgressions, culminating in the development of the modern storm-influenced rocky shoreface, including beachrock. To conclude, uplifted coastal marine–fluvial terraces were partially eroded and covered by mixed siliciclastic-bioclastic sediments, reworked from upslope, that yielded relatively young depositional ages. Such deposits should not be misinterpreted as shoreface deposits, which would lead to calculation of anomalously high uplift rates.

How to cite: Antoniou, C., Robertson, A., Kinnaird, T., and Srivastava, A.: Upper Pleistocene–Recent Coastal-Fluvial Terrace Deposits of the Polis Graben, NW Cyprus: Implications of New Luminescence Dating, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18123, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18123, 2026.

EGU26-19029 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

Tracing sediment sources and export dynamics in the Congo River Basin using radiogenic isotopes 

Johanna Menges, Enno Schefuß, Anette Meixner, Yannick Garcin, Gaël U. D. Bouka, Carolia Abaye, Mélanie Guardiola, Steven Bouillon, Yannick Stroobandt, Gesine Mollenhauer, Hendrik Grotheer, and Simone A. Kasemann

The Congo Basin is the second-largest river basin in the world. It is characterized by extensive tropical forests, wetlands, and floodplains that together form one of the largest terrestrial carbon reservoirs on Earth, including the world’s largest tropical peat complex beneath the swamp forests of the Cuvette Centrale. The low-relief morphology and extensive floodplain systems of the basin strongly influence the storage, transformation, and transfer of water, sediment, and organic matter. Consequently, export dynamics from different parts of the Congo Basin remain incompletely understood, including the sourcing and export of clastic sediment and associated particulate organic carbon. Here, we use radiogenic isotope ratios of strontium, neodymium, and lead together with bulk organic carbon (stable and radiocarbon isotopes) and nitrogen isotope data, to constrain the export of clastic and organic particulates from contrasting geomorphic and ecological settings through the Congo River's fluvial network. We analyzed a transect of tributaries spanning peat-dominated swamp forests, evergreen forests, and mixed forest-savanna catchments. Underlying source lithologies range from Archean cratonic rocks to Cretaceous units and Quaternary sediments within the swamp regions of the Cuvette Centrale. We then compare the modern river data with a downcore marine record from Congo Fan deposits to assess how Holocene climate change affected sediment routing dynamics and the preservation of provenance signals from the Congo Basin in the stratigraphic archive. This study provides new insights into the sediment and organic carbon routing systems within the Congo Basin and its connection to the marine sedimentary record.

How to cite: Menges, J., Schefuß, E., Meixner, A., Garcin, Y., Bouka, G. U. D., Abaye, C., Guardiola, M., Bouillon, S., Stroobandt, Y., Mollenhauer, G., Grotheer, H., and Kasemann, S. A.: Tracing sediment sources and export dynamics in the Congo River Basin using radiogenic isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19029, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19029, 2026.

EGU26-19505 | Posters on site | GM5.2

Detrital record unveils the role of topography in the Antarctic Ice Sheet growth   

Marco Fioraso, Luca Zurli, Valerio Olivetti, Matteo Perotti, Sonia Sandroni, Robert McKay, Timothy Naish, Gianluca Cornamusini, and Massimiliano Zattin

The East Antarctic Ice Sheet is the largest ice-sheet on the planet, developed since the Late Eocene upon a puzzle made of cratonic plateaus, mountain belts and intracontinental basins. The flow pattern of the waxing Ice Sheet is controlled by the preexisting landscape, mainly where high-relief topography was already developed. On the eastern limit of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet facing the Ross Sea, the Transantarctic Mountains acted as a barrier limiting the early growth of the ice sheet. Outlet glaciers drained ice flows across the high elevation rift flank enlarging fjord-like valleys by selective erosion, whose efficiency changed also as a consequence of the variable Oligocene-Miocene climate. 

Uncertainty exists whether or not high-relief topography predates major ice growth in the Transantarctic Mountains. Here, landscape is expected to play a critical role, modulating flow directions over a preexisting drainage network. In addition, pre-Cenozoic tectonic inheritances controlled the location of highs and lows in the topography contributing to focus the glacial flow. The southern Victoria Land is the sector of the Transantarctic Mountains which offer the most complete bedrock exposition in deglaciated areas, and offshore drill cores reaching depths of up to 850 m below sea floor just off the margin. The detrital record from 36 to 18 Ma corresponds to the Eocene-Oligocene Transition and the onset of the Ice Sheet growth.   

In this study, we applied a multi-analytical approach to constrain sediment provenance using new datasets of detrital apatite fission-track thermochronology and detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology from CIROS-1 drill core. New data are coupled with petrographic description of gravel and sand fractions, facies analysis and revised age model. The source-to-sink analysis of CIROS-1 sediments is compared with Cape Roberts Project core record to reconstruct the environmental conditions and geomorphic setting of the two main valleys draining ice through Dry Valleys. The comparison between detrital signals and bedrock information suggests a change in the erosive style and the elevation of the sediment source through the Eocene-Oligocene. The Eocene catchment area located along the coast was reorganized by the overriding outlet glaciers sourced from the inner Transantarctic Mountains. The topographic divide retreated in Dry Valleys where glacial erosion was more efficient as recorded in provenance data. Results highlight how the preexisting mountainous landscape conditioned ice flow during early EAIS expansion and provide new constraints on the timing and magnitude of landscape modification along the TAM rift flank.

How to cite: Fioraso, M., Zurli, L., Olivetti, V., Perotti, M., Sandroni, S., McKay, R., Naish, T., Cornamusini, G., and Zattin, M.: Detrital record unveils the role of topography in the Antarctic Ice Sheet growth  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19505, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19505, 2026.

EGU26-19646 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

Grain size fractionation in a Triassic dryland fluvial system: the Sherwood Sandstone Group, UK 

Xiang Yan, Gary J. Hampson, and Alex C. Whittaker

Sediment routing systems record grain size changes from source to sink. Sediment grain size decreases downstream due to the selective deposition of sediment, but can also increase when material is added from tributaries. Importantly, quantifying downsystem changes in grain size helps elucidate the dynamics of sediment routing systems in the geological past, and understand the spatial heterogeneity of deposited strata.

The Sherwood Sandstone Group (SSG) and Mercia Mudstone Group (MMG) of the British Isles are regionally significant units deposited during the breakup of Pangea. The SSG is a key unit for groundwater resources, geothermal energy and carbon capture and storage. For our source-to-sink analysis, we use a chronostratigraphically defined interval of the SSG and MMG, which was deposited by a long-distance dryland river system active during the mid-Triassic (c.240 Ma).

We interpret 130 sections through the SSG and MMG using geophysical well logs, outcrops and cored boreholes. Using these data, existing palaeogeographies and isopach maps, we generate upsystem-to-downsystem volumetric grain size profiles (gravel, sand and mud) for this sediment routing system. We convert these profiles into a dimensionless mass balance framework. These results provide a detailed characterisation of this river system and its deposits, supported by existing studies on sediment routing, sandstone petrography and quantitative paleohydrology. Crucially, we are able to explore the spatial dynamics of this sediment routing system, including the locations of sediment inputs and downsystem sediment bypass, demonstrating the generic utility of our approach in reconstructing ancient source to sink systems.

How to cite: Yan, X., Hampson, G. J., and Whittaker, A. C.: Grain size fractionation in a Triassic dryland fluvial system: the Sherwood Sandstone Group, UK, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19646, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19646, 2026.

EGU26-19973 | ECS | Posters on site | GM5.2

High-resolution basin-wide sedimentary budget quantification during periods of high-frequency climate change in the active Corinth Rift system, central Greece 

Christopher C. Di Paolo, Robert L. Gawthorpe, Ritske S. Huismans, Delphine Rouby, and Casey W Nixon

The Gulf of Corinth (GoC), central Greece is a relatively young rift (~2 Myr) with high extension rates (10-15 mm/yr) making it an ideal location to study the effects of tectonics and climate on sediment dynamics during early-stage rifting. The GoC’s stratigraphy is divided into two main units separated by a basin-wide unconformity that occurred at ~790 ka. Below the unconformity is a low-amplitude, less-coherent seismic package. Above the unconformity are alternating high-amplitude and low-amplitude seismic packages which correspond respectively to the GoC’s climate-driven connection to and separation from the global ocean.

Using the GoC’s dense network of offshore 2D seismic data tied to IODP Expedition 381 cores, we quantify the sedimentary budget accumulated in the GoC at high resolution (<50 kyr timescale) where seismic resolution allows (present - 330 ka), and lower resolution (<160 kyr) before (330-790 ka). We extract clastic solid volumes from isopachs between 3D seismic surfaces generated from interpretation of multiple 2D surveys. We incorporate uncertainties resulting from the time to depth conversion and the sediment remaining porosity estimated from IODP 381 Site M0079 cores.

Time to depth conversion contributes uncertainty that ranges from 7% at the seafloor to 20% at the basement. Porosity contributes uncertainty that ranges from 8% at the seafloor to 4% at the basement. Estimates of sediment volumes in the high-resolution section range from 4.3 km3 ± 10.3% from 0-15 ka to 7.9 km3 ± 20.1% from 259-294 ka.

We see two stages of increasing sediment accumulation rates over the last 600 ka. Accumulation rates rise from 0.047 ± 20.3% km3/kyr at 592 ka to 0.413 ± 21.0% km3/kyr at 259 ka then from 0.122 ± 15.4% km3/kyr at ~220 ka to 0.302 ± 13.2% km3/kyr at present.

From these preliminary results we will evaluate the relationship between the accumulation volumes and rates in relation to climate, i.e. changes in precipitation due to global glacial-interglacial cycles, and regional tectonics, i.e. the simultaneous uplift of the drainage area and subsidence of the basin.

How to cite: Di Paolo, C. C., Gawthorpe, R. L., Huismans, R. S., Rouby, D., and Nixon, C. W.: High-resolution basin-wide sedimentary budget quantification during periods of high-frequency climate change in the active Corinth Rift system, central Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19973, 2026.

EGU26-20918 | ECS | Orals | GM5.2

From Source to Sink: linking the Andean source signal to coastal eolian sand-dunes using cosmogenic 10Be/14C residence times in Central Chile 

Maíra Dal Pai, Juan Luis García, Tania Villaseñor, Paula Castillo, Taylor Schildgen, and Nathaniel Lifton

The formation of dune and paleodune sequences along the Pacific coast of Central Chile (30-35° S) remains poorly understood. The Andean glaciated landscape seems to exert a major influence on sediment supply, although the coupling between glacier fluctuations and dune build up in the Pacific coast remains speculative. Drainage basins, modulated by climatic and tectonic forcings, produce and transfer sediment from source areas to continental and marine sinks. However, transport pathways are complex as sediment may be temporarily stored and mixed along fluvial systems, decoupling source signals from downstream sinks by delaying or partially erasing them. Sediment residence time integrates both transport duration and temporary storage within a basin. Constraining it is essential to evaluate whether climatic signals such as glacier fluctuations can be faithfully transferred to the Pacific coast and recorded in dune deposits, allowing a better understanding on the formation of these systems. Here, we estimate sediment residence times in the Rapel Basin using paired in situ cosmogenic 14C and 10Be measured in modern fluvial and dune sands. As 14C has a much shorter half-life than 10Be, this pair is particularly sensitive to periods of sediment storage and can be used to quantify the time sediments spend in transient reservoirs along their transport pathways. Therefore, we adopt a source-to-sink sampling strategy, collecting sediments from distinct geomorphic domains along the basin, from the Andean headwaters to the coastal dune systems. Our results indicate that all samples experienced some degree of storage during transport, with minimum residence times of ~2.5 kyr in the Andean glacial domain and maximum values of ~14 kyr in dunes at the Pacific coast. At the source zone, residence times ranging from ~2.5 to ~7.5 kyr suggest that sediments record a millennial scale residence signal prior to entering the fluvial network, likely due to storage in glacial environments and on hillslopes. Once sediments enter the channel network, transport through the medium and lower basin appears to be largely efficient, with little additional storage until reaching the Pacific coast. From the river mouth to the dune systems, sediments record up to ~4 kyr of additional residence time relative to the Andean source signal. Such addition indicates a millennial scale lag time in source signal transmission towards the dunes. Our dataset suggests that sediment residence times within the Rapel Basin (Central Chile) are primarily controlled by sediment generation rather than by complex fluvial transport histories itself. Only at the river mouth, significant additional residence times are added to the signal as sediment is transferred towards the dunes, as part of the long-shore littoral drift. These results demonstrate that even with a millennial timescale lag at the coast, the dune systems remain sensitive archives that record the primary Andean signal.

How to cite: Dal Pai, M., García, J. L., Villaseñor, T., Castillo, P., Schildgen, T., and Lifton, N.: From Source to Sink: linking the Andean source signal to coastal eolian sand-dunes using cosmogenic 10Be/14C residence times in Central Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20918, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20918, 2026.

Salt rich margins are characterised by complex structural and thermal regimes due to the high thermal conductivity of evaporites (~6.5 Wm-1K-1) and their interaction with the insulating sedimentary cover (~2.0 Wm-1K-1). Observational evidence and well data demonstrate the existence of thermal anomalies in proximity to salt structures in salt-bearing basins. Furthermore, these rocks exhibit extremely low viscosity and an absence of shear strength, thus allowing for the occurrence of highly non-linear salt tectonics, otherwise referred to as halokinesis. While the structural mechanics of halokinesis are well-documented, the dynamic feedback between sedimentation rates, salt geometry, and the basin's thermal evolution remains under-explored in geodynamic models.

In this work, we investigate this interplay using a 2D thermo-mechanical numerical code (Mandyoc). A rifted margin was modelled under three post-salt sedimentation rates, with realistic salt thermal properties being compared against control scenarios where salt is thermally equivalent to the crust. Our models replicate the expected behaviour of the salt tectonics, with depocentre migration, diapirism, nappes and welds. The structures in the sediments are marked by extension in the proximal domain, and compression in the distal domain. The results obtained demonstrate that the thermal field is strongly affected by the sedimentation rate, since it is the primary cause of halokinesis. 

In low sedimentation regimes, the effect of the salt high conductivity dominates. Diapirism and allochthonous nappes efficiently conduct heat to the surface, cooling the sub-salt section and depressing isotherms, potentially retarding source rock maturation. In the moderate sedimentation rate scenario, the salt movement creates more complex structures and the isotherms are modified depending on the structure thickness and range. In a high-sedimentation regime, the rapid progradation suppresses vertical salt tectonics and creates a thick, low-conductivity clastic wedge. In this instance, the sedimentary blanketing effect is more significant than the salt cooling effect, which results in heat trapping and accelerated thermal maturation in the pre-salt layers.

Our findings point that the salt layer acts not only as a structural seal or a detachment layer but as a dynamic thermal modulator. The effectiveness of the salt as a "radiator" is strictly controlled by the competition between the halokinesis and progradation rate. Disregarding this coupling in basin modelling may lead to significant misinterpretations of the oil maturation window and the thermomechanical evolution of the distal margin.

This work has been by Petrobras Project 2022/00157-6 and has been financially supported by the Human Resources Program of the Brazilian National Agency for Petroleum, Natural Gas, and Biofuels – PRH/ANP43 (2025/21407-9). We also would like to express our fully gratitude to Leonardo M. Pichel and the Bergen Research Group because of its extensive collaboration with us.

How to cite: Bueno, J., Almeida, R. P., and Sacek, V.: How post-salt sedimentation rates control the thermal evolution of salt-bearing margins: The interplay between thermal blanketing and salt effects, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2795, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2795, 2026.

EGU26-3093 | Posters on site | TS4.2

Simulation of the Permian Source-to-Sink System in the Junggar Basin 

Xu Chen and Jian Wang

To overcome the long-standing limitations of source-to-sink (S2S) studies of the Permian in the Junggar Basin—namely an overemphasis on static characterization and a lack of constraints from numerical sedimentary modeling—this study aims to develop an integrated, basin–mountain coupled forward-modeling workflow for the S2S system of the Lower Permian Wuerhe Formation. The goal is to achieve a dynamic, quantitative reconstruction of source-area surface processes, sediment supply, and basin depositional responses, and to predict sandbody distribution. The research includes: (1) within a unified spatial framework, characterizing accommodation-space evolution controlled by source-area tectonic evolution, rainfall and erosion-driven sediment supply, as well as depositional-area subsidence and lake-level variations; (2) deriving key surface-process and paleogeomorphic parameters, including paleoflow directions, time-varying runoff and sediment fluxes, and background geomorphic attributes (paleoslope, paleo-elevation, and paleowater depth); and (3) simulating sediment transport and deposition within the lacustrine basin to establish spatiotemporal evolution of geologically interpretable products—lithology, water depth, facies belts, sandbody distribution, depositional thickness, and stratigraphic architecture and sequence-filling styles—and constraining these results with geological observations.

Methodologically, we first prescribe initial topography and uplift rates in the source area, the spatiotemporal distribution of rainfall intensity, erosion rates of the source rocks, and a lake-level curve, while assigning a basement subsidence rate in the depositional area to jointly constrain the temporal evolution of accommodation space. We then run Badlands to obtain key outputs from topographic evolution and drainage/flow-routing calculations, and use these outputs as boundary conditions for Sedsim to perform depositional forward modeling and generate sedimentary results directly comparable to geological interpretation. Finally, the forward-model outputs are calibrated against well, seismic, and outcrop data; sensitivity analyses and iterative updates are conducted for critical parameters (uplift, erosion, rainfall, lake level, and subsidence) to obtain an optimal parameter set that is both process-consistent and consistent with observations.

The results indicate that the coupled Badlands–Sedsim forward-modeling workflow effectively transfers quantitative signals of source-area surface processes into basin-scale depositional responses, enabling a shift in S2S studies from “static description” to “process-based dynamic constraint.” Through data calibration and sensitivity-driven iteration, the workflow significantly improves the geological consistency and interpretability of the simulation results, providing a reproducible quantitative approach for understanding sedimentary evolution, sequence-filling mechanisms, and predicting favorable sandbody fairways in the Permian Junggar Basin, particularly for the Lower Permian Wuerhe Formation.

How to cite: Chen, X. and Wang, J.: Simulation of the Permian Source-to-Sink System in the Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3093, 2026.

The paleoenvironmental and provenance evolution of the Campanian Gosau Group sediments at Grünbach-Neue Welt in the Eastern Alps of Austria was investigated across a continuous transition from terrestrial to marine settings during the depositional period, coinciding with the boundary between the Lower and Upper Gosau subgroups. This transition was primarily driven by tectonic subsidence triggered by the northward subduction of the Penninic Ocean along the northern margin of the Austroalpine microplate. The sedimentary successions record depositional and environmental changes associated with subsidence. Integrated lithological, petrographic, paleontological, mineralogical, and geochemical analyses were performed to reconstruct the paleoenvironmental conditions and trace the sedimentary provenance. Paleoenvironmental analysis implied that the Grünbach Formation (upper Santonian to lower Campanian) represents a terrestrial-dominated setting with episodic marine incursions while the overlying lower Piesting Formation (upper Campanian) is dominantly shallow-marine setting with terrestrial input. The shift toward less weathered, coarser detritus sediments across the two formations suggests changes in sediment transport pathways and sources, likely influenced by subsidence, marine transgression, and source areas’ uplift. This study provides valuable insights into the Campanian paleoenvironment and provenance shifts of the Gosau Group, highlighting the complex interplay between subsidence, sea-level fluctuations, and sediment supply. Furthermore, it advances our understanding of how coupled environmental and tectonic processes influenced basin evolution.

How to cite: Xiang, X., Lee, E. Y., and Wagreich, M.: Paleoenvironmental Evolution and Provenance Shifts in Campanian Marginal Gosau Basins: Evidence from Sedimentary and Geochemical Records, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3851, 2026.

EGU26-4164 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Surface Forcing of Moho Topography in an Intra-Plateau Deep Basin 

Honghao Xiong, Haibin Yang, and Lei Wu

Unlike the wedge-shaped geometry typical of foreland basins, the interior of the Tibetan Plateau contains a series of large, closed basins. These basins are defined by thick sedimentary fills, a dish-shaped structural geometry, and a distinctly flattened to downward-convex morphology of the sub-basin Moho interface. However, the mechanisms governing their evolution remain debated. To address this, we employed numerical models that couple surface processes with lithospheric rheology to simulate the Cenozoic evolution of the Qaidam Basin, the largest sedimentary basin within the Tibetan Plateau, which has continuously accommodated substantial sediments derived from the surrounding mountain ranges throughout the Cenozoic. By systematically varying parameters from high to low erosion rates and from normal to strong mantle rheology, we compared model outcomes and successfully reproduced the observed geometry, topography, sedimentary sequence, and sub-basin Moho morphology of the Qaidam Basin. Our models reveal that dish-shaped basin evolution is controlled by three key factors: substantial sediment loading, a low crustal convergence rate, and a persistent centripetal sediment routing system. The sediment loading suppresses crustal deformation within the basin and drives downward deflection of the sub-basin Moho. Concurrently, a stronger mantle lithosphere localizes the deformation, resulting in a shorter-wavelength basin geometry. Our findings provide a new perspective for understanding deep intra-plateau basins by highlighting the governing role of coupled surface processes and lithospheric rheology. This mechanism not only explains basins within the Tibetan Plateau but also accounts for analogous settings, such as the Altiplano Basin in the Altiplano-Puna Plateau. Furthermore, the model is applicable to other dish-shaped basins formed under similar coupling conditions, exemplified by the Junggar Basin. Another key finding is that active surface processes can drive subsurface exhumation even under stable tectonic conditions. This suggests that accelerated cooling signals recorded by low-temperature thermochronology may not solely represent tectonic uplift acceleration, thereby implying that such data require careful reinterpretation.

How to cite: Xiong, H., Yang, H., and Wu, L.: Surface Forcing of Moho Topography in an Intra-Plateau Deep Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4164, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4164, 2026.

The microscopic pore systems in clastic reservoirs the margins of foreland basins are complex and heterogeneous, primarily controlled by the superimposition of burial diagenesis and tectonic diagenesis. These reservoirs have experienced not only vertical burial compaction but also intense lateral tectonic compression, accompanied by varying degrees of microfracture development and multiphase alteration by diverse diagenetic fluids. This study focuses on the Cretaceous Bashijiqike Formation in the Kushen area of the Kuqa Depression, Tarim Basin, which mainly consists of low-porosity and low-permeability to tight sandstone reservoirs deposited in a braided river delta environment. By systematically comparing burial depth, maximum paleo-stress, diagenesis, and microscopic pore characteristics across different tectonic positions, the study reveals how different reservoir-controlling factors combine to create different reservoir characteristics.

North to the Kelasu Fault, the reservoirs experienced relatively shallow burial (<4000 m) under strong tectonic stress. Diagenetic processes include compaction, calcite cementation, and meteoric water dissolution. Reservoir pores are dominated by primary pores with minor dissolution pores, accompanied by abundant microfractures. Between the Kelasu and Keshen Faults, reservoirs underwent deeper burial (6500-7000 m) under moderate tectonic stress. Diagenesis includes compaction, multi-type cementation (dolomite > quartz > albite > calcite > anhydrite), and multi-phase dissolution. Reservoir pores consist of mixed primary and dissolution pores, with dissolution pores exceeding primary pores in abundance, and local microfracture development. Between the Keshen and Baicheng Faults, reservoirs are characterized by ultra-deep burial (~7500 m) and low tectonic stress. Diagenesis includes compaction, multi-type cementation (dolomite > calcite > anhydrite > albite > quartz), and multi-phase dissolution. Reservoir pores are mainly primary pores with subordinate dissolution pores, and microfractures are rarely developed.

From north (foreland basin margin) to south (basin interior), increasing burial depth enhances vertical compaction, while decreasing tectonic stress reduces tectonic compaction and microfracture development. Concurrently, diagenetic fluids evolve from dominantly meteoric water in the north to multi-phase complex fluids including meteoric water, lagoon water, and organic acids in the south. These factors collectively control the diagenetic evolution and heterogeneity of microscopic reservoir pores in the study area.

Keywords: Tectonic stress; Diagenesis; Microscopic pore; Bashijiqike Formation; Kuqa Depression

How to cite: Zheng, X. and Sun, X.: Microscopic reservoir pores heterogeneity and its controlling factors of the Bashijiqike Formation in the Kuqa Depression, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4210, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4210, 2026.

The western Baiyun area in the northern South China Sea, particularly within the central Pearl River Mouth Basin (Zhu‐II Depression), hosts a complex detachment system. This study elucidates the tectonic control of a detachment-convergent transfer zone on the spatiotemporal evolution of the sedimentary basin system during the Eocene rifting. Integration of borehole and high-resolution 3D seismic data reveals that magmatic activity and reactivated pre-existing faults governed initial basin subsidence and the early development of high-angle normal faults in the upper crust. A fundamental shift occurred around ∼43 Ma (late Wenchang stage), when deformation transitioned to lower-crustal ductile thinning. This drove the formation of ductile‐crust domes, the rotation of faults into low-angle detachments, and ultimately, the establishment of the detachment-convergent transfer zone. This structural reorganization directly controlled basin geometry, transforming it from isolated, narrow, and deep lacustrine depocenters into a unified, wide, and shallow basin. Consequently, the sedimentary system evolved from fan delta‐braided river delta assemblages to braided river
delta‐beach bar systems. Constraining this tectonically dictated basin-fill architecture provides critical insights for predicting potential reservoirs in deep-water continental margins.

How to cite: Jia, Y., Xu, S., and Liu, Q.: Tectonic Control on Basin-Fill Architecture in a Detachment-Convergent Transfer Zone: The Pearl River Mouth Basin Example, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4660, 2026.

EGU26-5339 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

How normal faults control delta deposition: Insights from analogue modelling 

Nemanja Krstekanic, Duco H. van der Woude, Ernst Willingshofer, Maarten Kleinhans, and Liviu Matenco

In many natural systems, normal faults induce sedimentation in basins by creating depositional space that is gradually filled by incoming sedimentary infill. In this study, we investigated the response of deltaic systems to normal faulting through a novel analogue modelling approach integrating fluvial and tectonic processes. The models were built in a flume where the engine-driven extension was coeval with a river system controlled by water discharge and sediment feed. The river feeds the tectonically controlled basin where the deltaic lobes form. In the models, we varied engine velocity (i.e., extension/subsidence rate), while keeping the sediment influx and water discharge constant. Faulting of the model sand layers, representing the uppermost crust, is implemented in the flume by a mobile basal sheet, which is pulled from underneath a fixed block at constant velocity. The basin side (i.e., hanging wall) of the main normal fault is filled with water, while a predefined channel guides sediment-rich water towards the basin during early river incision. The river system scaling was done by discharge for the channel dimensions and by sediment mobility number for the sediment transport rate, while the fault slip rates were scaled based on natural fault-controlled basins such as the Roer Valley Graben or the Gulf of Corinth. The difference between natural temporal and spatial scales at which surface and tectonic processes operate was bridged by calculating the ratio between the creation of the accommodation space due to normal fault slip and the average sedimentation rate in the basin. This ratio is calculated for the entire basin and for a single lobe, and is ultimately the key parameter controlling the delta evolution.

The modelling results showed that the active faulting led to progradation and retrogradation of the delta. When the subsidence rate exceeds the sedimentation rate, the delta retrogrades early, and the branching of the delta lobes occurs later. In the model with similar subsidence and sedimentation rates over a lobe, the delta mainly experiences aggradation with several moderate prograding and retrograding cycles. In this situation, there is a minor lateral migration of the delta lobes without branching and significant avulsion. With low subsidence rates, the number of progradation-retrogradation cycles is increasing, the delta progrades farther into the basin, and can cross the conjugate basin-bounding fault(s). Such progradation-retrogradation cycles are often accompanied by local hiatuses, river avulsion, delta lobe branching and lateral migration, which are controlled by an interplay of external forcing and internal delta dynamics.

These findings facilitate understanding of the relationship between tectonics and delta dynamics in natural systems. For instance, due to the slow subsidence and a high sediment supply, the Roer Valley Graben is being overfilled in the early stages, with deltaic formations reaching the other side of the basin before shifting to a late-stage basin-parallel progradation. Contrastingly, the fast subsiding Gulf of Corinth, accompanied by a low sediment supply, has multiple small individual coeval delta lobes, which, presently, do not reach far into the graben and are unable to fill the created accommodation space.

How to cite: Krstekanic, N., van der Woude, D. H., Willingshofer, E., Kleinhans, M., and Matenco, L.: How normal faults control delta deposition: Insights from analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5339, 2026.

Back-arc extension is commonly assumed to be a steady, long-term process. However, geological records from the Japan Sea reveal a short-lived phase of rapid opening during the early–middle Miocene, followed by abrupt cessation. The geodynamic origin of this transient behaviour remains debated. This study employs three-dimensional geodynamic numerical models to investigate how oblique subduction geometry influences slab dynamics, mantle flow, and back-arc extension.

Our results show that a sufficiently high trench obliquity promotes slab breakoff at shallow upper mantle depths, forming a slab window and triggering a short-lived episode of strong lateral (toroidal) mantle flow. This flow dramatically accelerates back-arc extension and generates pronounced along-strike variations in spreading rates. As the slab window sinks into the mantle transition zone, the associated lateral mantle flow rapidly weakens, leading to a sharp decrease and eventual termination of back-arc spreading.

In contrast, models with lower subduction obliquity exhibit no slab breakoff, lack significant lateral mantle flow, and fail to reproduce rapid back-arc extension. These results suggest that slab breakoff induced by oblique subduction provides an efficient yet transient mechanism for focusing back-arc extension. Our findings offer a unified geodynamic explanation for the timing, spatial pattern, and abrupt end of Japan Sea opening. The proposed mechanism may also help explain slab window formation and episodic back-arc activity in other obliquely convergent margins.

How to cite: Luo, P. and Li, Z.-H.: Transient Acceleration and Termination of Japan Sea Opening Controlled by Oblique-Subduction-Induced Slab Window, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6108, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6108, 2026.

The Panalesis model consists of global maps created every 10 million years or so from the Neoproterozoic to the present. These maps rely on a maximum of data from multiple sources (paleomagnetism, fossils, lithofacies, geochemistry, etc.) and comply with the rules of plate tectonics, following our Dual Control Approach methodology.

Once the global plate tectonics model has been defined, it is possible to derive many other types of maps. The first type of maps to be derived are palæogeographic maps. We supplement them however by maps of the age of the sea-floor, maps of accretion / subduction rates, maps of volume of subducted lithosphere, maps of hydrothermal alteration at mid-oceanic ridges, maps of crustal and lithospheric thickness, etc., which constitute the Panalesis Atlas. Associated with climate models, we show here an example of maps depicting the evolution of the drainage system at global scale through time and estimates of sediment fluxes over the Phanerozoic.

How to cite: Vérard, C. and Franziskakis, F.: The Panalesis model and its derivative maps: Implications for global long-term interaction between geodynamics and surface processes , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7294, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7294, 2026.

EGU26-8291 | Orals | TS4.2

Deformational Corridors along the San Andreas Plate Boundary: Evidence from Lithospheric Depths to the Surface 

Kevin P. Furlong, Kirsty A. McKenzie, and Matthew Herman

With the systematics migration of the Mendocino Triple Junction (MTJ), the San Andreas plate boundary forms within lithosphere transitioning from a convergent (subduction) to translation tectonic regime.  How that transition occurs, and what crustal/lithospheric deformation is associated with the fundamental plate boundary change has not been well understood. Through the combined analysis of a detailed 3-D lithospheric structure in the vicinity of the MTJ (from seismic tomography) in conjunction with geodetic data, seismicity, regional thermochronology, surficial geomorphic characteristics, and observed heat flow we are able to delineate two distinct deformational corridors defining the tectonics of plate boundary transition. A well recognized consequence of MTJ migration is the development of a slab window in its wake. Our seismic tomographic imagery helps us define the extent of that slab window - in particular ion western boundary. We are also able to image a fragment of former Farallon plate (which we term the Pioneer fragment), now accreted to the Pacific plate,  that has migrated with the MTJ, that also has served as the western boundary of the slab window. Geodetic data indicates the primary lithospheric-scale plate boundary structure forms along that Pioneer - slab window transition. The result is two distinctive corridors with quite discordant tectonic histories that lie on either side of the nascent plate boundary.

The Pioneer Corridor, which bounds the San Andreas Plate boundary on the west has experienced a coupled burial/erosion sequence as the MTJ migrates. This involves rapid rates of burial (Eel River Basin) followed by a short lived, but extremely rapid unroofing (~ 10 mm/yr) followed by subsequent, but slow exhumation. This results in major changes in observed surface heat flow, a complex pattern of low-T thermochronolgy ages, and a relatively subdued landscape (except in the region of rapid exhumation).

The Mendocino Crustal Conveyor (MCC) Corridor overlies the slab window, bounding the San Andreas boundary on the east. It has a distinctly different tectonic history involving a sequence of crustal thickening (uplift) followed by crustal thinning, with a complex lower bounding thermal evolution . The result is a quite different thermal-chronologic history, a variation in heat flow consistent with the crustal evolution, and a much more rugged landscape reflecting the long-lived uplift/exhumation history driven by slab-window processes.

Although the development of the San Andreas in the wake of the MTJ is oftentimes thought to be a tectonically simple process. This analysis indicates a very discordant history recorded in the thermal and surficial data of the two corridors bounding the nascent plate boundary.

How to cite: Furlong, K. P., McKenzie, K. A., and Herman, M.: Deformational Corridors along the San Andreas Plate Boundary: Evidence from Lithospheric Depths to the Surface, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8291, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8291, 2026.

EGU26-9873 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Tectonic and Climatic Controls on Himalayan Topographic Evolution: Numerical modelling of tectonics-erosion-precipitation interactions 

Samantak Kundu, Sascha Brune, Dirk Scherler, Derek Neuharth, Xiaoping Yuan, and Sanjay Kumar Mandal

Topography and erosion in active convergent mountain belts arise from coupled feedbacks between
tectonics, climate, and surface processes. Tectonic deformation generates topography through crustal
shortening and thickening, which modifies precipitation via orographic effects. Enhanced precipitation
drives river incision, mass wasting, and sediment transport that erode the landscape, feeding back into
topography and precipitation patterns over geological timescales.
In the Himalaya, crustal shortening produces an orogenic wedge above the Main Himalayan Thrust, the
basal décollement with a flat-ramp-flat geometry where sub-horizontal flats at different crustal levels are
connected by inclined mid-crustal ramps. Wedge growth occurs primarily through basal accretion, whereby
material from the subducting Indian plate is scraped off and emplaced beneath the wedge as thrust-bounded
rock slices (horses) between a floor thrust and roof thrust, forming a mid-crustal duplex. As convergence
continues, this process operates episodically: new horses are sequentially accreted through footwall
imbrication, punctuated by phases when breakthrough ramps form to transfer slip between décollement
levels. This temporal cyclicity in basal accretion creates alternating phases of duplex thickening and ramp
activation. However, how this cyclic process modulates climate-tectonic feedbacks—specifically, how
episodic duplex growth and ramp activation influence topographic evolution, precipitation distribution, and
erosion rates across the wedge—remains poorly constrained over tens of millions of years.

To investigate these feedbacks, we employ a 2D coupled lithosphere-scale numerical framework that
captures the physics of climate–tectonic–surface interactions, building on the coupled modelling approach
developed by Yuan et al. (2024). This framework integrates a thermomechanical geodynamic model
(ASPECT) to account for tectonic deformation and uplift, a landscape evolution model (FastScape) to
simulate surface processes and an orographic precipitation model (LFPM) to evaluate climate–topography
feedbacks. We reproduce first-order geometries of the India-Eurasia collision zone by introducing crustal
décollements as pre-defined horizontal weaknesses in the Indian pate.
Preliminary results indicate that variations in basal décollement strength modulate tectonic style and ramp
cyclicity, controlling mountain-belt width and, in turn, precipitation patterns and surface erosion across
different ramp phases. A stronger basal décollement relative to an intermediate décollement leads to the
development of distinct inner and outer wedges. The outer wedge thereby grows laterally by frontal
accretion while uplift of the inner wedge occurs via duplex formation. Uplift of the inner wedge produces a
highly elevated, low-relief landscape, suggesting a transient geomorphic response to ongoing duplex uplift,
as observed in parts of the Himalaya. In these zones, two distinct rainfall maxima are observed, associated
with the inner and outer wedges, along with corresponding dual bands of high relief and enhanced channel
steepness. We find that variations in erosional parameters, together with crustal rheology, can substantially
influence the geometry of the Himalayan wedge, thereby modulating crustal deformation, topography
changes and the climate.


Reference: Yuan, X., Li, Y., Brune, S. et al. Coordination between deformation, precipitation, and erosion
during orogenic growth. Nat Commun 15, 10362 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54690-4

How to cite: Kundu, S., Brune, S., Scherler, D., Neuharth, D., Yuan, X., and Mandal, S. K.: Tectonic and Climatic Controls on Himalayan Topographic Evolution: Numerical modelling of tectonics-erosion-precipitation interactions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9873, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9873, 2026.

The evolution of orogens and sedimentary basins, together with associated vertical motions and thermal fields, is controlled by crustal and lithospheric thickness variations, linked to plate kinematics and rheological properties. All these factors are tightly coupled to surface processes such as erosion and sedimentation, and they are linked to climatic variations. However, understanding the distinct effects and complex interplay between tectonic and surface processes requires new, coupled approaches.

Here we present results from three-dimensional numerical models based on the thermo-mechanical code I3ELVIS, which uses finite differences and marker-in-cell methods and incorporates elasto-visco-plastic rheologies of compressible and thermally expanding/contracting rocks and parametrized partial melting, coupled to a newly developed erosion–sedimentation module. Mass is conserved between eroded and deposited material at each time step. Surface evolution is governed by advection, onshore hillslope diffusion, fluvial incision following a stream-power law, sediment diffusion from river mouths into the sea and pelagic sedimentation, and is described by

∂h/∂t + uHH h = uV + ∇H(κ ∇H h) - K Qm Sn + D

where h is the elevation, t is time, u is the velocity, H and V denotes horizontal and vertical quantities or operators, respectively, κ is diffusivity, K, m and n are stream power parameters, Q is water discharge, S is the local slope and D is a pelagic sediment source term. A node-based drainage network is built by steepest-descent flow routing, with discharge accumulated from laterally variable rainfall. Sediment delivered at river mouths is transported into the marine domain by a two-stage diffusive process, using a low diffusivity in proximal shelf environments and a higher diffusivity offshore to represent more efficient gravity-driven and pelagic redistribution.

Using this fully coupled framework, we investigate the effects of climate variability and mantle potential temperature during rifting and subsequent tectonic inversion. The models allow us to analyze strain localization, fault longevity, degrees of partial melting, and the spatial and temporal distribution of syn-tectonic sedimentary successions.

How to cite: Balázs, A., May, D., and Gerya, T.: Tectonics - erosion - sedimentation interactions during structural inversion: insights from fully coupled 3D numerical models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11962, 2026.

The structural style of foreland fold-and-thrust belts (FTBs) is highly sensitive to variations in pre-existing structures, three-dimensional décollement distribution, and syn-tectonic sedimentation. However, the relative importance of these factors and their influence on 2D and 3D structural variability remain poorly constrained. The pronounced along-strike variability of the Andean foreland FTB makes this region an ideal natural laboratory to investigate these interactions. We use the thermo-mechanically coupled tectonic model FANTOM 2D to produce high-resolution, fold-and-thrust belt–scale simulations that explore the interaction between internal properties of the wedge and surface processes. We systematically vary the strength of the two décollement horizons, combined with syn-tectonic sedimentation, and explore how this controls variability in structural styles of FTB formation. Our results show that a strong basal décollement combined with a weaker upper décollement leads to a steeper wedge taper and the development of an antiformal stack in the internal part of the fold-and-thrust belt and, in the foreland, all thrusts detach on the upper décollement, involving only the upper layer. In contrast, models with a weak basal and stronger upper décollement produce a lower-taper wedge, with thrust sheets detached solely on the basal décollement, propagating toward the foreland in a piggyback sequence. Structural complexity and kinematic variability increase when both décollements have similar low to intermediate strengths and interact with syn-tectonic sedimentation. Thrusts originate simultaneously in both décollements, involving the lower and upper layer in an alternating sequence, leading to a complex interaction between thrust propagation in the two layers. The onset of each structure—commonly pop-ups and triangular zones—and their subsequent diverse evolution can serve as diagnostic indicators of the relative strength between décollements. These modeled structures are comparable to the along-strike structural variability observed in the Bolivian fold-and-thrust belt. While syn-tectonic sedimentation primarily controls the number and length of thrusts, our results emphasize the first-order role of décollement rheology in shaping foreland fold-and-thrust belt architecture and its kinematic evolution.

How to cite: Saiz, F., S. Huismans, R., and G. Wolf, S.: 2D models exploring factors controlling N-S variation of external foreland fold and thrust belt of the Andes (Southern Bolivia -Northwest Argentina), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12043, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12043, 2026.

The existence of weak and shallow intra-crustal (salt) layers, syn-tectonic sedimentation as well as extensional inheritance have been shown to play a major role on deformational style and structural geometry of mountain belts on Earth. The Pyrenean orogen provides a well-constrained natural example of an inversion orogen strongly influenced by salt-detached foreland-fold-thrust belts. This study investigates the influence of pre-contractional salt and of syn-contractional salt deposition, together with inherited extensional structures, on crustal-scale mountain-building and associated foreland fold and thrust belt formation. To this end we use high-resolution thermo-mechanical numerical simulations based on the finite-element code FANTOM 2D, and explore the influence of salt viscosity, crustal flexural rigidity, extensional inheritance, crustal strength, and syntectonic sedimentation. By systematically varying those parameters, we can assess the impact of syn-tectonic salt deposition on the localization of deformation, thrust system evolution (both thick- and thin-skinned), and overall orogenic geometry. Comparison with the Pyrenees and other similar orogenic settings emphasizes the importance of extensional inheritance, syn-tectonic sedimentation and salt-tectonics during mountain building. Our models provide new insights into the mechanical role of evaporites in fold-and-thrust belt development.

How to cite: Gibellini, A., Huismans, R. S., and Wolf, S. G.: Effect of rift inheritance and salt layers on mountain building – a numerical modelling study motivated by the southern Pyrenean foreland fold-and-thrust belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12231, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12231, 2026.

Based on the latest drilling, logging, and seismic data, and using key tectonic interfaces as markers, this study divides tectonic strata in combination with regional tectonic movements, establishes a vertical stratigraphic framework, and reconstructs erosion amounts. It clarifies the present-day preservation, post-depositional erosion, original distribution characteristics, and their spatiotemporal variations for each stratum, systematically revealing how their development features respond to the basin's tectonic evolution. The results indicate that the Mesozoic tectonic layer in the Jiyang Depression can be subdivided into three sublayers: Early-Middle Triassic, Early-Middle Jurassic, and Early Cretaceous. The Cenozoic tectonic layer can be subdivided into five sublayers: Kongdian–Lower Es4, Upper Es4–Lower Es2, Upper Es2–Dongying, Guantao–Minghuazhen, and Pingyuan Formations. The distribution of preserved strata from bottom to top is uneven, with significant variations among different tectonic units and layers, reflecting the combined effects of original deposition and subsequent erosion. The Early-Middle Triassic period inherited the tectonic framework and sedimentary characteristics since the Late Hercynian, forming a large-scale inland depositional system. The Early-Middle Jurassic represented a transitional period from the Paleo-Asian tectonic domain to the circum-Pacific tectonic domain, characterized by early-stage filling and late-stage draping. The Early Cretaceous exhibited reverse fault depression, trending northwest, with greater depositional thickness near the Zhangjiakou–Penglai fault zone. The Cenozoic was marked by mantle upwelling and lithospheric thinning, with the Paleogene characterized by multi-episodic extensional fault depression and the Neogene–Quaternary by regional sag depression. The Jiyang Depression underwent multiple phases of complex tectonic evolution during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, leading to widespread erosion at the tops of the Late Triassic, Late Jurassic, Late Cretaceous, Lower Es4, and other tectonic sublayers.

How to cite: Jia-xin, L.: Development Characteristics of Mesozoic-Cenozoic Tectonic Strata in the Jiyang Depression and Their Response to Tectonic Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13391, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13391, 2026.

EGU26-14294 | Posters on site | TS4.2

The Southern Apennine front: evidences of recent activity at the Gulf of Taranto (Italy). 

Bruno Massa, Agostino Meo, Sabatino Ciarcia, and Maria Rosaria Senatore

The Southern Apennines collisional belt is connected to the Calabrian Arc subduction system across the Gulf of Taranto area (Southern Italy).  The role of active deformation during the late Pleistocene-Holocene time is a matter of debate. Our research focused on the feeding area of the Taranto Canyon, the main morphological feature of the continental slope in the study area. The headwall canyon incises the continental margin from the shelf break, at about 30 m b.s.l., down to 450 m depth,  covering an area of  about 50 km². A novel, high-resolution multibeam bathymetry was acquired using a Multibeam Echo-Sounder system. A total of approximately 1600 km² of high-resolution bathymetric data were collected, with a final gridded resolution of 10 × 10 m, referenced to Mean Sea Level. Bathymetry was used to generate a Digital Elevation Model (DEM), allowing  reliable morpho-structural and hydrographic analysis. In addition, a total of 650 km of seismic lines were collected across the outer continental shelf and slope in the north-eastern sector of the Gulf of Taranto, using the GeoResources Geo Spark 200 Sparker system, operating at 1 kJ. The adopted configuration allowed a dominant frequency range between 500 and 2000 Hz, a pulse length of ~0.5 ms, allowing imaging depths between 200 and 400 ms, two-way travel time. These acquisition parameters ensured a high-resolution imaging of buried sedimentary units, stratigraphy and tectonics. The interpretation of seismic sparker profiles, along with the high-resolution bathymetry, reveal deformations and small-scale thickness variations within Pleistocene–Holocene units. The integration of morphostructural and geophysical data suggests that present-day deformation exerts a primary control on canyon evolution and slope dynamics of the north-eastern Gulf of Taranto. These results provide new insights into the recent geodynamic evolution of the Southern Apennine front and highlight its implications for potential geohazard assessment.

How to cite: Massa, B., Meo, A., Ciarcia, S., and Senatore, M. R.: The Southern Apennine front: evidences of recent activity at the Gulf of Taranto (Italy)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14294, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14294, 2026.

Exhumation strongly influences the structural, pressure and temperature evolution of sedimentary basins, and thus the formation and distribution of mineral and energy resources. It is commonly quantified using compaction-based methods that rely on sonic, porosity and thermal data to reconstruct uplift from maximum burial depths, typically via empirical relationships. However, these relationships are often calibrated for specific geological settings and then transferred elsewhere, and even region-specific models use parameters that vary within measurable ranges but are usually treated as exact. Data errors and unquantified parameter uncertainties can therefore propagate through the calculations, significantly compromising the reliability of exhumation estimates.

We previously developed a probabilistic compaction model for the Northern Carnarvon Basin (NCB) in the Australian North West Shelf (NWS) using sonic data from normally compacted, unexhumed intervals. Research shows that the dynamic evolution of the NWS basins has been shaped by multiple rifting and extensional phases and magmatic activities associated with Gondwana dispersal, and by later regional tilting linked to subduction along the northern margin. These complex histories imply significant basin-scale variability in subsidence and exhumation patterns, suggesting that NCB compaction behaviour may differ substantially from that in neighbouring basins such as Browse, Roebuck and Bonaparte. Here we extend probabilistic compaction analysis across these basins, deriving basin-specific shale compaction trends and comparing them to identify key similarities, differences and their geological controls. In doing so, we explicitly test whether a single “regional” compaction model is sufficient for exhumation analysis on the NWS, or whether basin-scale models are required.

Model robustness is evaluated using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling, and uncertainty propagation is used to quantify the effect of parameter uncertainty on exhumation estimates. The NCB model shows strong similarity to Roebuck Basin trends but diverges from those of the Vulcan Sub-basin in the Bonaparte Basin. We attribute these differences to contrasting tectono-thermal histories, particularly the stronger influence of proximal subduction on the Bonaparte Basin. Our results indicate that while the NCB model may be cautiously transferable to the nearby Roebuck and parts of the Browse Basin, applying it to the distal Bonaparte Basin introduces substantial uncertainty. We demonstrate that, wherever data permit, basin-specific probabilistic compaction models are preferable to regional or global models for reliable exhumation analysis on complex passive margins such as the NWS.

How to cite: Makuluni, P., Hauser, J., and Clark, S.: Basin-specific versus regional compaction models: quantifying uncertainty in exhumation estimates on the Australian North West Shelf, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16214, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16214, 2026.

The Cascadia forearc is unique among global subduction zones because of the accretion of a large igneous province (Siletzia) and continuous clockwise rotation of the margin due to oblique subduction of the Juan de Fuca plate. We reconstruct the stratigraphic architecture and sediment accumulation history in the forearc by investigating multiple, along-strike forearc basins. Integrating potential-field models, 2D seismic reflections, and deep borehole data, our 3D mapping allows us to track basin depocenters through space and time, revealing a fundamental structural shift in the Miocene that significantly reshaped the forearc.

During the Paleogene, the Cascadia forearc was a broad, marine basin characterized by high sediment accumulation rates and unrestricted accommodation space. Our results show that during the Miocene in the central forearc (Portland-Tualatin Basin), what was once a single continuous basin was subdivided as transpressional stress structurally inverted older Paleogene normal faults. Similarly, in the Chehalis Basin to the north, clockwise rotation reoriented fault systems relative to the regional stress field, pushing the basin depocenter northward as deformation shifted from northwest-striking to west-striking faults. This structural transition occurred as the outer-arc high (Coast Range) emerged, causing depositional environments to shift from marine to terrestrial. It is also coincided with a steep drop in sediment accumulation rates: a 7-fold decrease in the Chehalis Basin (196 to 27 m/Myr) and a 10-fold decrease in the Portland-Tualatin basins (305 to 29 m/Myr) to the south.

We propose that along-strike variations in subduction geometry also impact basin evolution. In the southern and central forearc, a relatively steep subduction angle and clockwise rotation pushed the outer-arc high close to the magmatic arc, leaving minimal accommodation space. In contrast, shallower subduction to the north near the Seattle Basin maintained a wider separation, allowing high sediment accumulation rates to persist through the Neogene (211 m/Myr).

By integrating basin analysis with regional tectonics, we constrain along-strike variation in Cascadia forearc geometry through the Cenozoic. We find that sustained rotation and the influence of Siletzia basement, not just sedimentary accretion, have controlled the evolution of fault systems and Cascadia forearc deposition. Accordingly, this work provides a framework for understanding the evolution of forearc basins where long-term rotation and strain-partitioning dominate.

How to cite: Bershaw, J., Moe, R., and Scanlon, D.: Cascadia’s Mid-Life Crisis: Miocene Changes in the Forearc due to Rotation and Subduction Dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17015, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17015, 2026.

EGU26-17238 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Contrasting Tectonic and Hydrodynamic Controls on the Infill of the Toukoshan Formation: A Seismic Stratigraphic Study Offshore Central Taiwan 

Ming-Yen Tsai, Ho-Han Hsu, Tzu-Ting Chen, Char-Shine Liu, Liang-Fu Lin, and Arif Mirza

Understanding the origin of high-frequency stratigraphic heterogeneity in active orogenic basins is essential for distinguishing the relative contributions of regional tectonics and local environmental forcings. In the offshore areas of central Taiwan, the Early Pleistocene to present Toukoshan Formation exhibits complex architectural variations that challenge singular tectonic interpretations. This study utilizes multichannel seismic reflection profiles and borehole data to dissect the evolutionary mechanisms driving these stratigraphic shifts. While the underlying Late Miocene to Early Pleistocene sequences exhibit architectural stability as well-stratified reflections, the Toukoshan Formation marks a transition to highly discontinuous geometries, reflecting a switch in dominant drivers toward localized hydrodynamic forcing. The lower Toukoshan Formation features co-existing parallel and progradational clinoform geometries, indicating significant lateral variations. These progradational structures are vertically overlain by continuous, sub-parallel reflections, recording a low-to-high-to-low energy transition. While tectonic subsidence typically produces laterally continuous stratigraphic geometries, the observed progradational sets in this study exhibit marked vertical and lateral discontinuities. This suggests that localized stratigraphic architecture is decoupled from the gradual tectonic trend, reflecting a switch in dominant drivers toward rapid hydrodynamic forcing. Such features likely record wave-driven sediment redistribution and the development of localized barrier complexes under high-energy conditions during relative sea-level fluctuations, rather than being a direct response to tectonic loading. Correlation of key time horizons across multiple seismic profiles reveals a southward migration of the depocenter within the Toukoshan Formation. This spatial pattern is consistent with the southward propagation of the orogenic belt and the resulting higher subsidence rates in the south as noted in previous studies, indicating that such regional-scale sediment redistribution is primarily governed by foreland basin subsidence. Our findings reveal a decoupling of stratigraphic drivers: while isopach maps confirm sustained tectonic control over regional accommodation, the internal architecture of the Toukoshan Formation marks a switch to localized hydrodynamic forcing. Wave-driven sediment supply and reworking overrides the tectonic signal, creating high-frequency heterogeneity and proving that even under active tectonics, environmental energy can be the primary sculptor of the depositional landscape.

How to cite: Tsai, M.-Y., Hsu, H.-H., Chen, T.-T., Liu, C.-S., Lin, L.-F., and Mirza, A.: Contrasting Tectonic and Hydrodynamic Controls on the Infill of the Toukoshan Formation: A Seismic Stratigraphic Study Offshore Central Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17238, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17238, 2026.

EGU26-17421 | Orals | TS4.2

Crustal deformation of Gondwana during the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age 

Yiorgos Galanis and David Bridgland

It is widely documented in the fluvial terrace and the sedimentary archive that Late Cenozoic landscapes have experienced an increase in non-steady-state uplift. With stepwise increase in uplift with climate transitions, this naturally led research to link uplift and climate. Further documented was the influence of crustal domain in controlling rates, where younger crust appears to react with greater intensity than its older, Archaean and Proterozoic counterparts. We began this project questioning that if Late Cenozoic crustal deformation is related in some way to increasing climate deterioration, then we should expect similar patterns during analogous periods. The selected period was the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age. Both exhibit similar low modelled CO2, high δ18O, high-frequency and high-magnitude oscillations in sea level, direct evidence of glaciation and, in comparison to earlier glacial episodes, biological complexity. Thermochronology data was compiled from terranes across Gondwana to provide a regional perspective of the nature of exhumation. The results are as follows. A pattern was evident of higher exhumation rates from Gondwanan-aged crustal domains in contrast to earlier Proterozoic and Archaean domains. Although expected and fitting with theory of how the crust deforms, this pattern is most curious. Linking the timing of exhumation with stages of climate deterioration proved difficult due to the resolution at which thermochronology describes exhumation. The presentation will explore the validity of assumptions and limitations of methodology and preservation of evidence, with discussion of avenues for further research on the topic.

How to cite: Galanis, Y. and Bridgland, D.: Crustal deformation of Gondwana during the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17421, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17421, 2026.

EGU26-17804 | Orals | TS4.2

Neotectonic vertical motions based on syn-volcanic palaeosurfaces and geochronological data: inferences for crustal and mantle processes (Pannonian Basin, Central Europe) 

László Fodor, Gábor Csillag, Károly Németh, Zsófia Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Krisztina Sebe, Tamás Telbisz, Gábor Kovács, and Sierd Cloetingh

Rate and timing of neotectonic vertical motions represent an ongoing research topic in inverted sedimentary basins. This presentation offers new data concerning the uplift history of the western part of the Miocene Pannonian Basin system, (Central Europe) which is bordering the Alpine orogenic belt. After the syn-rift phase of ~21–15Ma, the area underwent the post-rift phase which involved differential subsidence reaching several kilometres in basin centres. Parallel to post-rift subsidence process, the basin inversion started during the Late Miocene and resulted in differential uplift, fluvial and aeolian denudation, and river incision.

The late post-rift and the early neotectonic phases were accompanied by extensive basalt volcanism, resulting in the activity of two distinct phreatomagmatic monogenetic volcanic fields, the Bakony-Balaton Highland and Little Hungarian Plain Volcanic Fields (BBHVF and LHPVF) through the Late Miocene to earliest Quaternary (7.96–2.61 Ma). The volcanic fields comprise diverse volcanic landforms, including shield volcanoes, maar diatremes, volcanic plugs and erosional remnants of scoria and spatter cones.

Detailed analysis of volcanic facies was used to reconstruct the topographic position of the syn-volcanic palaeosurface upon which the volcanoes developed. Using the previously published ages of the volcanic rocks and the palaeo-elevations of the volcanic surfaces, averaged uplift rates were derived for all observation points. In addition, previously published exposure age data and geomorphological data were used to constrain the uplift rates.

The reconstructed palaeosurfaces and the calculated rock uplift rates show spatial and temporal variations from ~20 to ~100 m/Ma. Before ~3.5 Ma the two volcanic fields showed opposite differential vertical motions having been positive in the eastern basin margin (Transdanubian Range) and negative in the neighbouring basin centre (Kisalföld/Danube Basin); variations were due to differential post-rift subsidence and the onset of minor neotectonic uplift. After ~3.5 Ma all the studied areas underwent uplift, but the south-western part of the volcanic fields exhibits larger uplift values than the north-eastern one triggering a regional drainage pattern reorganisation. Moving west from the volcanic areas, toward the foothills of the Alps, the uplift rates increased even more and approximating values obtained in the Alpine orogenic belt.

This variable differential vertical motion history points to the interplay of complex governing processes. These could involve the intraplate compressional stress related to neotectonic basin inversion, lower-crustal flow of the weakened crust, and more importantly, mantle processes at depth. This latter could involve lithospheric folding, mantle convection-induced development of a dynamic topography, and the eventual effect of secondary plumes. In addition, uplift could be coupled with surface processes like variable unloading by denudation and loading by sedimentation in the axial and marginal parts of the area, respectively.

The research was supported by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office, project 134873 and the HUN-REN Research Grant Hungary project RGH531001.

How to cite: Fodor, L., Csillag, G., Németh, K., Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Z., Sebe, K., Telbisz, T., Kovács, G., and Cloetingh, S.: Neotectonic vertical motions based on syn-volcanic palaeosurfaces and geochronological data: inferences for crustal and mantle processes (Pannonian Basin, Central Europe), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17804, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17804, 2026.

EGU26-17815 | Posters on site | TS4.2

Integrated Geological and Geophysical Investigation of Al-Shout Valley, Saudi Arabia 

Saad AlHumidan and Suhail Alhejji

This study of the subsurface conditions within a fluvial system impacted by the Red Sea rift tectonics offers an integration of geological and geophysical observations from Al-Shout Valley in western Saudi Arabia. Two primary fracture orientations are revealed by structural measurements, suggesting regional tectonic control. While Vertical Electrical Sounding (VES) data define the transition from unconsolidated sediments to gravel layers and underlying bedrock, high-resolution Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) profiles show varying sediment thickness and shallow subsurface heterogeneity. The significant sediment variability and a strong tectonic influence on the valley evolution are shown by the combined dataset. These findings will advance our knowledge of near-surface architecture and fluvial stratigraphy in environments associated with arid rifts.

How to cite: AlHumidan, S. and Alhejji, S.: Integrated Geological and Geophysical Investigation of Al-Shout Valley, Saudi Arabia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17815, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17815, 2026.

EGU26-18447 | Posters on site | TS4.2

Thermomechanical models of Taiwan’s orogeny with along-strike variability 

Ming Jun Zheng, Yuan-Hsi Lee, and Eh Tan

Taiwan is situated within an active arc–continent collision zone and represents one of the most rapidly exhuming orogens on Earth, characterized by complex structural architecture. In our previous work, we developed a comprehensive thermomechanical model that incorporates the depth-dependent transition from brittle to ductile deformation, lithology-controlled erosion, and observed geometries of the basal decollement and backstop. The model successfully reproduces the key structural features of the northern Taiwan orogen and is consistent with metamorphic temperature profiles, thermochronological constraints, spatial patterns of strain, and the observed rates of exhumation and cooling. The results further demonstrate the critical roles of ductile deformation and ramp structures in the formation of the Hsuehshan Range and the Western fold-and-thrust belt.

Structural styles, however, vary systematically from north to south across the Taiwan orogen. Notably, the Hsuehshan Range is absent in southern Taiwan, and total crustal shortening decreases significantly toward the southern tip of the island.

Here, we apply the same thermomechanical framework under varying boundary conditions to reconstruct the along-strike evolution of mountain building across Taiwan.

Our results indicate that the timing of orogenic onset is comparable along strike, whereas the rate of shortening decreases progressively from north to south. The basal decollement extends to approximately 20 km depth and exhibits variable ramp–flat geometries, leading to distinct structural styles along the orogen. The model successfully captures the development of the Pingtung Basin and the structural evolution of the Hengchun Peninsula, providing a unified framework for understanding the along-strike variability of Taiwan’s orogeny.

How to cite: Zheng, M. J., Lee, Y.-H., and Tan, E.: Thermomechanical models of Taiwan’s orogeny with along-strike variability, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18447, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18447, 2026.

EGU26-20363 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Eocene – Miocene geologic evolution of the Alps-Apennines junction wedge top basin in northwest Italy 

Maria Isabel Vidal Reyes, Mattia Marini, Chiara Amadori, Simone Reguzzi, Matteo Maino, Niccolo Menegoni, Fadi H. Nader, and Magdala Tesauro

The sedimentary fill of foreland wedge-top basins is characterized by an intricated depositional architecture, resulting from superposition of tectonics and sedimentation. This study explores the relationship between tectonics and basin evolution through the analysis of the Eocene-Miocene depositional systems formed in the Alps-Apennines junction wedge-top basin (northwest Italy). We implemented a 3D geologic model, providing thickness and lateral facies variations, as well as the architecture of these systems. To this aim, we analysed subsurface and surface data, including seismic reflection profiles, field observations, and facies analysis of the outcropping successions. Five major units were identified within the basin, which are representative of key stages in its tectonic evolution. An initial phase of basin subsidence (Eocene-Oligocene) culminated in the establishment of a widespread deep-water environment, characterized by high efficiency turbidite systems (Burdigalian). Afterwards, the progression of Apennine deformation led first to basin tilting and then basin inversion and progressive shallowing (Middle to Late Miocene). The 3D model is the basis for a quantitative characterization of the relationship between tectonic subsidence and sediment accumulation, useful to understand the complex evolution of this and analogue sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Vidal Reyes, M. I., Marini, M., Amadori, C., Reguzzi, S., Maino, M., Menegoni, N., Nader, F. H., and Tesauro, M.: Eocene – Miocene geologic evolution of the Alps-Apennines junction wedge top basin in northwest Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20363, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20363, 2026.

The Yaziluo Aulacogen, developed on the northern margin of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean, has become a strategic breakthrough area for shale gas exploration in southern China's complex tectonic regions due to the discovery of Carboniferous industrial gas flow. However, prior to this study, the region had been poorly studied, with limited thermal indicator data, well-developed carbonate strata, and was affected by the superimposed effects of multi-phase tectonic movements. A single type of thermal indicator could not accurately reconstruct its thermal history, leading to uncertainties in hydrocarbon source rock maturity evolution and hydrocarbon generation phases, thus hindering the evaluation of shale gas potential. To address the challenge of accurately reconstructing thermal history in complex tectonic regions, this study focused on the Yaziluo Aulacogen, which preserves abundant stratigraphic records. We reconstructed the thermal history of the aulacogen since the Late Paleozoic using a multi-method coupling approach, including the combination of carbonate clumped isotope with U-Pb dating, low-temperature thermochronology, and organic thermal indicators. This work established a thermal history reconstruction technique for complex tectonic regions and quantitatively analyzed the spatio-temporal superimposition effects of multi-phase tectono-thermal events. Furthermore, we identified the controlling factors influencing the maturity evolution of the Lower Carboniferous source rocks and clarified the relationship between regional tectono-thermal evolution and critical hydrocarbon generation periods. The results have provided geothermal constraints for geodynamic studies of passive continental margin rift basins along the northern Paleo-Tethys margin and offered key technical support for hydrocarbon resource assessment in similar complex tectonic regions across the Paleo-Tethyan domain.

How to cite: Gao, P.: Thermal History Reconstruction of the Yaziluo Aulacogen, Paleo-Tethyan Complex Tectonic Domain: Coupled Constraints from Multitype Thermal Indicators, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20539, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20539, 2026.

The interplay between tectonic shortening and surface erosion critically influences mountain building, yet their combined effects on vertical orogenic growth remain unclear. Here we present a suite of tectonic-geomorphology analogue experiments that combine brittle deformation with controlled rainfall-driven erosion. Under a certain shortening rate, we find that wedge height does not monotonically decrease with increasing erosion. Instead, the maximum orogenic wedge height occurs at a moderate rainfall/erosion rate, rather than under no or low erosion. To quantify this relationship, we introduce a dimensionless parameter, the rainfall-to-shortening ratio (R2S), and show that wedge height peaks at R2S ≈ 1. Compilation of data from 28 natural orogenic belts shows a similar bell-shaped trend, with maximum average elevations occurring at R2S ≈ 100, supporting the experimental results. The R2S difference between modeled and natural results likely represents the scaling difference of rainfall rate relative to shortening rate. We suggest that moderate erosion promotes vertical growth by reducing internal wedge strength and allowing the development of steeper critical surface slopes. These findings underscore the dynamic coupling between tectonics and surface processes and offer a scalable, physically grounded framework for understanding and predicting variations in mountain height across both experimental and natural systems.

How to cite: Wu, L. and Yang, B.: Moderate Erosion relative to Shortening Maximizes Mountain Heights in Active Orogenic Belts: Insight from tectonic-geomorphology analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21847, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21847, 2026.

EGU26-156 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Reconstruction of exhumation history along magma-poor rifted margins - Insights from numerical models 

João Pedro Macedo Silva, Victor Sacek, Gianreto Manatschal, and Carlos Eduardo Ganade

Continental rifting gives rise to margins with variable magmatic budgets, producing endmembers that range from magma-poor to magma-rich. At some magma-poor rifted margins like Australia-Antarctica conjugate margins and fossil margins seafloor preserved in Western Alps, portions of the lithospheric mantle were exhumed to the surface during the late phases of rifting. However, the key factors controlling this exhumation remain poorly constrained. From thermomechanical numerical scenarios, we investigated the controlling factors of the mantle exhumation process during rifting by varying crustal thickness, lithospheric mantle structure and rifting velocity. The results show that lower crustal strength and consequent lithospheric coupling drive the formation of exhumed mantle domains at magma-poor rifted margins. The exhumation process distributes different portions of lithospheric mantle along the rifted margins where at the most distal regions corresponding to initially deeper portions of lithospheric mantle. Factor as crustal thickness and mantle lithospheric structure affected the width of exhumed mantle domains. We observe that the stretching processes can exhume mantle particles from different lithospheric depths, sampling both shallow particles near the base of the crust and deeper portions of the lithosphere, especially in scenarios with an initially high degree of coupling between crust and lithospheric mantle. We also tracked the P-T-t paths of lithospheric mantle particles and our results agree with P-T-t paths from Iberian Margin, Diamantina Zone at SW Australian Margin and also from fossil rifted margins of the Western Tethys in the Alps and P-T estimation data for exhumed mantle samples from Newfoundland Margin and Terre Adélie seamount B at Antarctic Margin showing the potential of numerical models to explore the exhumation process in the context of magma-poor rifted margins.

How to cite: Macedo Silva, J. P., Sacek, V., Manatschal, G., and Ganade, C. E.: Reconstruction of exhumation history along magma-poor rifted margins - Insights from numerical models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-156, 2026.

EGU26-979 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Flat Moho beneath orogens and extensional regions: What controls it? 

Ömer Bodur, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Elif Nihan Çavdar, and Gökhan Çalınak

Flat Moho is a characteristic feature beneath extended continental lithosphere and orogenic plateaus; however, the physical processes that govern their formation remain poorly understood. In particular, the mechanical conditions required for lower crustal flow to effectively suppress Moho deflection are still debated. It has been proposed that lower crustal flow may facilitate lateral mass redistribution, thereby limiting Moho deflection and Moho relief during extension. Here, we compare seismological (receiver function) and gravity data and geodynamic models to identify the controls of Moho variation across various tectonic regions. Namely, we perform two suites of two-dimensional visco-plastic numerical models using the finite element code ASPECT with systematically vary (1) the minimum effective viscosity of the lower crust, and (2) its brittle strength, represented by cohesion. Each model simulates the extension of a 50 km-thick crust overlying a previously thinned lithospheric mantle, allowing us to isolate the rheological controls on Moho geometry and crustal deformation. Our results show that the primary factor governing Moho topography is the viscosity of the lower crust. When the lower crust is weak (≤ 10¹⁸ Pa·s), the viscous flow efficiently redistributes the material, leading to diffuse deformation and flat Moho (ΔMoho < 5 km). In contrast, high-viscosity models (≥ 10²¹ Pa·s) exhibit localized crustal thinning and pronounced Moho deflection, with relief up to 50 km and slopes exceeding 0.04 km/km. Varying the cohesion of the upper crust influences the distribution of brittle strain, but has a limited effect on Moho morphology. We conclude that flat Moho geometries arise from the integrated mechanical response of the crustal column where a sufficiently weak lower crust accommodates crust-mantle decoupling. These findings provide a quantitative framework to interpret observed flat Moho patterns in extensional settings such as the western Anatolia, the Basin and Range Province, and Tibetan Plateau.

How to cite: Bodur, Ö., Göğüş, O. H., Çavdar, E. N., and Çalınak, G.: Flat Moho beneath orogens and extensional regions: What controls it?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-979, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-979, 2026.

EGU26-1035 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Neotectonics of the Central Kenya Rift 

Daniel Botha, Alastair Sloan, Simon Kübler, and Beth Kahle

The Central Kenya RIft (CKR) is one of the fastest deforming sections of the Eastern African Rift System (EARS). Extensive tectonic research has been performed on the rift in northern and southern Kenya, but the modern tectonic geomorphology of the CKR remains understudied. Existing fault maps show a change in the orientation of the EARS within the CKR, although faults have not been mapped in detail with modern techniques. Despite the numerous fault scarps that offset the rift floor, few large earthquakes have been recorded in the recent past, with the exception of a MS 6.9 event in 1928. Maturing rifts demonstrate a shift from border fault seismicity to increased aseismic deformation dsitributed along intra-rift faults. This study aims to map active fault scarps within the CKR to better understand the modern tectonics, which may give insights into seismic hazard for an area with a high population growth rate. Rigorous examination of the high resolution TanDEM-X Digital Elevation Model (DEM) was used to formulate a digital fault database, which includes attributes about individual fault lengths and orientations. The NNW-SSE orientated CKR represents an intersection between NNE-SSW orientated EARS rifts to the north and south, and older NNW-SSE orientated structural fabrics. While the CKR itself shows a traditional mature rift morphology containing a developed inner graben with recent volcanism, the junction between the CKR and Northern Kenya Rift appears to be less mature. The 1928 earthquake, which occurred along a border fault in this junction, challenges the theory of axial strain concentration in an aging rift. Calculations on the balance of extension accommodated by larger border faults vs younger intra-rift grid faults allows for the possibility of continued border fault slip. The lack of large earthquakes in the CKR itself suggests an aseismic model to describe deformation, while seismic hazard appears to be greater in the junctions between rift segments of alternate orientations. 

How to cite: Botha, D., Sloan, A., Kübler, S., and Kahle, B.: Neotectonics of the Central Kenya Rift, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1035, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1035, 2026.

EGU26-1953 | Orals | TS2.1

Diagnostic criteria for mapping rifted margin architecture using seismic reflection profiles 

Gianreto Manatschal and Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic

Rifted margins result from the complex interaction between tectonic, magmatic and sedimentary processes. Conceptual models explaining their evolution have changed considerably over the last few decades, moving from simple stretching models to more complex polyphase rift models that distinguish between structural domains (proximal, necking, distal) and distinct rift modes. Advances in dynamic numerical modelling have made it possible to not only reproduce the predicted sequential evolution of rift modes and the related rift domains, but also to create complex 2D and even 3D computer-generated simulations, which must be compared with real world examples. While increasingly sophisticated 2D and 3D seismic images of rifted margins allow theoretically to rigorously test and calibrate the models, the problem resides that their geological interpretations are none unique. It is therefore more important than ever to develop a ‘protocol’ which allows for objective, verifiable, consistent and reproducible geological interpretations of seismic data.

 

Rifted margins present, indeed, first- and second-order diagnostic geometries and seismic facies that can be mapped on seismic reflection profiles. Our contribution aims to synthesise current knowledge on margin architecture and present a systematic approach to seismic interpretation, supported by representative “champion” seismic lines. For each domain, we describe the main structural and stratigraphic characteristics and provide diagnostic criteria commonly observable on seismic reflection profiles. Rather than revisiting the mechanisms of margin formation, we assess whether first- and second-order observational features capture the full range of architectures between existing endmember models. While using the magma-rich/magma-poor dichotomy aids communication, natural rift systems span a continuum of intermediate and hybrid configurations. Our approach accommodates this variability and promotes standardized, reproducible interpretations, allowing to close the loop between increasingly sophisticated modelling and imaging techniques and their testable, reproducible, across-scales coherent geological interpretation.

How to cite: Manatschal, G. and Peron-Pinvidic, G.: Diagnostic criteria for mapping rifted margin architecture using seismic reflection profiles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1953, 2026.

Many rift-related triple-junctions from various geological periods have been previously investigated worldwide. Some of these large extensional lithospheric phenomena even involved complex circular configurations composed of numerous omnidirectionally spaced radial and arcuate elements, thereby having a general multi-junction character. Although pointing to close association of horizontal plate kinematics with centrally directed vertical updoming as two conjugated significant geodynamic phenomena, such annular dichotomy of features penetrating and segmenting the surrounding upper Earth's mass has yet been addressed only poorly.

Based on spatial analysis of regional topography and/or hydrography, an extensive Cenozoic circular structure (> 6,000 km in diameter) even including recently active tectonic elements appears to have developed in whole Europe and some adjacent areas of Africa and Asia centred at a common intersection point of the Upper Rhine Graben, Lower Rhine grabens (with significant Roer structure), Hessian grabens (involving Leine structure), and more distant Eger Graben current axes. The pervasive surface fracturing of both higher / lower topographic levels was taken into account (numerous concentric boundaries between mountain summit blocks visualized by closed contours / ubiquitous multi-arc- and fan-shaped geometries within piedmonts and lowlands indicated in continental river network, less along important block-bounding slopes, and locally on sea floor). The fairly regular annular lithospheric fragmentation is expressed by a wide-scale spectrum of features from general mountain or basin belt orientations through trends of circumferential, centrifugal, or centripetal river sections and corresponding valleys to consistent sets of sharp stream bends.

Using a similar research approach, several analogous circular phenomena were detected within the Red Sea rift system. Despite possible links to various known geometrically consistent geological structures including magma plumbings or mantle plumes, it is yet hard to determine the main evolutionary processes and the closer time constraints of the circular systems. Their role should be considered and discussed on a broad disciplinary basis, among others, because similar surface configurations seem to exist in different tectonic settings such as large uplifting basement massifs or arcuate orogenic belts and intermontane basins. An attempt to invoke related communication is made also by means of this contribution.

How to cite: Roštínský, P.: Rhine Graben rift system-related multi-junction and other analogs: Large-scale circular lithospheric segmentation indicated in regional topographic and hydrographic data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2582, 2026.

The massive Orphan Basin, offshore Newfoundland, preserves evidence of a complex, multiphase rift history influenced by structural inheritance tied to the Appalachian-Caledonian orogen. Despite recent advances in plate kinematic reconstructions of the Southern North Atlantic, the tectonic evolution of the Orphan Basin remains poorly constrained, largely due to limited seismic and well coverage. As a result, the contributions of structural constraints on deformation have been oversimplified, leading to the misrepresentation of their influence on continental breakup.

This study prioritizes the interpretation of recently available 2D seismic reflection datasets acquired by TGS/PGS and ION Geophysical, developing stratigraphic and structural constraints to inform plate kinematic modelling. An analysis of the spatial distribution of Jurassic to Early Cretaceous syn-rift sediments and the geometries of major fault systems provide new insights into rift migration and the temporal variability of strain localization in the Orphan Basin during continental breakup.

Seismic interpretation and fault analysis identify two temporally distinct hyperextended rift basins separated by a region of thick crust, highlighting the importance of mechanically rigid blocks, such as the Orphan Knoll, in focusing strain, controlling basin development, and influencing the timing and geometry of rift propagation. While previous reconstructions have represented extension within the Orphan Basin as continuous and uniform, our analysis indicates that strain was instead focused within discrete extensional corridors controlled by large detachment faults.

Using GPlates, these seismic constraints are integrated into a deformable plate tectonic reconstruction, refining the kinematic plate model of the Southern North Atlantic while improving its geological accuracy and reducing the reliance on uniform crustal stretching assumptions. The updated reconstruction aims to provide a significant step towards a reproducible analogue model for hyperextended rift basins during magma-poor continental breakup. 

How to cite: Nickson, T. and Welford, J. K.: Integrating Seismic Interpretation of the Orphan Basin, Offshore Newfoundland, with Deformable Plate Tectonic Modelling of the Southern North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3101, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3101, 2026.

Stretching of the crust, seafloor spreading, and volcanism commonly affect the overriding plate above retreating slabs in subduction settings. The Vavilov Basin (Tyrrhenian Sea) is a Pliocene–Quaternary back-arc basin formed in response to the eastward rollback of the Apennine–Tyrrhenian subduction system. The basin has a roughly triangular shape and it is bounded by major escarpments (e.g. the Selli Line) separating it from the continental margins (Cornaglia Terrace, De Marchi Seamount and Flavio Gioia Seamount). Its western sector is characterized by N–S–oriented ridges interpreted as the surface expression of basaltic magma injections during, or shortly after, mantle exhumation (e.g. the Gortani and the D’Ancona Ridges).

Near the centre of the basin, the Vavilov Volcano (VAV), a large volcanic edifice ~60 km long and ~32 km wide, rises from ~3600 m below sea level (b.s.l.) to a minimum depth of ~795 m b.s.l. The VAV consists of three main volcanic units: (i) west-tilted pillow lava flows below ~1500 m b.s.l., (ii) radial lava flows between ~1500 and 1000 m b.s.l., and (iii) scoriaceous lava flows from ~1000 m b.s.l. to the summit. K–Ar dating of pillow lavas sampled along the eastern flank at ~1000 m depth yields Pleistocene ages of 0.37 and 0.09 Ma, consistent with the observed magnetic pattern. Magnetic data show a positive anomaly over the shallow part of the volcano related to the Brunhes geomagnetic chron, and contrasting with negative anomalies on the outer flanks and surrounding basin.

Here we present an integrated magnetic and morphologic analysis of VAV aimed at constraining its internal plumbing system and the relationship with surface volcanic and tectonic structures. We develop an inverse magnetic model that images subsurface structural elements related to both an early spreading ridge and a later central volcanic system. Our results indicate that intervening intrusive ridges in small back-arc basins may evolve following a polyphasic evolution with a transition from fissural to central-type volcanism and developing a multi-level plumbing system. The VAV morphological asymmetry reflects an eastward migration of volcanic activity through time, possibly associated with asymmetric basin opening. The shallow plumbing system comprises: (a) an early NNE–SSW–elongated dike sheet feeding fissural volcanism along the summit ridge, and (b) a younger central magma reservoir beneath the summit feeding central vents. A NW–SE–oriented apophysis extending southeastward from the central reservoir likely supplied volcanic cones on the eastern flank.

 

How to cite: Cocchi, L., Muccini, F., Palmiotto, C., and Ventura, G.: Reconstructing the plumbing system of the Vavilov Seamount (southern Tyrrhenian Sea): insights into the transition from fissural to central-type volcanism back-arcs , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3400, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3400, 2026.

EGU26-4342 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Geological structure related to the Mienhua Submarine Volcano in southern Okinawa Trough from High-Resolution Sparker Seismic profiles  

Hsin-Wen Li, Shu-Kun Hsu, Lien-Kai Lin, and Ching-Hui Tsai

Located in the northern margin of the southern Okinawa Trough, the Mienhua Submarine Volcano (MSV) is probably formed during the post-collision of the former Taiwan orogeny. The MSV is accompanied by vigorous hydrothermal activities. To understand the related tectonic faults, volcanic intrusions, and hydrothermal activity of the MSV, we have collected several high-resolution sparker seismic profiles surrounding the MSV. Our results show that the east and west sides of the MSV show different features. In the east side, we have found unconformities, high-amplitude seismic reflectors, and acoustic blanking zones. The acoustic blanking zones indicate that hydrothermal fluid has penetrated the strata and migrated upwards and laterally. Many hydrothermal plumes are also found in the water column. In other words, hydrothermal activity is active in the eastern region. In contrast, in the west side of MSV, few unconformities or hydrothermal activities were found. Besides, large-scale mass-transport deposits (MTDs) are formed, possibly due to submarine landslides.

How to cite: Li, H.-W., Hsu, S.-K., Lin, L.-K., and Tsai, C.-H.: Geological structure related to the Mienhua Submarine Volcano in southern Okinawa Trough from High-Resolution Sparker Seismic profiles , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4342, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4342, 2026.

We present a new first-approach methodology, applicable to thermally re-equilibrated rifted margins, to determine margin crustal architecture and magmatic type from the TWTT of top basement of time-domain seismic reflection data. The method invokes Warner’s 10s Moho rule (Warner, 1987) to give the TWTT crustal basement thickness from top basement TWTT from which we determine crustal basement thickness. It does not require the Moho to be seismically imaged or sediment thickness to be known.

Determining rifted margin crustal thickness and assessing whether a margin is magma-normal, magma-starved or magma-rich is fundamental to understanding margin structure and formation processes. This is often a difficult task compounded by the absence of clear or unambiguous seismic Moho.

Warner observed that, for a thermally re-equilibrated margin, the Moho seismic reflection is approximately flat at ~10s TWTT and is constant irrespective of the complexity of geology above. Moho TWTT is at 10s for unthinned continental crust, oceanic crust, and for crust in between, and applies equally to magma-rich, magma-starved and magma-normal rifted margins.

We apply the new methodology using Warner’s 10s Moho rule to map crustal basement thickness for the Campos and Santos rifted margins offshore Brazil from TWTT of top basement observed on seismic reflection data. We show that the resulting map of crustal thickness determined from top basement TWTT shows a good correlation with that determined using gravity inversion.

Modelling shows that different magmatic-margin types have distinct shapes of top basement TWTT that is independent of sediment thickness. The lateral transition from downward-sloping to flat top basement TWTT corresponds to the oceanward taper of thinned continental crust to boxed-shaped oceanic crust, providing an estimate of the landward-limit of oceanic crust (LaLOC). Magma-starved margins show a step-up of top basement TWTT onto oceanic crust. For margins with magma, lateral inflections in the TWTT of base sediment provide information of the onset of magmatic-volcanic addition and the formation of hybrid crust consisting of thinned continental crust plus new magmatic crust. For magma-normal margins this lateral inflections of TWTT corresponds to the start of deep-water volcanics (SDRs) at 6-7s TWTT. For magma-rich margins (with sub-aerially erupted volcanic SDRs) this TWTT inflection occurs at 2-3s.

We interpret the top basement TWTT profiles on the Southern Campos Margin to indicate a slightly magma-poor margin. The thinnest crust occurs between thinned continental crust and normal-thickness oceanic crust, consistent with a simple isostatic model where maximum decompression melting to form oceanic crust does not occur until after continental crust separation.

On the SW Santos Margin, we interpret the top basement TWTT profiles to indicate a slightly magma-rich margin. A broad region separates the end of the crustal thinning taper and the LaLOC. A simple isostatic model can generate this top basement TWTT shape as a broad region of hybrid crust or thicker-than-normal early oceanic crust.

Top basement TWTT cannot reliably identify the margin domain transition between the necking zone and hyperextended crust. This transition coincides with the onset of normal decompression melting and the start of hybrid crust.

How to cite: Graça, M., Kusznir, N., and Manatschal, G.: Rifted Margin Crustal Architecture and Magmatic Type from Time-Domain Seismic Reflection Data Using the Warner 10 second Moho TWTT Rule: A New First-Approach Methodology , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4961, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4961, 2026.

The Newfoundland rifted margin (NLRM) exhibits complex lithospheric features, including failed rifts, continental ribbons, transfer zones, and along-strike segmentation. Although the spatial variability of these tectonic features is central to understanding the region’s tectonic evolution, their interactions and broader implications remain debated. In this study, drawing on an unprecedented deep multichannel seismic dataset, we interpret a grid of margin-scale seismic reflection profiles to examine the variability of crustal necking and rift domain architectures along the NLRM and the associated Orphan Basin–Flemish Pass failed rift. Our interpretation reveals asymmetrical crustal necking on the conjugate sides of the failed rift, consistent with published numerical modelling studies, which suggest that asymmetric rifting is an early-stage process, potentially occurring before the necking phase. We observe more gradual crustal necking in regions of thinned and inferred weaker crust. In contrast, more abrupt crustal necking is associated with areas of thicker, inferred stronger crust, where transcrustal faults extending to depths greater than 20 km are imaged. Mantle serpentinization interpreted beneath both the NLRM and the failed rift zone indicates that serpentinization is not contingent on rift success or failure but is primarily governed by rheology and the availability of transcrustal faults. For magma-poor rifted margins, in contrast to magma-assisted rifting, transcrustal faulting linked with mantle serpentinization appears to facilitate continental breakup. Our systematic mapping reveals pronounced across-strike and along-strike variations in rift domain distributions, predominantly controlled by inherited transfer zones that segment the margin and that range from localized to diffuse, accommodating extension and giving rise to alternating strong and weak margin segments.  

How to cite: Alehegn, W. N. and Welford, J. K.: Nature of Crustal Necking and Rift Domain Architecture Along the Newfoundland Margin, Eastern Canada: Improved Seismic Perspectives and Interpretational Uncertainties, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5349, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5349, 2026.

Tectonic inheritance often plays a significant role in the evolution from continental rifts to passive rifted margins in extensional settings. Continental ribbons, which constitute intact continental fragments that remain tethered to their parent plates within rift systems, can form through interacting propagating rifts in pristine lithosphere but can also represent the lasting manifestation of pre-rift lithospheric heterogeneity. In the southern North Atlantic rift system, which transects the vestiges of the older Paleozoic Appalachian-Caledonian orogen, large continental ribbons are plentiful, arguably more so than anywhere else in the entire Atlantic Ocean. The spatial distribution of these ribbons, wrenched away from the North American, European, and Iberian plates during Mesozoic rifting and breakup of the Pangean supercontinent, provides insights into the pre-rift orogenic architecture of the lithosphere. This complex inheritance would go on to influence strain partitioning and sedimentary basin evolution during subsequent rifting and extensional reactivation. Studying these key components of rift systems and their consequences is often complicated by sparse seismic coverage due to their limited resource potential and their more distal locations. Yet, the characterization of continental ribbons at the lithospheric scale is necessary for their faithful incorporation into basin and plate reconstructions. To that end, alternate and complementary geophysical methodologies, such as potential field analysis, are needed to infill sparse seismic constraints and properly capture the physical characteristics of these impactful features. In this presentation, I will discuss the continental ribbons of the southern North Atlantic, the methods used to characterize their attributes, their likely tectonic origins, and how this information can be used to improve and quantify their contribution to reconstructions of the region.

How to cite: Welford, J. K.: Continental ribbons within the southern North Atlantic rift system: attributes, origins, and consequences, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5429, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5429, 2026.

EGU26-5886 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Unified Mapping of the African Rift System: Lithospheric Strength and Magmatic Evolution 

Margaret Maenner, Jean-Joel Legre, D Sarah Stamps, Aubreya Adams, and Tolulope Olugboji

The interaction between mantle plumes and continental lithosphere results in a complex spectrum of rifting outcomes, ranging from magma-rich breakups to failed rifts. Current research in the Turkana Depression posits a "Refractory Paradox," suggesting that failed rifts like the Anza Graben remain "dead zones" because prior melting events extracted volatiles, leaving behind a mechanically strong, dried-out lithosphere resistant to modification. However, it remains unclear if this "baked-dry" signature is a global requirement for rift failure or a local anomaly. We investigate this hypothesis by mapping the subtle architectural differences—specifically Moho sharpness and seismic lid preservation—that distinguish magma-poor regions from their magma-rich counterparts. To overcome the limitations of standard receiver function (RF) analysis, which is often degraded by noise and reverberations, we apply a rigorous, high-resolution workflow. We first denoise seismic data using the CRISP-RF algorithm, employing sparsity-promoting Radon transforms to suppress incoherent noise while preserving full-wavefield phases. These clean data are then inverted alongside surface wave dispersion measurements using a transdimensional probabilistic Bayesian  framework. This approach allows us to quantify non-uniqueness and robustly constrain multi-layered crustal properties (Vp/Vs ratios) and lithospheric velocity structure without placing limiting assumptions on elastic properties. By integrating these refined seismic constraints with common-conversion-point (CCP) stacking, we resolve the trade-off between magmatic underplating (gradational Moho, Vp/Vs > 1.8) and tectonic thinning (sharp Moho, Vp/Vs ~1.74). Finally, we pair these structural observations with thermo-chemical modeling (WINTERC-G/PerPleX) to convert velocities into temperature and composition. This study aims to determine if the lithospheric strength beneath the African Rift is governed by volatile depletion or alternative weakening mechanisms, such as anisotropy or eclogitization.

How to cite: Maenner, M., Legre, J.-J., Stamps, D. S., Adams, A., and Olugboji, T.: Unified Mapping of the African Rift System: Lithospheric Strength and Magmatic Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5886, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5886, 2026.

The Continent-Ocean Transition (COT) in the young Tyrrhenian basin documents mantle exhumation punctuated with multiple episodes of discrete oceanic crust formation. This observation challenges prevailing models of magma-poor COTs, which typically describe mantle exhumation preceding the emplacement of oceanic crust. Notably, this COT developed without the conventional conditions associated with magma-poor rifted margins, such as slow rifting velocities and chemically depleted mantle sources. A key observation is the low shear-wave velocity observed in the uppermost mantle of the Tyrrhenian basin and its adjacent onshore regions correlates with subduction-related volcanism, suggesting the presence of a hydrated mantle wedge with low rheological strength. Here we show that, based on 3D magmatic-thermomechanical numerical modeling, the episodic formation of oceanic crust within the Tyrrhenian basin’s COT results from the mechanical weakness of the mantle. The lithospheric mantle is exhumed to the surface through exhumation channels initiated within the weak mantle zone. The subsequent flow of partially molten mantle toward these channels leads to the development of multiple short-lived spreading centers. Our findings shed light on characteristics and mechanisms shaping the COT of marginal basins, where their opening is influenced by subduction processes.

How to cite: Su, H. and Leng, W.: Weak mantle wedge causes mantle exhumation punctuated with discrete oceanic crust in the Tyrrhenian basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7005, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7005, 2026.

EGU26-7229 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

New constraints on active normal faulting in the South Gulf of Evia, Greece 

Saoirse Coveney, Alex Whittaker, Rebecca Bell, James Wood, Haris Kranis, and Athanassios Ganas

In many areas of active faulting, the continuity of normal faults with a short or incomplete historical earthquake record and subtle topographic expression is not fully understood: as a result the seismic potential of these faults is often underestimated. The Southern Gulf of Evia rift, Greece is an example of a poorly explored normal fault bounded system, where the location and spatiotemporal evolution of the major basin bounding faults is not well constrained. We integrate geomorphic and structural field data, topographic analyses and geodetic data to constrain the locations, footwall geometries and structural evolution of 8 major extensional structures bounding the Southern margin of the South Gulf of Evia. We propose that this fault system comprises two isolated fault groups containing both partially and fully linked segments. These fault linkage scenarios suggest that the eastern fault group may have a total linked length of ca. 40 km with a maximum credible earthquake size of Mw 7.0. Further, we reconcile new analysis of vintage sparker seismic reflection data previously acquired and interpreted in the 1980s, with onshore geomorphic indicators of tectonic uplift to provide new constraints on the continuity of active normal faults offshore, including the major normal fault zones bounding the northern margin of the rift. By comparing our reconstructions of footwall relief with the seismic reflection and Ocean Bottom Seismometer (OBS) data, we suggest footwall uplift to hanging wall subsidence ratios of 1:2-1:3 and total slip rates in the order of 2-3 mm/yr. Finally, based on the correlation of seismic stratigraphy with a global eustatic sea level curve and a comparison of estimated sediment fluxes into the Gulf with measured sediment volumes in the South Gulf, we propose updated Pleistocene-Holocene ages for the basin stratigraphy and suggest possible timescales for fault evolution and linkage along the rift margins.

How to cite: Coveney, S., Whittaker, A., Bell, R., Wood, J., Kranis, H., and Ganas, A.: New constraints on active normal faulting in the South Gulf of Evia, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7229, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7229, 2026.

EGU26-7348 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Normal fault migration and basin evolution in complex rift settings: insights from the North Gulf of Evia, Central Greece 

James Wood, Rebecca Bell, Alexander Whittaker, Saoirse Coveney, Frank Chanier, Fabien Caroir, Haralambos Kranis, and Athanassios Ganas

The North Gulf of Evia is a young, active continental rift system located in Central Greece. Extension of 2-4 mm/yr is accommodated by large normal fault systems, such as the onshore Coastal Faults near Kammena Vourla, but slip rates and timing of initiation of these structures and intrabasinal offshore faults are poorly constrained. Extension is also coupled with strong rotational and strike-slip influence from the westward-propagating North Anatolian Fault, providing contrast to the nearby, orthogonal rifting in the Gulf of Corinth. The geodynamic setting of the rift has resulted in a complex configuration of normal, oblique and strike-slip faults across the North Gulf of Evia rift system. Detailed, high resolution study of faulting processes (initiation, linkage and migration) and the temporal evolution of such systems requires a high-resolution age model of syn-kinematic sedimentation. To date, no pre-Holocene sedimentary correlation has been proposed for the North Gulf of Evia, restricting the temporal scope of evolutionary studies.

We aim to unlock the temporal evolution of late-Quaternary (0-~325 ka) sedimentation and faulting in the North Gulf of Evia through the development of a syn-tectonic depositional age model for the Western Basin of the Gulf. To do this, we exploit a high resolution, high density 2D seismic reflection dataset (WATER I and II) to identify three key mappable horizons across the semi-enclosed basin using seismic stratigraphic principles including reflection terminations and onlap relationships. Based on observed late-Pleistocene deltaic clinoform packages, ages of ~12 ka (MIS 2), ~130 ka (MIS 6) and ~325 ka (MIS 9) are attributed to these horizons within our sequence stratigraphic model. The age model is applied across the Western Basin alongside a new network of offshore faults to determine the major structural components, depocentres and evolutionary history of the rift system for the first time.

We resolve the major modern structural controls on the basin to be the Kalypso Fault at the southern margin of the rift and the axial Central Graben. Holocene throw on the extensional Kalypso Fault is ~3.75 mm/yr with faults of the Central Graben deforming at throw rates of ~0.9 - 1.7 mm/yr. We show that the Kalypso Fault is linked to the western part of the onshore Coastal Fault System, widely considered the most active fault zone of the North Gulf of Evia and uplifts the hanging wall of the active Arkitsa Fault, where a sequence of uplifted Pleistocene marine terraces is preserved. Initiation of the Kalypso Fault is temporally constrained to ~325 ka from thickening relationships of syn-kinematic sediment packages following a strain migration event from the Arkitsa Fault. This migration event occurs across non-parallel structures with evolving strike of >20°, likely reflecting the regional rotational influence of the North Anatolian Fault on Central Greece. The Kalypso Fault represents the most active resolved normal fault in the Western North Gulf of Evia and presents significant, previously unrecognised seismic hazard.

How to cite: Wood, J., Bell, R., Whittaker, A., Coveney, S., Chanier, F., Caroir, F., Kranis, H., and Ganas, A.: Normal fault migration and basin evolution in complex rift settings: insights from the North Gulf of Evia, Central Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7348, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7348, 2026.

EGU26-7459 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Basement Inheritance and Its Influence on Rift Evolution and Rifted Margin Architecture: The North Sea and Mid-Norwegian Margin. 

Chloé Castagné, Gwenn Péron-Pinvidic, and Gianreto Manatschal

The Mid-Norwegian margin and the North Sea rift are among the most extensively studied regions in the world, owing to their abundant geological and geophysical datasets. Their basement architecture is complex, having been shaped by the Silurian Caledonian orogeny and subsequent gravitational collapse during the Devonian. This was followed by multiple rifting episodes, separated by periods of tectonic quiescence. While the North Sea subsequently entered a post-rift phase dominated by thermal subsidence, rifting along the Mid-Norwegian margin persisted until continental breakup in the early Eocene.

Despite these studies, the mechanisms by which remnants of the Caledonian orogeny influenced later rifting stages remain unclear. For many years, seismic imaging could not penetrate to the depths required to investigate the complete basement architecture. Recent advances in seismic reflection imaging, however, have enabled the acquisition of long-offset, deep, high-resolution profiles extending up to 16 seconds two-way travel time (s-TWTT). The GeoexMCG Regional Deep Imaging (RDI) dataset thus provides an unprecedented opportunity to study the entire basement architecture, including the lower crust and lithospheric mantle.

This contribution summarizes the first results of a PhD study focused on a large-scale interpretation of the RDI dataset, supported by offshore-onshore geological correlations and gravity and magnetic modelling. Units with distinct seismic facies -i.e., zones of consistent reflectivity characterized by amplitude, frequency, and continuity - were defined in Petrel after multiple mapping iterations. Based on these results, the aim of the PhD study is to explore how inherited basement structures influence continental rifting and the formation of rifted margins at large scales.

How to cite: Castagné, C., Péron-Pinvidic, G., and Manatschal, G.: Basement Inheritance and Its Influence on Rift Evolution and Rifted Margin Architecture: The North Sea and Mid-Norwegian Margin., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7459, 2026.

Plate motion directions, and the orientations of rift zones and oceanic spreading ridges, and of transform faults and fracture zones that are perpendicular to these ridges, are generally controlled by tectonic forces such as slab pull, mantle convection, and mantle plumes. Here, it is hypothesized that within the confines of these general orientations, the exact orientations of these structures, and therefore plate motion directions, are partially controlled by suitably oriented sets of steep continental lithospheric discontinuities (CLDs), which work in concert with these larger tectonic forces.

Previously, the observation has been made that oceanic fracture zones are contiguous with CLDs, such as suture zones and other lithospheric fault zones. Based on high-resolution bathymetry, geological and geophysical data, it is demonstrated here that continents have multiple sets of lineaments parallel to such CLDs, or contiguous with CLDs where they occur farther inland and do not reach the ocean. Published analog experiments suggest that the orientations of transform faults and fracture zones are controlled by these CLDs if the angle between the spreading direction and the CLDs is no more than ~45°. Spreading ridge segments evolve in an orientation perpendicular to these transform faults and fracture zones, so that the spreading direction becomes parallel to the transform faults and fracture zones. The implication is that the exact plate motion directions are controlled by CLDs, if a set of CLDs is orientated at low angle with the spreading direction. When plate motion directions need to change due to tectonic forces, the new hypothesis predicts that the exact directions may be controlled by a different set of suitably orientated CLDs. During later stages of oceanic spreading, the larger tectonic forces such as slab pull, mantle convection, and mantle plumes become increasingly dominant and plate motion directions may no longer be controlled by the CLDs.

While the hypothesis needs further testing, it has potentially far-reaching implications. For example, Euler pole reconstructions are commonly based on small circle patterns formed by fracture zones and transform faults in the oceanic lithosphere. Oceanic crust older than ~200 Ma is typically destroyed by subduction, and pre-Mesozoic Euler poles can therefore not be reconstructed based on that method. If the hypothesis presented above is correct, the orientations of CLDs and associated lineament sets may be used as proxies for orientations of past transform faults and fracture zones, at least during early oceanic spreading. The locations of past Euler poles may thus be better estimated based on these CLDs and lineaments, and pre-Mesozoic plate tectonic reconstructions may be much improved in deep geologic time.

How to cite: Kuiper, Y.: Do continental lithospheric discontinuities exert control on tectonic plate motion directions?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8469, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8469, 2026.

The Meso-Neoproterozoic period is sometimes referred to as the “Boring Billion” or “Earth’s Middle Age,” spanning the time between the formation of the Columbia supercontinent and the Rodinia supercontinent. This period records a key transition in the supercontinent cycle, shaping the global tectonic regime and paleogeographic pattern. In this study, laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) zircon U-Pb geochronological analysis was conducted on five sandstone samples from the Ordos Rift Zone in the western North China Craton to constrain the regional tectonic evolution and basin development processes. The detrital zircon ages can be divided into multiple age groups, with zircon grains older than 1.8 Ga derived from the basement of the North China Craton, while the younger zircon populations (< 1.8 Ga) are associated with Mesoproterozoic magmatic events. Through an integrated approach combining zircon geochronology, major and trace element analysis, and sandstone modal analysis, the tectonic setting and parent rock properties of the provenance area were identified. The tripartite sedimentary cycle of volcanic rocks, continental-margin clastic rocks, and marine carbonate rocks in the Changcheng Period of the Ordos Rift Zone was finely delineated, and the response times (2.0  Ga, 1.8  Ga, and 1.6  Ga) of the assembly, consolidation, and breakup processes of the Columbia supercontinent in the western North China Craton were calibrated, respectively. The results show that the vertical sedimentary sequence of the Changcheng System in the Ordos Rift Zone corresponds to the rift evolution stages, forming a tripartite evolutionary cycle of igneous rocks–continental-margin clastic rocks–marine carbonate rocks, which records the transition process of tectonic activity from intense to stable. Three distinct stages of basin evolution during 1.8–1.4 Ga were defined: the initial rift stage and the rift expansion stage correspond to the disintegration of the Columbia supercontinent (1.8–1.6 Ga), and the passive continental margin stage coincides with a slowdown of the late supercontinent breakup rate (1.6–1.4 Ga). The detailed characterization of the regional tectonic evolution and rift zone sedimentary filling process during the Changcheng Period in the Ordos Basin reveals the source‑to‑sink spatiotemporal sedimentary pattern controlled by the rift system, providing key constraints for the evolution of the western margin of the North China Craton during the Precambrian supercontinent transition and offering new insights into the response of the North China Craton to global-scale geodynamic processes.

How to cite: Liu, G.: Detrital Zircon Records and Tectono-Sedimentary Evolution of the Mesoproterozoic Changcheng Period Strata in the Ordos Rift Zone, Western North China Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8574, 2026.

EGU26-8746 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Effects of inheritance and surface processes on strain localization during the early stages of the Corinth Rift system development  

Ingra Barbosa, Ritske Huismans, Casey Nixon, Robert Gawthorpe, and Delphine Rouby

From 5 to ca. 2 million years ago, faulting in the Corinth Rift, in central Greece, was concentrated onshore, to the south of the present-day Gulf of Corinth. Between 2 to 1.8 Ma the active fault network migrated northward, accompanied by footwall uplift, which led to active faulting and the rift being localized offshore in the present-day Gulf of Corinth. The factors controlling this fault migration remain unknown. Overall rift evolution is controlled by tectonics, but climate-driven surface processes affect rift topography, the development and longevity of normal faults, and overall rift evolution. A simple yet effective method for assessing strain distribution within a fractured region is the Kuiper’s test, which quantifies how much a line sampled through a faulted area deviates from a uniform distribution. By calculating the cumulative extension of faults distributed along a line, it is possible to infer if the strain in this section is distributed homogeneously throughout the fractures (values close to the uniform distribution) or if the strain is localized in few large faults (large departure of the uniform distribution), and whether this variation is statistically significant. We use the finite element thermo‐mechanical numerical model Fantom-2D coupled with the landscape evolution model FastScape to investigate how inheritance and surface processes control rift faulting and progressive localization during the early stages of continental rift evolution. We test different values of crustal strength and of frictional-plastic strain weakening to evaluate the response of the models. We tested each model without surface processes, and with different aggradation and progradation rates. We evaluated fault distribution, depocenter migration and rift localization through time and compared them to high resolution datasets from the present-day Corinth Rift and central Greece. The degree of localization obtained through the Kuiper’s test for five regions in the Corinth Rift were used to further validate the models. Using datasets of a rift system with a relatively simple extension history such as the Corinth Rift helps to better constrain numerical modelling parameters and improve rift evolution models.

How to cite: Barbosa, I., Huismans, R., Nixon, C., Gawthorpe, R., and Rouby, D.: Effects of inheritance and surface processes on strain localization during the early stages of the Corinth Rift system development , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8746, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8746, 2026.

EGU26-9303 | Posters on site | TS2.1

A New Approach to Rift Kinematics During the Formation of the Black Sea Basin 

Armagan Kaykun and Russell Pysklywec

As recent hydrocarbon discoveries rekindle exploration activities in the Black Sea Basin (BSB), efforts to understand the geodynamic processes that led to the formation and evolution of the basin have started to play a significant role in understanding the structural trends formed during rifting. The debate on whether the basin rifted open as one east-west oriented basin, or as two separate basins named the Eastern and Western Black Sea Basins, has been discussed in numerous models. Evidence for the two-basin hypothesis focuses on the basin's semi-parallel ridge and depression architecture, which trends NW-SE in the east and W-E in the west. Conversely, the single-basin model is supported by the correspondence between the regional structure and geodynamic rifting models, specifically those involving an asymmetrical rift pivoting on an eastern hinge caused by slab roll-back of the subducting plate located in the south of the basin.
To address existing tectonic uncertainties, we established a new structural framework for the BSB by reinterpreting 24 long-offset 2D seismic lines. These structural constraints enabled the development of two 2D computational models, allowing us to simulate the distinct kinematic evolution of the basin's western and eastern sections. Our 2D sectioned models show that rift velocities vary significantly in the east-west direction. This contradicts previous analog models showing that the formation of the BSB was related to a simple asymmetrical rift with constantly increasing velocities towards the west from a hinge point located at the eastern margin of the basin. The complex velocity changes throughout the rift axis suggest an uneven movement throughout the subduction zone that drives the back-arc rift. Ultimately, proposing a new complex kinematic history during the evolution of the rift and alternating rift velocities throughout the rift axis, provide a better understanding of the timing of all tectonic events and the final ridge depression geometry observed throughout the BSB.

How to cite: Kaykun, A. and Pysklywec, R.: A New Approach to Rift Kinematics During the Formation of the Black Sea Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9303, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9303, 2026.

The kinematic of the southern North Atlantic is still debated and new kinematic markers are needed to improve our knowledge of the earliest movements. In this frame, we focus on the location of the first evidence of steady-state oceanic spreading offshore Galicia Bank. Such marker is a spatial criterion that can be used to propose refined new kinematic models. Galicia Bank is part of the magma-poor rifted margins of the southern North Atlantic. The margin is located west of Iberia and is conjugated to the southeastern margin of Flemish Cap. These plate corners are key for understanding the kinematics of the Iberia plate, as they are suspected to act as microplates with complex movements during the Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous. Studies already proposed domains of exhumed continental and oceanic mantle along a seismic reflection and wide-angle profile offshore Galicia Bank (Dean et al., 2015; Davy et al., 2016) but this boundary is poorly defined on a large scale along the margin. As rift phases occurred during the ‘Cretaceous Quiet Zone’ (118–83 Ma), it is not possible to identify the first oceanic crust using Earth's magnetic field reversal. We propose to interpret several E/W to NW/SE oriented seismic reflection profiles from the BREOGHAM-2005 cruise (P.I. Luis Somoza) to better constrain these areas of exhumed mantle. We based our interpretation method on previous studies of the eastern part of the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR) that described a domain of exhumed mantle with successive detachment faults on either side of the ridge axis occurring over the last 11 million years (e.g. Sauter et al., 2013; Reston et al., 2018). In addition, recent seismic reflection data allowed the definition of new criteria for characterising ultra-slow nearly amagmatic spreading ridges. We therefore map these criteria in order to locate this domain along the West Iberia margin. We provide new spatial observations of landward-dipping reflectors and exhumed mantle ridges. They are interpreted as seismic indicators of the presence of flipping detachments. A new boundary is thus proposed along the West Iberia margin separating continental mantle exhumation from steady-state ultra-slow oceanic spreading, which could serve as a constraint in kinematic constructions. The indicators of early steady-state oceanic spreading may be applied to other magma-poor rifted margins. This study may indeed be supported by the presence of the same flip-flop structures in symmetry offshore the Flemish Cap southeast margin.

How to cite: Etcheverry, L., Autin, J., and Somoza, L.: Localisation of steady-state ultra-slow oceanic spreading along magma-poor rifted margins: Case example offshore Galicia Bank (West Iberia)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9482, 2026.

EGU26-9582 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Integrated Seismic–Potential Field Constraints on the Evolution of the Dniepr–Donets Rift Basin 

Ali Nasiri, Randell Stephenson, Sergiy Stovba, Sergey Drachev, Łukasz Słonka, and Stanisław Mazur

The Dniepr–Donets Basin (DDB) is one of the largest and best-preserved intracontinental rift systems in Europe, yet the geodynamic processes responsible for its formation remain uncertain. There are two end-member models possible: (1) passive rifting driven by far-field tectonic stresses transmitted through the lithosphere, such as back-arc extension or plate boundary forces, and (2) active rifting associated with localized thermal anomalies in the mantle, potentially linked to plume-like upwellings. Distinguishing between these mechanisms is important for understanding why some continental rifts evolve toward oceanic break-up, whereas others, such as the DDB, remain confined within continental interiors.

This study aims to reassess the tectonic evolution of the DDB by integrating regional-scale seismic, borehole, gravity, and magnetic datasets into a coherent crustal and lithospheric framework. The core of the analysis is based on the interpretation of approximately 40 regional seismic reflection and refraction profiles, including classical and widely used datasets such as DOBRE’99 and Georift-2013. These seismic data are calibrated using stratigraphic, lithological, and velocity information from nearly 1,900 boreholes distributed across the basin. Fourteen key stratigraphic horizons are mapped consistently throughout the DDB, covering an area of ~76,900 km² and spanning the pre-rift, syn-rift, and post-rift sedimentary sequences.

Seismic interpretation is complemented by gravity and magnetic anomaly data, which are used to refine the geometry and continuity of major fault systems and crustal domains. The combined datasets allow the timing and kinematics of major faulting episodes and regional unconformities to be constrained with improved confidence. Balanced cross-section analysis along selected regional profiles provides quantitative estimates of crustal extension, fault displacement, and basin asymmetry, offering direct tests of competing rift models.

A three-dimensional structural model of the DDB that integrates seismic surfaces with borehole stratigraphy and velocity data is a key outcome of the work. Although still under development, this model reveals the three-dimensional architecture of the basin, including variations in sediment thickness, fault segmentation, and structural asymmetry along strike. Particular attention is paid to identifying systematic asymmetries in fault geometry and basin fill, which may indicate simple-shear deformation and lithospheric-scale detachment processes commonly associated with passive rifting. Linking shallow geological observations with deep crustal reflectivity patterns enables a more robust reconstruction of the basin’s long-term evolution.

Potential field data further provide constraints on the role of mantle processes during rifting. Spatial variations in gravity and magnetic anomalies are analyzed to detect possible mafic intrusions, high-density lower-crustal bodies, or anomalous mantle domains. These observations are used to evaluate whether thermal weakening of the lithosphere and magmatic underplating played a primary role, or whether rifting was dominated by mechanical stretching of a relatively cold lithosphere.

Overall, this ongoing research integrates crustal- and mantle-scale observations to explore the interplay between mantle dynamics, faulting, sedimentation, and basin subsidence. The results are expected to refine models of intracontinental rifting and clarify the conditions under which continental rifts either progress toward break-up or remain long-lived but abortive systems, as exemplified by the Dniepr–Donets Basin.

How to cite: Nasiri, A., Stephenson, R., Stovba, S., Drachev, S., Słonka, Ł., and Mazur, S.: Integrated Seismic–Potential Field Constraints on the Evolution of the Dniepr–Donets Rift Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9582, 2026.

EGU26-9953 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Controls on the spatio-temporal distribution of plume-related excess melting during continental rifting 

Abigail Plimmer, Ritske Huismans, and Sebastian Wolf

The complexity in the relationship between mantle and lithosphere processes may be most directly exemplified in the coupling between upwelling plumes and extending lithosphere at rifted margins, and the distribution of excess melting across these regions through space and time. Rifted margins are often described in two end-member classes; magma-rich and magma-poor, typified by the emplacement of seaward dipping reflector sequences (SDRs) and high velocity lower crustal bodies (HVLC) or the exhumation of serpentinised mantle with little extrusive melt, respectively. Previous studies have linked margin architecture and magmatic budget to extension velocity, lithosphere thickness, and rheology. The role of mantle plumes remains poorly constrained, with plumes associated with both magma-poor and magma-rich margins, implying that their influence on excess melt production is not straightforward. Our study aims to better constrain the relationship between mantle plumes and excess melting at rifted margins by exploring the interaction of plumes originating from the mantle transition zone and rifting.

We present two-dimensional numerical simulations to investigate how mantle plumes interact with lithosphere extension during continental rifting. Rifting is simulation using the ALE finite-element code FANTOM, incorporating a thermal anomaly at the base of the upper mantle to represent a stalled plume source. We systematically vary velocity, plume temperature anomaly, and plume position relative to the rift axis to explore how these parameters control the timing, magnitude, and spatial distribution of excess melting during breakup.

Our results indicate that excess melting associated with mantle plumes is both transient and spatially distributed. The timing, magnitude and lateral distribution of excess melting depends non-linearly on the interaction between plume buoyancy and lithospheric extension rate, with the strongest plume influence occurring at intermediate extension velocities. Plumes residing directly beneath the rift axis focus melt, producing temporally concentrated, focussed melt zones that promote earlier rift breakup whereas plumes which lie adjacent to the rift axis produce spatially offset and temporally delayed melt focussing, resulting in narrower but less efficiently coupled melt zones. These results demonstrate that plume-driven excess melting may be highly time-dependent with an evolving spatial distribution that reflects the efficiency of melt focussing relative to the thinning lithosphere.

How to cite: Plimmer, A., Huismans, R., and Wolf, S.: Controls on the spatio-temporal distribution of plume-related excess melting during continental rifting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9953, 2026.

EGU26-10165 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Fault activity along the western margin of the Argos Gulf (Peloponnese, Greece) revealed by tectonic geomorphology analysis 

Amélie Viger, Haralambos Kranis, Alexander Whittaker, Rebecca Bell, and Athanassios Ganas

The Gulf of Argos, Greece, is a post-Miocene basin at the north-western extremity of the Cretan Sea (southern Aegean). Its formation is attributed to NE-SW-oriented back-arc extension, induced by rollback of the subducting slab in the Hellenic arc.

The western margin of the Gulf of Argos is marked by the almost linear coastline of the eastern Peloponnese, and is related to a c.100 km long, NNW-SSE normal fault system, stretching from Kiveri to Ariana. Despite it being a recognizable structure, there are few, if any, constraints related to its degree of activity, possible segmentation, and seismic hazard potential. The immediate footwall to this fault system, which we name Western Argos Fault System (WAFS), hosts several similarly striking high-angle normal faults, whose Quaternary degree of activity is also poorly understood.

To better understand fault activity and evolution in the Gulf of Argos, we study the mid- to long-term (several kyr to a few Myr) development of the footwall of the West Argos Fault System. Our study focuses on how drainage river long profiles and footwall relief have responded dynamically to tectonic activity. We estimate an uplift rate for each footwall catchment along the WAFS from knickpoint analysis and estimates of bedrock erodibility. We then compare these results with vertical motion data collected in the field and topographical data along the western margin of the Gulf of Argos.

We propose a throw rate of 0.9-2.4 mm/yr along the WAFS, which comprises at least four segments and an overall southward migration of fault activity, as the northernmost segments appear to be significantly less active than the southern ones.

How to cite: Viger, A., Kranis, H., Whittaker, A., Bell, R., and Ganas, A.: Fault activity along the western margin of the Argos Gulf (Peloponnese, Greece) revealed by tectonic geomorphology analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10165, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10165, 2026.

EGU26-10868 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Early opening of the Central Atlantic and its connection to the Western Tethys 

Benjamin Heudes, Julie Tugend, Geoffroy Mohn, and Nick Kusznir

                Deciphering the dynamics of continental breakup is fundamental to understanding how oceanic basins initiate, segment, propagate and connect to the global oceanic system. However, constraining the spatial and temporal evolution of continental rupture is challenging as it precedes the establishment of continuous oceanic spreading and reliable kinematic markers such as marine magnetic anomalies. Here we focus on the earliest stage of Pangea breakup, with the aim of constraining basin segmentation during the initial opening of the Central Atlantic Ocean (CAO), prior to its connection with the main Panthalassa Ocean through the Western Tethys.

                The CAO corresponds to the earliest opened branch of the Atlantic.  The timing of its continental breakup and onset of oceanic spreading remains debated, with proposed breakup ages ranging from 195 Ma to 175 Ma. This uncertainty leads to major ambiguities in the geodynamic context of continental rupture, with consequences for the interpretation of rifted and nascent oceanic basins segmentation, connectivity, and associated depositional environments. It also affects the interpretation of major Jurassic magnetic anomalies identified across the CAO: the East Coast Magnetic Anomaly (ECMA) and Blake Spur Magnetic Anomaly (BSMA), which are commonly used as kinematic markers in early Atlantic reconstruction.

                To address these issues, we have compiled a regional database to integrate major rift structures and basins, Upper Triassic salt distribution, and variations in the nature of the ocean-continent-transition and magmatic type. We present interpretations of seismic reflection data along the Central Atlantic rifted margins, calibrated using available drilling results. These data allow us to constrain rift basin age and architecture, fault system development and the distribution of rift-related salt provinces. In parallel, regional crustal thickness maps derived from gravity inversion are used to investigate along-strike variations in magmatic budget during continental breakup and the early stages of oceanic accretion, relation with the spatial distribution of the ECMA and BSMA.

                Our first results confirm pronounced along-strike variations in magmatic volumes emplaced during continental breakup and the initial phases of oceanic spreading. The newly compiled database will provide key constraints for paleogeographic reconstructions, with the aim of clarifying the duration of oceanic basin isolation, the timing of basin connectivity through the Western Tethys and sedimentation pathways associated with the early Atlantic evolution.

How to cite: Heudes, B., Tugend, J., Mohn, G., and Kusznir, N.: Early opening of the Central Atlantic and its connection to the Western Tethys, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10868, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10868, 2026.

EGU26-11130 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Strain partitioning in the Natron Basin, East African Rift: Insights from geodetic and seismic moment rates. 

Ivan Navarrete, Jean-Arthur Olive, Eric Calais, Derek Keir, and Manon Dalaison

The Natron Basin is located within the eastern branch of the East African Rift, a segment characterized by greater magmatic activity compared to the western branch. This activity has been shown to play a key role in accommodating deformation in the eastern rift, alongside crustal-scale faulting. The Natron Basin represents a particularly suitable natural laboratory to investigate the interaction between active tectonic and magmatic deformation, as previous studies have documented magmatic intrusion events associated with active rifting episodes in the region.

In this study, we use new geodetic observations acquired during a GNSS campaign conducted in the Natron Basin in summer 2025, and started in 2013, to investigate present-day deformation patterns. Campaign-derived horizontal (and vertical) velocities are used to estimate regional strain rates and to derive geodetic moment rates under standard mechanical assumptions. These geodetic estimates provide an integrated measure of ongoing extension across the basin.

To assess how this deformation is released seismically, we compare geodetic moment rates with seismic moment rates inferred from global earthquake catalogs, including NEIC and ISC; over comparable spatial and temporal scales. This comparison allows us to place bounds on the seismic coupling coefficient of rift normal faults.

The observed mismatch between geodetic and seismic moment rates suggest that a significant fraction of present-day deformation in the Natron Basin is accommodated though aseismic processes. These may include distributed crustal deformation and contributions from magma intrusions, which are known to influence rift evolution in magma-rich segments of the East African Rift. These observations illustrate the potential of combined geodetic and seismic analyses to investigate strain partitioning in magma-rich segments of continental rifts.

How to cite: Navarrete, I., Olive, J.-A., Calais, E., Keir, D., and Dalaison, M.: Strain partitioning in the Natron Basin, East African Rift: Insights from geodetic and seismic moment rates., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11130, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11130, 2026.

EGU26-11281 | Orals | TS2.1

Reassessing modes of Plume-Rift Magmatism 

Jason P. Morgan and César R. Ranero

Several types of magmatism are typically associated with continental stretching and rift formation. The South Atlantic Rifted Margin is a particularly well-studied system that exhibits: (1) Thousands-km-long massive dike swarms – likely linked to the Tristan Plume/hotspot; (2) the Parana-Etendeka continental flood basalt (CFB); and (3) the formation of extensive seaward dipping reflector sequences (SDRs) along the southern portion of this rifted margin. Here we review the distribution, timing, and volumes of these different modes of rift-related magmatism in relation to rift evolution.

Great dike swarms formed prior to, during, and soon after the Parana-Etendeka flood basalt event at 136.5-135.5 Ma. Although comparable in spatial extent and volume to the well-known Proterozoic Mackenzie dike swarm that similarly extended from a continental flood basalt, summed dike volumes appear to only be ~10% (0.15e6 km^3) of the Parana CFB magmatism (~1.5e6) and ~2% of total magmatism (~6e6) associated with South Atlantic Rifting including SDR provinces.

The defining characteristic of the CFB event is that it occurred very rapidly, which appears most consistent with a sudden lithospheric thinning event (e.g. lower lithospheric delamination) in the presence of hot plume material. A plume-head rising under thick continental lithosphere simply could not create this sudden burst of volcanic activity, thus an abrupt lithospheric thinning event appears needed to explain this melting anomaly. Note that there is seismic evidence consistent with such a delamination event both in the thinned lower lithosphere beneath Parana and the presence of a delaminated lithospheric fragment in the transition zone near the site of the modern Tristan Plume.

Finally, the largest volcanism associated with South Atlantic rifting is linked to the SDR province including associated underplated magmas offshore the southern margins of South American and Africa. This post-CFB magmatic activity can be quantitatively explained by more extensive melting of southward flowing Tristan Plume material after extensive rifting has thinned the extending lithosphere to <~80km. The later timing of this activity (~130-125 Ma) relative to the CFB (136.5-135.5 Ma) suggests that it, too, was not linked to the arrival of a plume head, but rather the persistent ‘tail’ of the Tristan Plume.  We will also briefly discuss potential implications for the epeirogeny linked to plume-rift evolution.

 

How to cite: Morgan, J. P. and Ranero, C. R.: Reassessing modes of Plume-Rift Magmatism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11281, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11281, 2026.

EGU26-11555 | Orals | TS2.1

Styles of extensional reactivation in rifted margins – comparing numerical modeling results to nature 

Zoltán Erdős, Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic, Susanne Buiter, and Joya Tetreault

Many rifted margins develop in regions that previously experienced oceanic subduction and continent–continent collision. This implies that continental rifting commonly occurs in a lithosphere that contains significant inherited features, rather than in a homogeneous medium. Such inheritance can be broadly classified into three categories – structural, rheological, and thermal – which typically coexist. Inherited features may strongly influence rift evolution and resulting margin architecture.

In this study, we use 2D thermo-mechanical numerical models to investigate how complex inheritance, featuring structural, rheological and thermal components, affects subsequent phases of continental rifting. Our models simulate rifting following orogenesis that occurs through oceanic subduction, microcontinent accretion, and continental collision. By varying the size and complexity of the pre-rift orogen, we evaluate the relative importance of different types of inheritance in the development of rifted margins. We compare the resulting margin architectures with natural examples.

We find that a dynamic interplay exists between structural, rheological, and thermal inheritance, strongly influencing the resulting rifted margin architectures. In small, cold orogens, structural inheritance is predominant, whereas in large, warm orogens, thermal and rheological inheritance play more significant roles. The relative importance of thermal and rheological inheritance is particularly challenging to assess, but we propose that the former plays the more prominent role. To illustrate these contrasts, we compare conjugate rifted margin architectures of two end-member models with natural examples from the opening of the North and South Atlantic Oceans. Our experiments reproduce a diverse array of features observed in the natural examples, including the formation of continental fragments and allochthons. They illustrate the complex deformation pathways through which rifted margin structures may have been achieved. Our results thus highlight the critical role of deformation history in shaping the evolution of continental rifting.

How to cite: Erdős, Z., Peron-Pinvidic, G., Buiter, S., and Tetreault, J.: Styles of extensional reactivation in rifted margins – comparing numerical modeling results to nature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11555, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11555, 2026.

EGU26-12670 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Intermediate-complexity modeling of magma–tectonic interaction in continental rifts 

Menno Fraters, Sascha Brune, Eleonora Rivalta, Rene Gassmöller, Sibiao Liu, Ameha Atnafu Muluneh, and Cedric Thieulot

Continental rifting often induces decompression melting and the ascent of magma that intrudes into the brittle crust in the form of dikes and sills and that extrudes along volcanic fields. At the same time, continental rifts experience stress from topographic loading due to rift flank uplift. It is clear that these two processes interact in magmatic rifts such as the Kenya Rift, the Main Ethiopian Rift, the Afar triple junction, and at the Icelandic plate boundary. However, separating the interplay between tectonic and magmatic processes, the evolving topography and the rift-related stress field, as well as the impact of these processes on dike-fault interactions from field observations alone remains difficult.


Previous modeling studies of time-dependent magma-tectonic interactions in extensional tectonic settings generally fall into two categories: (1) Simple models (e.g. Buck et al., 2005) represent diking by a prescribed fixed rectangular zone of horizontal divergence. While this approach can be applied to model tens of millions of years of dike injection along spreading ridges, its simplicity prevents applications to continental rifts where magmatism manifests over broad areas. (2) More complex setups simulating magma ascent via porous flow and fluid-driven fracture (e.g., Li et al. 2023). This approach allows to study the evolution of individual dikes, but its computational costs prevent application to lithosphere-scale rifts over geological time scales. 

Here, we present a numerical workflow that can be categorized as a model of intermediate complexity. The dikes are nucleated at the brittle-ductile transition above zones of partial melt. They are then propagated perpendicular to the minimum compressive stress, similar to the approach of Maccaferri et al. (2014), until they reach their freezing depth or the surface. In this presentation, we show how we  approach this problem and how we implement it in the open-source community geodynamics model ASPECT. We demonstrate that the generated dikes are being focused in specific regions, and how the directional dilation and heat injection during magma intrusion through dikes influence the long-term rifting evolution. 

References:

Buck, W. Roger, Luc L. Lavier, and Alexei N. B. Poliakov. “Modes of Faulting at Mid-Ocean Ridges.” Nature 434, no. 7034 (April 2005): 719–23. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03358.

Li, Yuan, Adina E Pusok, Timothy Davis, Dave A May, and Richard F Katz. “Continuum Approximation of Dyking with a Theory for Poro-Viscoelastic–Viscoplastic Deformation.” Geophysical Journal International 234, no. 3 (September 1, 2023): 2007–31. https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggad173.

Maccaferri, Francesco, Eleonora Rivalta, Derek Keir, and Valerio Acocella. “Off-Rift Volcanism in Rift Zones Determined by Crustal Unloading.” Nature Geoscience 7, no. 4 (April 2014): 297–300. https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2110.

How to cite: Fraters, M., Brune, S., Rivalta, E., Gassmöller, R., Liu, S., Muluneh, A. A., and Thieulot, C.: Intermediate-complexity modeling of magma–tectonic interaction in continental rifts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12670, 2026.

The presence of pre- to early synrift salt leads to varying degrees of decoupling between supra- and subsalt deformation during rifting. Decoupling is favored by thick salt or small fault displacement. This has been examined in detail in low-𝛽settings such as the southern and central North Sea and is applicable to the proximal domains of rifted margins. In addition, the role of late syn-rift salt on margins has been extensively studied. But the behavior of pre- to early synrift salt in the high-𝛽 necking, hyperextended, and exhumed mantle domains remains poorly understood.

A common suprasalt geometry in the necking and hyperextended domains of the western Iberian margin is that of strata that dip and thicken basinward. These might be mistaken for growth strata adjacent to a landward-dipping fault bounding a horst or for salt evacuation structures in a half graben, with both interpretations invoking low-𝛽, high-angle normal faults. However, they more likely record extension associated with large-offset detachment faults, but with thickening onto the top of the hanging wall instead of the fault. Slip ceases on the low-angle, basinward-dipping fault between the hanging- and footwall cutoffs of the salt, with continued extension on the deeper part of the fault transferred to slip on the steeper, landward-dipping hanging-wall salt in a zig-zag pattern like that of fish-tail thrusts. This simple concept can guide interpretations in areas with inadequate imaging.

The same idea also explains the presence of significant volumes of pre- to early synrift salt in the exhumed mantle domain, as seen in the Mauléon Basin of the NW Pyrenees. This relationship is enigmatic because mantle represents new real estate that formed after salt deposition and, moreover, any salt should be highly attenuated. The solution is that as mantle is exhumed from beneath the upper plate, extension on the landward-dipping exhumation detachment is transferred to the basinward-dipping salt detachment on that upper plate, thereby generating a zig-zag fault geometry. Effectively, the upper plate moves out from between both detachments, which merge at the hanging-wall cutoff of the upper plate such that salt and suprasalt strata end up juxtaposed above the footwall of the exhumation detachment. That part of the detachment becomes locked and the salt above the mantle does not get attenuated by further extension.

How to cite: Rowan, M., Chenin, P., and Manatschal, G.: Using stratal geometries above prerift to early synrift salt to constrain crustal fault interpretations in the distal domains of magma-poor rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12780, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12780, 2026.

The Meso-Neoproterozoic Yanliao Aulacogen in the northern North China Craton (NCC) preserves a critical sedimentary record of the Columbia supercontinent breakup. However, the geodynamic mechanism driving its episodic subsidence and distinct asymmetric architecture (e.g., the "north-faulted, south-overlapping" geometry) remains debated. Specifically, how the rigid cratonic lithosphere accommodated significant extension under the hotter thermal conditions of the Mesoproterozoic represents a geodynamic paradox. To address this, we integrate geological prototype basin reconstruction with 2D thermo-mechanical modeling (ASPECT).

Constrained by stratigraphic correlations and detrital zircon provenance data from the Yanliao and Liaodong areas, we performed a systematic parametric study to test the sensitivity of rift evolution to mantle potential temperature (Tp) and lithospheric rheology. Our reconstruction reveals a rapid subsidence phase coincident with regional magmatism (~1.38 Ga). Correspondingly, numerical results indicate that simple mechanical stretching is insufficient to localize strain within the thick cratonic keel. Instead, a melt- or fluid-induced rheological weakening mechanism is required to reproduce the observed lithospheric thinning and basin depth. We propose that the Yanliao Aulacogen marks a transition in tectonic style, where the interplay between a hot, weak lower crust and magmatic pulses controlled basin evolution. This study provides new quantitative constraints on the geodynamic regime of NCC and highlights the necessity of incorporating Precambrian-specific rheological laws in ancient basin analysis. It not only reconstructs the paleogeography of the Yanliao Aulacogen but also provides quantitative constraints on the geodynamic regime of the NCC during the supercontinent cycle.

How to cite: Liu, J.: Rheological Controls on Intracratonic Rifting: Insights from Stratigraphic Reconstruction and Geodynamic Modeling of the Mesoproterozoic Yanliao Aulacogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13025, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13025, 2026.

EGU26-13086 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Magma-poor spreading at the Southwest Indian ridge: new insights from multichannel seismic reflection data and implications for magma-poor rifted margins 

Julia Autin, Daniel Sauter, Sylvie Leroy, Mathilde Cannat, and Victor Cabiativa Pico

Observations at active magma-poor mid-oceanic ridges during ultraslow spreading (< 20 km/Myr full rate) are crucial for understanding the oceanization processes taking place during tectonic plate breakup. Particularly along magma-poor rifted margins, where subcontinental mantle is exhumed prior to the onset of oceanic spreading. It is hypothesized that this exhumation, occurring along detachment faults, is accompanied by a progressive increase in the magmatic budget, ultimately leading to the formation of a spreading ridge. These exhumation processes are believed to be similar to those observed in magma-poor areas along ultra-slow-spreading ridges, such as the easternmost part of the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR).

There, dredging revealed an oceanic basement composed of serpentinized exhumed mantle intruded by gabbros and locally overlain by variable amounts of basalts (Sauter et al., 2013). The morphology of the serpentinite ridges allowed to propose a "flip-flop" evolution of the detachment faults, characterized by alternating fault vergences. In this study, we analyse large-scale seismic reflection profiles of the Sismosmooth cruise (2014), over a series of peridotite ridges formed by flip-flop detachment processes. The absence of sedimentary cover allows for direct observation and ground-truthing of the nature of the exhumed basement at the seafloor (dredges, sub-marine images, bathymetry, TOBI side-scan sonar data). However, seismic reflection data are challenging to interpret due to the high impedance contrast between the water column and the basement, which limits wave penetration in the basement (Canales et al., 2004).

Our objective is to identify new criteria for identifying flip-flop detachment faults in contexts where the basement surface is covered by sediments, i.e. at continental margins. We also aim at identifying differences between flip-flop faulting at mid-ocean ridges and magma-poor rifted-margins. Detachment fault blocks in the easternmost SWIR form large amplitude, regularly spaced (11-18 km), mostly rounded and asymmetric ridges that expose serpentinized peridotites, locally with a thin basaltic cover. Seismic reflection data shows that the reflective top basement is locally affected by normal faults dipping mostly toward the ridge axis. Deep reflectors parallel to the top basement (~0.8 s TWT below top basement) occur locally, mostly beneath the inward-facing slopes of ridges, where the basement top is concave. We propose that they result from magma entrapment in the axial rift, when a new, antithetic, detachment fault cuts the previous one. Higher heat flow and hydrothermalism in the fault damage zone could prevent melt ascension to the seafloor.

We next look for these features (smooth reflective top basement ridges and reflectors ~0.8 s TWT below top basement) in seismic reflection profiles acquired across magma-poor rifted margins where flip-flop processes are suspected. We propose an interpretation of smooth basement ridges in the most distal magma-poor rifted margins as proto-oceanic or oceanic domains. We apply this approach to the Iberia and Antarctica fossil margins and show how this new criteria, allowing us to propose that flip-flop detachment processes took place during or directly after the final breakup of the lithospheric mantle, may help map and interpret key domains of the most distal part of magma-poor rifted margins.

How to cite: Autin, J., Sauter, D., Leroy, S., Cannat, M., and Cabiativa Pico, V.: Magma-poor spreading at the Southwest Indian ridge: new insights from multichannel seismic reflection data and implications for magma-poor rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13086, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13086, 2026.

EGU26-13194 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Mapping the Moho Geometry around the exhumated mantle in the Tyrrhenian Sea: A Synthesis of Multi-vintage Seismic Data and DSDP/ODP/IODP Drilling Results 

Lining Yang, Manel Prada, César R. Ranero, Maria Filomena Loreto, and Nevio Zitellini

The Tyrrhenian Sea is a young back-arc basin that began to open in the Langhian/Serravallian (15.97-13.82 Ma). Its formation was driven by the eastward roll-back of the Apennine-Maghrebide subduction system, leading to the exhumation of the mantle in the Vavilov Basin. The spatio-temporal evolution of this exhumation occurred just after the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). Consequently, the distribution and thickness of Messinian evaporites (5.97–5.33 Ma) provide a chronostratigraphic marker to constrain the transition from continental rifting to mantle exhumation. Within this framework, the present study aims to reconstruct a refined 3D Moho topography to reveal the relationship between crustal thinning and mantle exhumation.

In the Tyrrhenian Sea, we analysed a comprehensive suite of legacy seismic lines, including the SITHERE (1985), CS (1989), CROP (1995), and MEDOC and CHIANTI (2010 and 2015) surveys. We then converted Two-Way Travel time (TWT) into depth, integrating a robust velocity-depth model generated from five 2D seismic reflection profiles with coincident refraction data collected during the Spanish Survey MEDOC/CHIANTI. The resulting Moho geometry and the boundaries of mantle exhumation are validated and constrained by a synthesis of borehole data from DSDP, ODP (Sites 651 and 655), and the recent IODP Expedition 402 (Sites U1612, U1615, and U1616).

Our mapping reveals that a prominent, high-amplitude reflector is consistently observed across the region, typically occurring around 7s TWT. Once converted into depth, this interface deepens toward the continental margins and shallows toward the basin centres. In the Vavilov Basin, where mantle exhumation has been confirmed by drilling (U1614, U1616, and 651), we have identified reflectors within the exhumed basement. Notably, as imaged by the MEDOC-9 seismic profile crossing the heterogeneous exhumed domain at IODP Site U1612, one of these reflectors is sub-horizontal and truncates a set of rotated reflectors, suggesting a possible complex fault-like feature within the mantle.

The identified reflectors occurring within the mantle may be either a tectonic or hydrothermal boundary, such as a serpentinization front or a major detachment fault within the exhumed domains. Spatial correlations between Moho shallowing and the thinning of Messinian units indicate that the most intense phase of crustal thinning and mantle exhumation in the Vavilov Basin occurred shortly after the Messinian. Our new 3D Moho contour map provides a refined geodynamic framework for constraining the timing and magnitude of lithospheric extension in this back-arc region and for guiding future geodynamic modelling.   

How to cite: Yang, L., Prada, M., Ranero, C. R., Loreto, M. F., and Zitellini, N.: Mapping the Moho Geometry around the exhumated mantle in the Tyrrhenian Sea: A Synthesis of Multi-vintage Seismic Data and DSDP/ODP/IODP Drilling Results, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13194, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13194, 2026.

EGU26-13499 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Consequences of Elevated Pre-Rift Lithosphere Geotherm on the Rifting and Breakup of the South China Sea 

Nick Kusznir, Brian Taylor, Francois Sapin, Cuimei Zhang, Gianreto Manatschal, and Pauline Chenin

Before Oligocene continental breakup at ~30 Ma, the South China Sea (SCS) lithosphere had an elevated geotherm following Cretaceous northward subduction of Pacific or Proto-SCS oceanic lithosphere under the continental South China block resulting in an Andean style orogeny and volcanic arc. We examine the consequences of this elevated geotherm on SCS crustal thickness determined from gravity inversion and determine the amount of lithosphere extension required for continental breakup and sea-floor spreading initiation.

Subsidence analysis of the northern SCS rifted margin shows up to 2 km subsidence of the base Oligocene unconformity to the present day that cannot be explained by observed extensional faulting and that we attribute to thermal subsidence from a very large pre-breakup lithosphere thermal perturbation. Parameterising the magnitude of this thermal perturbation by a McKenzie β factor requires a very large β factor > 4.

SCS crustal thickness predicted from gravity inversion incorporating an elevated pre-Oligocene lithosphere geotherm (GI model P3) is compared with that produced using an equilibrium initial lithosphere (GI model K1b). For very thinned continental crust and oceanic crust, GI models K1b and P3 give similar Moho depths that calibrate well against seismic reflection Moho depth. GI model K1b produces Moho depths consistently too deep (~ 5 km) for the northern SCS margin. In contrast GI model P3 with an elevated pre-rift geotherm produces Moho depths that calibrate well against seismic observations.

We examine profiles crossing the SCS to determine how much extension is required to stretch and thin continental lithosphere to generate continental breakup and initiate sea-floor spreading? Cumulative extension is calculated by integrating lithosphere thinning factor (1-1/β) determined by gravity inversion using GI model P3. Measured lithosphere extension prior to continental breakup and sea-floor spreading initiation in the SCS ranges between 303 km in the east and 558 km in the west predicted by GI model P3. In contrast measured lithosphere extension prior to rupture and separation of continental crust on the Iberia-Newfoundland conjugate rifted margins is 180 +/-20 km. Substantially more extension of continental crust (>200%) occurs before continental crustal breakup in the SCS compared with that between the Iberia and Newfoundland Atlantic margins

Our gravity inversion predicts a very wide region of continental crust with thicknesses between 25 and 10 km in the SCS, very much wider than for Atlantic type margins, due to a weak inherited SCS lithosphere rheology. The hot lithosphere geotherm prior to rifting and breakup gives a weak lithosphere rheology favouring extensional boudinage of the continental crust rather than crustal rupture and separation. Hot SCS lithosphere deformation contrasts with colder Atlantic Ocean type margins (e.g. Iberia-Newfoundland) where colder and stronger lithosphere rheology generates necking and focussing of lithosphere stretching and thinning.

How to cite: Kusznir, N., Taylor, B., Sapin, F., Zhang, C., Manatschal, G., and Chenin, P.: Consequences of Elevated Pre-Rift Lithosphere Geotherm on the Rifting and Breakup of the South China Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13499, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13499, 2026.

EGU26-13577 | Posters on site | TS2.1

SOSEM, South Santos Seismic and modelling experiment: analyzing rift-plume interaction during break-up - Preliminary results. 

Marta Perez-Gussinye, Jenny S. Collier, Yuhan Li, Tim Minshull, Jenny Duckworth, Yuan Nie, Sergio Fontes, Adelvison Alves, Gilberto Neto, Ingo Grevemeyer, Mario Araujo, Maryline Moulin, and Daniel Aslanian

What are the factors that control the generation and emplacement of magma during the rifting and breakup of continents? The Southeastern margin of Brazil along the South Atlantic Ocean offers an unprecedented opportunity to analyze this question. Here, the Tristan mantle plume appears to have exerted a significant influence on the magmatic processes associated with rifting. Yet, the influence of the plume on magmatism was spatially variable and heterogeneous along the margin. The basins south of the Rio Grande Fracture Zone (RGFZ) show clear evidence of magma-rich rifting, characterised by seaward-dipping reflectors and lower crustal magmatic intrusions emplaced during rifting. However, to the north of the RGFZ, the Santos and Campos Basins, generally lack the typical features of magma-rich margins. This asymmetric distribution of magmatism around the original plume head, differs from the classical view of plume-rift interaction which assumes that volcanism should be symmetrically distributed with respect to the plume head, as observed in the North Atlantic1.

To unravel the geological controls on the spatio-temporal distribution of magmatism during rifting, we carried out a wide-angle seismic experiment across the transitional zone between the Santos and Pelotas basins in November 2025. This area has been well-imaged with deep commercial MCS imaging (e.g. [2]). However, information on the nature of the crust is currently lacking and questions persist on the compositional nature of the São Paulo plateau, which has been interpreted as either extended and potentially intruded continental crust (e.g. [3], [4]) or as an oceanic plateau5.

During cruise MSM141 on board the R/V Maria S. Merian we acquired three wide-angle lines overlapping with pre-existing ION-GXT multichannel seismic lines 150 and 140 across the margin and 220 across the RGFZ. In total, 126 stations were deployed at ~8.5 km spacing. Simultaneously, 29 onshore stations were deployed along a ~200-km-long transect aligned with line 150. These three-component broadband stations were spaced 5-10 km apart and operated continuously at 250 Hz for up to 42 days. During shooting, an airgun array with a total volume of 64 L (4,160 in3) was used as the seismic source. The seismic experiment aims to reveal how magmatism changed with distance from the RGFZ, and the crustal nature of the Abimael Ridge and of the São Paulo Plateau. Our specific goals are to understand the 3D kinematic history of the area, and the role of the preexisting lithospheric structure and the RGFZ in controlling the spatio-temporal distribution of magmatism. The project has been funded by DFG and Petrobras and will include seismic tomography of the wide angle data and numerical modelling of the opening of this area of the South Atlantic.

References

Morgan, J. P. et al. (2020). PNAS, 117(45), 27877-27883. doi:10.1073/pnas.2012246117

McDermott et al. (2019). EPSL, 521, 14-24. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2019.05.049

Evain et al., 2015. JGR, v. 120, p. 5401–5431.

Araujo et al. (2022). Geol. Soc. Lon. Spec. Publ., 524(1). doi:10.1144/SP524-2021-123

Karner et al. 2021, in Marcio R. Mello, Pinar O. Yilmaz, and Barry J. Katz, eds., AAPG Memoir 124, p.215–256.

How to cite: Perez-Gussinye, M., Collier, J. S., Li, Y., Minshull, T., Duckworth, J., Nie, Y., Fontes, S., Alves, A., Neto, G., Grevemeyer, I., Araujo, M., Moulin, M., and Aslanian, D.: SOSEM, South Santos Seismic and modelling experiment: analyzing rift-plume interaction during break-up - Preliminary results., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13577, 2026.

EGU26-13740 | Orals | TS2.1

Multi-Physics Imaging of the Goban Spur Magma-Poor Rifted Margin: New Constraints on Breakup Processes Across the Continent–Ocean Transition 

Gaye Bayrakci, Tim A. Minshull, Steven Constable, Kyle Ivey, Raghu Ram, Alexander Lane, Marta Perez-Gussinye, and Javier Garcia-Pintado

Magma-poor rifted margins record late-stage continental breakup characterised by extreme thinning, mantle exhumation and serpentinisation, and variable magmatic addition across the continent–ocean transition. Disentangling these processes remains challenging using seismic P-wave velocities alone, because serpentinisation and mafic additions can produce overlapping velocity signatures. Electrical resistivity provides a complementary constraint because serpentinisation is thought to increase conductivity, while mafic additions are expected to generate resistive structures.

In September 2023, we acquired a ~200 km multi-physics geophysical profile across the Goban Spur magma-poor rifted margin offshore Ireland, which records continental breakup and the opening of the Atlantic basin at ~100–125 Ma. We deployed 49 multi-sensor seafloor instruments, most of which recorded wide-angle controlled-source seismic, controlled-source electromagnetic (CSEM), and magnetotelluric (MT) data. All data were sampled at 250 Hz. The profile is collinear with two high-quality multichannel seismic (MCS) reflection profiles acquired in 2013 and 2024.

Seismic traveltime tomography images a sharp transition from >10 km-thick continental crust to an exhumed mantle domain where pristine peridotite velocities are reached at ~4 km below the seabed, implying the presence of a ~3-4 km-thick zone comprising of serpentinised peridotite beneath the thin (< 1 km) sediment cover. Additional tomographic constraints come from refracted arrivals in the MCS streamer data. This transition coincides with a lateral decrease in resistivity inferred from MT inversions. Toward the oceanward end of the profile, magnetic anomaly C33r marks the transition to oceanic crust; oceanward of C33r, velocities indicate a more complex structure than typical mature oceanic crust, remaining similar to those in the exhumed mantle domain. MT inversions at the oceanward end further reveal a shallow lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary (LAB) at ~55–60 km depth expressed as a sharp increase in conductivity, which we interpret as due to the presence of partial melt. This shallow LAB is consistent with independent surface-wave constraints and is potentially sustained by ongoing small-scale convection as suggested by geodynamic modelling. These multi-physics results provide new constraints on lithospheric structure and breakup processes at a magma-poor rifted margin.

How to cite: Bayrakci, G., Minshull, T. A., Constable, S., Ivey, K., Ram, R., Lane, A., Perez-Gussinye, M., and Garcia-Pintado, J.: Multi-Physics Imaging of the Goban Spur Magma-Poor Rifted Margin: New Constraints on Breakup Processes Across the Continent–Ocean Transition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13740, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13740, 2026.

EGU26-13752 | ECS | Orals | TS2.1

Along-rift variations in magma system geometry observed using Sentinel-1 InSAR data from the East African Rift System 

Ben Ireland, Juliet Biggs, Fabien Albino, and William Hutchison

Volcano deformation signals detected using InSAR can be used to infer and contrast magmatic system geometry between volcanoes, although their observations present only a brief ‘snapshot’ of the system in geological time. Thus, whilst varying deformation signals may reflect ‘permanent’ differences in magmatic system architecture between systems, they may also simply reflect temporal variability in activity within otherwise similar systems. On geological timescales, magmatic system processes are controlled by tectonics, chiefly crustal properties and mantle melt supply, whereas their shorter-term activity is controlled by the relative strengths of the interacting mafic, tectonic, and silicic parts of the system, varying on timescales of 10s, 100s and 1000s of years, respectively.

Here, using this framework, we combine systematic InSAR-based analytical modelling with additional geochemical and geophysical observations to 16 deforming volcanoes in the Eastern Branch of the East African Rift System (EARS), to assess the prevalence and ‘permanence’ of along-rift variations in magma system geometry. The EARS is characterised by a wide variety of volcanism, rift tectonics, and deformation signals; mature continental rifts with large, central silicic caldera systems, thick crust (25-40 km), and low spreading rates (2-5 mm/yr) further south give way to nascent seafloor spreading ridges further north predominantly mafic volcanism, thinner crust (15-25 km), and higher spreading rates (10-17 mm/yr). The impacts of these variations on volcano deformation signals are important for understanding how architecture and activity of magmatic systems varies along-rift, and for the first time, routinely acquired and processed Sentinel-1 InSAR data presents the opportunity assess them.

To model each signal, we compare up to 9 possible source geometries, assessing model preference using Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC). The modelled deformation sources show a systematic change in melt geometry from dominantly horizontal in the mature continental rifts to vertical in the Erta Ale Volcanic Range (EAVR), indicating structural differences in magmatic system architecture. The extent and magnitude of deformation signals in the Kenyan Rift and Central Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) are also generally larger than in the EAVR during this period. Elsewhere, differences between the Northern and Central MER are attributed to temporal variability. Overall, along-rift differences in deformation patterns are attributed to both temporal variability and permanent differences in magmatic system architecture, with the latter influenced by crustal thickness and melt supply, impacting melt residence times and fractionation.

How to cite: Ireland, B., Biggs, J., Albino, F., and Hutchison, W.: Along-rift variations in magma system geometry observed using Sentinel-1 InSAR data from the East African Rift System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13752, 2026.

EGU26-13890 | Orals | TS2.1

A method to check the structural coherence of magma-poor rifted margins seismic interpretations: application to the Iberian margin 

Pauline Chenin, Nick J. Kusznir, Mark G. Rowan, and Gianreto Manatschal

During continental rifting, two main types of faults accommodate crustal extension and thinning, namely high-angle normal faults and large-offset (“low-angle”) detachment faults. Classical interpretations of Atlantic-type rifted margins assume a predominance of high-angle normal faults in the proximal margin and of extensional detachment faults in the most distal domain; however, the structural interpretation of the so-called necking domain in between remains disputed.

Identifying high-angle faults and extensional detachment faults at rifted margins is challenging because: (1) seismic reflection images may not allow interpreters to indisputably locate the top basement and/or recognize syn-tectonic sedimentary sequences; and (2) the interpretation of extensional detachment faults is often debatable due to their faint topographic and stratigraphic expressions and the common overprint of their exhumed footwall by high-angle normal faults or erosion. Yet, the accurate identification of high-angle and extensional detachment faults is crucial for understanding the stratigraphic, thermal and isostatic evolutions of rift systems, all of which are fundamental to successful predictions.

We present a methodology to interpret crustal-scale seismic reflection images of magma-poor rifted margins and test the reliability of structural interpretations via geometrical criteria. We use TGS line 140 located offshore Portugal, north of the Peniche peninsula, as a case study. 

How to cite: Chenin, P., Kusznir, N. J., Rowan, M. G., and Manatschal, G.: A method to check the structural coherence of magma-poor rifted margins seismic interpretations: application to the Iberian margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13890, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13890, 2026.

EGU26-14128 | Posters on site | TS2.1

 The Newfoundland margin crust: Understanding the Atlantic rifting. 

Laura Gómez de la Peña, César R. Ranero, Manel Prada, Irene Merino, Donna Shillington, and Valentí Sallarès

The structure of the Newfoundland–West Iberian conjugate margins has been extensively studied during the past 50 years in hundreds of papers. The crustal structure has been evaluated through seismic surveys and drilling expeditions, but those are not equally distributed in Iberia and Newfoundland. More work, and in particular recent studies on the West Iberian margin, have identified a complex crustal architecture characterised by continental, oceanic, and exhumed mantle domains that vary along the margin. This structural complexity has only been recently documented with modern data that allow to image the basement domains in detail.

In contrast, the Newfoundland basement remains comparatively less well understood due to a relative scarcity of seismic and drilling data. The main wide-angle and streamer data for this area, the SCREECH survey, were acquired in 2000 and modelled under the computational limitations of that time. The resulting models and images have been subject to debate and failed to unequivocally define the nature of the basement domains of the margins. This uncertainty has left open key questions regarding the evolution of deformation during rifting and, thus, also the degree of symmetry of this conjugate pair of margins.

The SCREECH acquisition parameters were similar to modern marine acquisition standards. We leveraged their inherent data quality with the current computational facilities and up-to-date methodologies to re-process the data, imaging the structure and modelling seismic phases. Recent advancements in parallel computing and novel geophysical techniques now allow for enhanced-resolution seismic models and a mathematically robust uncertainty analysis—tasks that were previously very computationally demanding.

Our study utilises the original SCREECH field data, consisting of three transects with coincident multichannel seismic (MCS) reflection data (6-km streamer) and wide-angle data recorded by short-period OBS and OBH stations at ~15 km spacing. By performing a joint inversion of the streamer and wide-angle data (utilising both reflection and refraction arrivals), we significantly improved the definition of geological units and the spatial resolution of the velocity models. A statistical uncertainty analysis was conducted to validate the reliability of these observed features.

Our findings reveal previously unrecognised crustal heterogeneity at the Newfoundland margin, including significant variations in thickness and composition along the margin. Notably, we challenge prior classifications of the crustal domains and the location and dimensions of the Continent-Ocean Transition (COT). Previous models identified an intra-basement deep reflector as the Moho, defining a 4–5 km thick layer interpreted as continental crust. However, our results suggest this reflector may not represent the Moho, as the observed crustal properties are inconsistent with typical continental or oceanic crust, and rather support a COT formed by >250 km of exhumed mantle. By integrating MCS imagery with these new velocity models, we provide a re-interpretation of the margin’s crustal structure and propose a refined evolutionary model for the West Iberian–Newfoundland conjugate system.

How to cite: Gómez de la Peña, L., R. Ranero, C., Prada, M., Merino, I., Shillington, D., and Sallarès, V.:  The Newfoundland margin crust: Understanding the Atlantic rifting., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14128, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14128, 2026.

We investigate the magnetic structure of the M-series and J-anomaly oceanic crust in the Central Atlantic with the integration of seismic data in magnetic anomaly modelling. We find that traditional magnetic models of oceanic crust, which assume uniform layers with constant magnetization and geomagnetic polarity reversals, fail to explain the observed anomalies, especially the lack of high-frequency reversals. This suggests that the complex 3D crustal structure created at slow to intermediate spreading rates plays a significant role in the anomaly patterns, because faulting and magmatic processes act as geological filters. Our new modelling approach includes defining the magnetic structure using the crustal seismic structure to adjust the magnetic layer thickness, and laterally varying the magnetization intensity. We explain the high amplitude of the J-anomaly due to a Fe-Ti enrichment in the magma and not to increases in layer thickness as previously proposed. We also discover a previously unrecognized K-anomaly, younger than the J-anomaly. We provide a new kinematic reconstruction of the central Atlantic showing asymmetry in the magnetic and crustal structure between the African and American plates. These findings emphasize the importance of combining seismic data to realistically model magnetic data and better understand crustal formation at slow-spreading ridges.

This work has been funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation MCIN/AEI under project ATLANTIS (ref. PID2019-109559RB-I00), and by the Portuguese Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia FCT, I.P. / MCTES under project LISA (https://doi.org/10.54499/PTDC/CTA-GEF/1666/2020) and through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020 (https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020), UID/50019/2025  (https://doi.org /10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025), UID/PRR2/50019/2025.

How to cite: Neres, M. and Ranero, C.: Magnetic modelling of the J-anomaly in the Central Atlantic constrains the structure of slow-spreading oceanic crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15111, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15111, 2026.

As the proximal zone of the passive continental margin in the northern South China Sea, the Zhu I Depression developed on the complex basement of the pre-Cenozoic active continental margin. It has long been located at the intersection of the West Pacific and Paleo-Tethys tectonic domains, characterized by a complex basin-forming setting, multiple stages of tectonic evolution, and significant spatiotemporal differences in its fault system. Based on seismic data interpretation, tectonic physical modeling, and regional tectonic analysis, this study systematically explores the controlling effect of the matching relationship between pre-existing faults and late-stage Cenozoic regional stress field on the fault system. Results show that: (1) Multiple superimposed "compression-extension-strike-slip" tectonic movements during the Mesozoic Indosinian and Yanshanian periods generated NE- and NW-trending pre-existing faults in the Cenozoic basement of the Zhu I Depression. The distribution density and strike of these basement faults controlled the spatial pattern of the Cenozoic fault system, with pre-existing faults being "dense in the east and sparse in the west" and Cenozoic faults "abundant in the northeast and scarce in the southwest", showing an orderly strike transition from NE to E-W to NWW from southwest to northeast. (2) The Cenozoic regional stress field of the Zhu I Depression underwent a clockwise transition: NW-SE extensional (Eocene) → nearly N-S extensional (early Oligocene) → NE-SW extensional (post-late Oligocene). Correspondingly, the dominant strike of the fault system changed from NE (Eocene) to nearly E-W (early Oligocene) and then to NW (post-late Oligocene). (3) Tectonic physical modeling reveals that stage-specific and direction-selective reactivation of NE- and NW-trending pre-existing faults under varying regional stress conditions caused the spatiotemporal differences in the Cenozoic fault system. Under Eocene NW-SE extension, NE-trending pre-existing faults were reactivated as depression-controlling faults, while NW-trending basement faults acted as weak vertical transfer zones, leading to segmented NE-trending faults with slight strike-slip components.During early Oligocene nearly N-S extension, NE-trending faults continued normal faulting with weakened intensity, while NW-trending faults intensified. Under oblique extension, both showed combined strike-slip-extensional characteristics, with new nearly E-W extensional faults or "arc-shaped" faults formed at conjugate positions. Post-late Oligocene, with NE-SW extension, NW-trending faults became dominant with enhanced activity, while NE- and NEE-trending faults diminished and became extinct.This indicates that selective reactivation of NE- and NW-trending basement pre-existing faults during the clockwise transition of the regional stress field from the Wenchang to Enping periods is the primary factor controlling the differential development of the Cenozoic fault system in the Zhu I Depression.

How to cite: Ma, C. and Wu, Z.: Matching Relationship Between Pre-existing Faults and Regional Stress Field Controls the Differential Development of the Cenozoic Fault System in the Zhu I Depression, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15587, 2026.

   The growth and linkage of basin-bounding normal faults play a pivotal role in controlling the structural architecture and tectono-stratigraphic evolution of rift basins. High quality, well-constrained 3D seismic data from the Xihu sag, East China Sea Basin document the growth history and transtensional reactivation of the basin-bounding fault system along the Western Slope Zone. The Pinghu fault system in the Xihu Sag is characterized by pronounced segmentation and progressive segment linkage, comprising six major fault segments that together define an overall “X”-shaped fault zone. 
   Our analysis identifies three distinct evolutionary stages: (1) isolated segment growth, characterized by independently evolving NNE-striking segments; (2) soft linkage, during which interactions between overlapping segments led to the formation of relay ramps; and (3) hard linkage, when continued displacement accumulation resulted in the breaching of relay ramps and the development of a through-going basin-bounding fault zone. This multi-stage fault evolution was jointly controlled by segmented fault growth during Eocene rifting and subsequent rotation of the regional stress field.
   The spatiotemporal evolution of the Pinghu fault exerted a first-order control on syn-rift sedimentation within the Pinghu Formation. During the fault linkage stage, intact relay ramps functioned as a key sediment entry pathways, channeling sediment supply into the basin and controlling the distribution of deltaic sandbodies. Progressive fault growth and linkage strongly influenced syn-depositional architectures: variations in thickness and facies within the Pinghu Formation record shifting depocenters and sedimentary responses to evolving fault activity.
   This study demonstrates the critical importance of basin-bounding fault segmentation and linkage histories in controlling sand-body distribution and understanding the tectono-sedimentary coupling processes in continental marginal rift basins.

How to cite: Zheng, J., Wu, Z., and Miocic, J.: Growth and Linkage of a Basin-Bounding Normal Fault System: Insights from the Pinghu Fault, Xihu Sag, East China Sea Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16764, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16764, 2026.

EGU26-16781 | ECS | Orals | TS2.1 | Highlight

The Importance of Past Rifting in Large Igneous Province Development: Insights from the Turkana Depression, East Africa  

Rita Kounoudis, Ian Bastow, Cindy Ebinger, Saskia Goes, Pengzhe Zhou, Martin Musila, Christopher Ogden, and Atalay Ayele

Lithospheric thin zones, such as recently failed rifts, are generally assumed to be weak spots where magmatism and deformation can concentrate during rifting and large igneous province development. Yet, the Turkana Depression in East Africa, the site of the failed 66-million-year-old Anza Rift, did not experience the widespread flood magmatism seen on the adjacent Ethiopian Plateau, despite being a lithospheric thin spot when the region encountered hot plume material around 45 million years ago. Using data from the 2019-2021 Turkana Rift Arrays Investigating Lithospheric Structure (TRAILS) project and surrounding seismograph networks we jointly invert surface-wave and receiver function data to constrain crustal and upper-mantle seismic structure and evaluate lithospheric thermo-mechanical modification. Evidence for thick lower crustal intrusions, ubiquitous below the uplifted Ethiopian Plateau, is comparatively lacking below the Depression’s failed Anza Rift system, which ongoing East African rifting is circumnavigating, not exploiting. The mantle lithosphere below the Depression has also retained its cool, fast-wavespeed ‘lid’ character, contrasting the Ethiopian Plateau. Volatile depletion during failed Anza rifting probably rendered the thinned lithosphere refractory without later rejuvenation. Subsequent rifting and magmatism thus initiated away from the still-thin Anza Rift, in regions where fertile lithosphere enabled melting and the sufficient lowering of plate yield strength. Areas of thinned lithosphere are thus not necessarily persistent weak zones where significant extension and magmatic provinces will develop.

 

Kounoudis, R., Bastow, I.D., Ebinger, C.J. et al. The importance of past rifting in large igneous province development. Nature 647, 115–120 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09668-7

How to cite: Kounoudis, R., Bastow, I., Ebinger, C., Goes, S., Zhou, P., Musila, M., Ogden, C., and Ayele, A.: The Importance of Past Rifting in Large Igneous Province Development: Insights from the Turkana Depression, East Africa , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16781, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16781, 2026.

EGU26-17705 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

LAB depth constraints from the Turkana Depression, East African Rift: implications for rifting and magmatism development in lithospheric thin spots, from S-to-p receiver functions 

Laurene Ville, Ian Bastow, Meghan Miller, Rita Kounoudis, Bryony Renwick, and Cynthia Ebinger

The East African Rift provides a natural laboratory to study the influence of pre-existing lithospheric thin spots on the development of rifting and hotspot tectonism. Below the Ethiopian Rift and elevated Ethiopian Plateau, extensive magmatic and thermal modification due to Eocene-Oligocene flood basalt magmatism and Miocene-Recent rifting has resulted in slow lithospheric mantle velocities (< 4.1km/s; Dugda et al., 2007, JGR). In contrast, below the previously rifted, lower-lying Turkana Depression to the south, the lithospheric mantle appears relatively unmodified (4.2-4.8 km/s; Kounoudis et al., 2023, EPSL), despite being underlain by hot, mantle plume material. Important in this picture are detailed constraints on the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB).

Why the Turkana Depression, and particularly the failed Anza Rift terranes, remained resistant to thermal and magmatic modification, is debated. Although the Turkana Depression was a lithospheric thin spot at the onset of plume magmatism, Cenozoic rifting is now circumnavigating, not exploiting, the Anza Rift terranes (Musila et al., 2023, G3). Lithospheric thin spots therefore don't necessarily mark weak zones that are exploited by subsequent rifting and magmatism. One hypothesis for the apparently refractory nature of the Anza lithosphere is that Mesozoic rifting removed easily fusible phases, suppressing subsequent melting and associated strain localisation (Kounoudis et al., 2025, Nature).

To test this geodynamic scenario, we calculated teleseismic S-to-p receiver functions and examined lithospheric thickness variations in the Turkana Depression, where the contrast between fast, relatively unmodified lithospheric mantle and slow, partially molten, plume-infiltrated asthenosphere is expected to provide impulsive S-to-p conversions at the LAB. We observe that the least impulsive and shallowest LAB conversions are associated with Miocene-Recent rift zones, and isolated shield volcanoes. Elsewhere, sharper and deeper S-to-p conversions attest to a lithosphere that has resisted thermo-mechanical modification.

How to cite: Ville, L., Bastow, I., Miller, M., Kounoudis, R., Renwick, B., and Ebinger, C.: LAB depth constraints from the Turkana Depression, East African Rift: implications for rifting and magmatism development in lithospheric thin spots, from S-to-p receiver functions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17705, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17705, 2026.

EGU26-17798 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Global rift analysis of tectonic and magmatic characteristics: towards constraining rift-related CO₂ degassing over geological timescales 

Luisa Hirche, Sascha Brune, Christian Heine, Simon Williams, and Anna Jentsch

The release of carbon at plate boundaries strongly influences Earth’s long-term climate over geological timescales. Continental rifts, in particular, are thought to play a major role in CO₂ degassing by activating carbon reservoirs in the deep lithosphere, with magmatic rifting enabling efficient CO₂ transport via carbonate-rich melts, especially during the early stages of rift development (Foley and Fischer, 2017). Substantial uncertainties in global degassing rates remain, as the incomplete geological record limits precise constraints on the timing, magnitude, and controlling factors of rift-related CO₂ release.

To reduce these uncertainties and enable time-dependent estimates of CO₂ degassing at continental rifts worldwide, we quantify first-order rift characteristics that are expected to control CO₂ degassing. Our analysis employs automated geoinformation workflows and builds on a newly compiled global database of more than 1500 Phanerozoic rifting events, providing a systematic framework for quantifying rift properties.

Here, we focus on three key characteristics: (I) proximity to cratonic lithosphere as an indicator of access to deep carbon reservoirs, (II) crustal thickness as a proxy for rift maturity and tectonic evolution, and (III) the distinction between magmatic and non-magmatic rifting styles, as provided by the global rift database, reflecting differences in the role of magma and volatile transport pathways. Crustal thickness and craton proximity are evaluated using multiple global crustal models and alternative craton boundary interpretations. These characteristics are linked to published present-day CO₂ flux measurements from active rift systems to derive relationships between rift properties and degassing rates. In the future, we aim to use these relationships in conjunction with plate tectonic reconstructions to derive global, time-dependent CO₂ degassing estimates throughout Phanerozoic times.

 

References:
Foley, S. F., & Fischer, T. P. (2017). An essential role for continental rifts and lithosphere in the deep carbon cycle. Nature Geoscience, 1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-017-0002-7

How to cite: Hirche, L., Brune, S., Heine, C., Williams, S., and Jentsch, A.: Global rift analysis of tectonic and magmatic characteristics: towards constraining rift-related CO₂ degassing over geological timescales, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17798, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17798, 2026.

EGU26-18129 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Factors controlling the rift basin formation in the Black sea region inferred from geodynamic models 

Ceyda Tonguç, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Ömer Bodur, Elif Nihan Çavdar, Can Aslan, and Özge Dinç Göğüş

Geodynamic modeling studies have shown that rift basin formation and their transition to sea floor spreading is controlled by tectonic deformation and surface processes. Furthermore, models are used to identify the controlling factors of symmetric vs asymmetric characteristics of the rift basins and the fault network patterns. Here, we use Black sea rift basin as a case study to test how varying model parameters can help to understand rapid subsidence and crustal stretching as well as up to 14 km of sediment thickness in the region. Namely,  we use high-resolution 2D geodynamic models (ASPECT) coupled with a landscape evolution code (FastScape) to investigate rift development under changing model parameters. We also reconcile model results against a number of geological and seismic reflection data where different types of stretching modes, such as pure vs simple have been described in the eastern and western sub basins. Our geodynamic model results provide important insight into how rifting has evolved in the black sea where thick sedimentary deposits are accumulated and possibly delayed continental break up.  That is, the thick sedimentary cover (Maykop) probably impeded serpentinization (sediment blanket) by modifying thermal structure of the crust. Models also explain the pure shear stretching (basin symmetry) in the eastern sub-basin compared to the west where migration of rift axis has been suggested and causing a broad zone of hyperextended crust.

How to cite: Tonguç, C., Göğüş, O. H., Bodur, Ö., Çavdar, E. N., Aslan, C., and Dinç Göğüş, Ö.: Factors controlling the rift basin formation in the Black sea region inferred from geodynamic models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18129, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18129, 2026.

EGU26-18234 | Orals | TS2.1

Magmatic-tectonic interactions in the Natron rift revealed by seismic anisotropy 

Frederik Link and Miriam Christina Reiss

Oldoinyo Lengai volcano is located the Natron Basin, a young (~3 Ma) magmatic rift segment of the East African Rift System. In this setting, magma transport, lithospheric deformation, and stress distribution are closely coupled, yet their relative roles in controlling volcanic and tectonic processes remain poorly constrained. The coexistence of an unusual natrocarbonatitic magmatic system with nearby silicic and basaltic volcanism points to a complex and evolving magma plumbing architecture that may both respond to and modify the regional stress field. Seismic anisotropy provides a sensitive indicator of stress-aligned fabric, deformation, and melt distribution within the crust and uppermost mantle.

Here, we combine local shear-wave splitting measurements with an inversion of anisotropic receiver functions to investigate stress modification and lithospheric deformation beneath Oldoinyo Lengai and the Natron Rift. We use data from the dense SEISVOL seismic network, spanning the region from Lake Natron to the extinct Gelai shield volcano, the monogentetic cone field Naibor Soito and active Oldoinyo Lengai volcano. We use the eigenvalue minimization method to analyze shear wave splitting of over ~10 000 volcano tectonic earthquakes. This provides a unique data set of shallow crustal anisotropy at unprecedented resolution. Azimuthally varying receiver-function signals are decomposed using harmonic regression and inverted within a probabilistic Bayesian framework, allowing us to resolve complex anisotropic layering and quantify uncertainties.

Our results reveal distinct anisotropic domains within the upper and mid-crust. Across much of the study area, fast-axis orientations align parallel to the rift axis, consistent with regional extensional stress. In contrast, pronounced lateral and depth-dependent variations in fast-axis orientation are observed beneath Oldoinyo Lengai and above a previously imaged sill complex underneath Naibor Soito, indicating localized stress perturbations associated with magmatic processes. These patterns closely correspond to the tension axes derived from focal mechanism solutions and stress modeling. However, local shear-wave splitting provides a much better spatial resolution of stress orientations at the scale of individual earthquake–station pairs and may even be susceptible to temporal changes of the magmatic plumbing system. Together, the combined anisotropic observations provide new constraints on the interaction between rift-related deformation and magmatic plumbing in the Natron Basin highlighting how seismic anisotropy offers substantial advantages to study these processes at high spatial and temporal resolution.

How to cite: Link, F. and Reiss, M. C.: Magmatic-tectonic interactions in the Natron rift revealed by seismic anisotropy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18234, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18234, 2026.

EGU26-18425 | ECS | Orals | TS2.1

Early development of a transform fault in a young ocean basin: insights from the Zabargad Fracture Zone, Northern Red Sea 

Margherita Fittipaldi, Adrien Moulin, Daniele Trippanera, Nico Augustin, Froukje van der Zwan, Laura Parisi, Hasbi Shiddiqi, and Sigurjon Jónsson

The Red Sea hosts a young (< 13 Ma) ultra-slow spreading ridge organized into right-stepping segments. The largest ridge offset, about 100 km in the N–S direction, occurs at the transition between the northern and central Red Sea and is known as the Zabargad Fracture Zone (ZFZ). However, its precise geometry and tectonic structure remain poorly determined owing to widespread Miocene evaporites that obscure basement structures. This limited knowledge prevents addressing first-order questions such as: What can we learn about the early development of large ridge offsets from the structure of the ZFZ and its relationships with inherited continental fabrics? What is the seismic hazard posed by this structure for coastal communities, and how does it relate to a reported Mw ~6.5 historical earthquake? To address these questions, we acquired new high-resolution bathymetric data of the ZFZ seafloor, performed detailed mapping of a range of different seafloor structures, and analyzed the outcome in combination with existing geophysical and geological studies. Our results indicate that the ZFZ is composed of one 50-km-long and seismically active transform fault along with smaller non-transform offsets that gradually connect to the Mabahiss Deep spreading center in the northern Red Sea. Moreover, the transform fault runs in continuity with a seismically inactive shear zone that is marked by highly deformed seafloor and extends towards the Saudi coastline before apparently connecting with an inherited Proterozoic shear zone onshore. We propose that this inactive shear zone acted as a transfer zone during the continental rifting phase of the Red Sea. We further reconstructed the early development of the ZFZ by sequentially restoring the oceanic basin to specific time periods. This reconstruction suggests that the initiation of the transform fault was delayed by a few million years relative to the onset of oceanic spreading along nearby ridge segments, an interval during which plate motion was accommodated through an evolving ridge-offset geometry initiated from the transfer zone.

How to cite: Fittipaldi, M., Moulin, A., Trippanera, D., Augustin, N., van der Zwan, F., Parisi, L., Shiddiqi, H., and Jónsson, S.: Early development of a transform fault in a young ocean basin: insights from the Zabargad Fracture Zone, Northern Red Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18425, 2026.

EGU26-19254 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Dynamics of detachment faulting at North Atlantic magma-poor rifted margins 

Irene Merino and Leila Mezri

At continent–ocean transition zones (COTs) of magma-poor rifted margins, the basement is typically shaped by highs and large domes with variable elevation and spacing. These features expose large portions of serpentinized mantle, locally intruded by variable volumes of gabbroic bodies. In these environments, the mantle is exhumed to the seafloor through detachment faulting, which promotes deep hydrothermal fluid circulation and pervasive alteration. However, how hydrothermal processes, magmatic accretion, and detachment faulting interact and evolve over geological timescales remains poorly understood. We address this problem using a 2-D geodynamic model coupled with thermodynamic calculations of water–rock interactions. The model accounts for sedimentation, magmatic accretion, and hydrothermal processes. We focus on the well-documented magma-poor Iberia margin, one of the best documented COTs, supported by extensive geophysical data and deep drilling results. Our simulations reproduce the observed basement morphology through successive episodes of detachment faulting. We find, however, that the development of multiple detachments does not necessarily take place following a flip-flop mode, in which, alternately, oppositely dipping detachments sequentially cut through their predecessors. Instead, deformation may evolve through sequential non-flipping detachment faulting, where polarity remains constant. While the flip-flop mode leads to a geologically symmetrical architecture between conjugate margins, the sequential non-flipping mode results in an asymmetric lithosphere structure, characterized by larger volumes of gabbros on one conjugate margin. The development of one mode or the other depends on the depth at which magma is partitioned across the lithosphere axis and on how faulting redistributes accreted magma and weaker serpentinized mantle. Model predictions for both symmetric (flip-flop) and asymmetric (sequential non-flipping) deformation modes closely match observations, reproducing basement morphology, P-wave velocity (Vp) structure, and the petrological architecture consistent with geological IODP samples from Iberia. This suggests that, in magma-poor settings, first-order Vp variations within the oceanic crust primarily reflect alteration paragenesis and fault geometries rather than mafic-ultramafic distinctions. Consequently, alteration may mask underlying geological differences, with a potentially non-flipping detachment mode that leads to widely spaced domes of exhumed serpentinized mantle at COTs. The choice between these modes hinges on the long-term interplay of axial magma-partitioning, detachment faulting, and hydration processes.

How to cite: Merino, I. and Mezri, L.: Dynamics of detachment faulting at North Atlantic magma-poor rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19254, 2026.

The Permo-Triassic Gondwana rift basins of Eastern India formed after the East Gondwana amalgamation, resulting from the collision of India, East Antarctica, and Australia. This study investigates the roles of longitudinal and transverse drainages in supplying Permo-Triassic sediments and delineates the sources that contributed towards sedimentation. Paleocurrent data, petrography of sandstones, heavy mineral chemistry, and monazite geochronology track the axial drainage to the Shillong-Meghalaya Complex, southwest Australia, and transverse drainage to the Chhotanagpur Gneissic Complex, East Antarctica, and Eastern Ghat Metamorphic Belt. Modal analysis of sandstones, along with the mineral chemistry of detrital rutile, tourmaline, and garnet, suggests that granitoids and metamorphic rocks are the primary sources of sediment. The detrital garnet of almandine variety exhibits maximum similarity with that of the Shillong-Meghalaya Complex, East Antarctica, and southwest Australia. The detrital tourmalines of the dravite variety show compositional similarity with the Chhotanagpur Gneissic Complex. The detrital monazites give four age populations: 500-400 Ma, 700-600 Ma, 900-800 Ma, and 1100-1000 Ma. The 900-800 Ma age population is dominant and occurs in all the formations. The 1100-1000 Ma and 500-400 Ma age populations are the second most abundant and show considerable variation in appearance. The age populations of detrital monazite from 500-400 Ma and 1100-900 Ma, as well as the similarity in garnet chemistry with the Shillong Meghalaya Granite Complex in East Antarctica and southwestern Australia, indicate that the sediment supply was dominated by longitudinal drainage during the early Permian Barakar Formation. The absence of 500-400 Ma age groups in the overlying middle Permian Barren Measures Formations suggests that supply from longitudinal drainage became subordinate. The late Permian Raniganj Formation, with the reappearance of Cambrian ages, indicates axial drainage became active again. The Triassic Panchet Formation, with age groups of 500-400 Ma, 700-600 Ma, and 1100-900 Ma, suggests that supply came from both proximal and distal sources actively. This study, therefore, establishes that the interplay of axial and transverse drainages brought sediments into the Permo-Triassic Gondwana Basins of Eastern India from a unified East Gondwana.

How to cite: Dutta, A. and Banerjee, S.: Role of axial and transverse drainages in sedimentation of the Permo-Triassic rift basins at the eastern continental margin of India: Implications for East-Gondwana reconstruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20195, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20195, 2026.

EGU26-21605 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Current and past state of the Reykjanes ridge, from Bight to Langjökull SW Iceland. Magmatic and tectonic evolution 

Armann Hoskuldsson, Fernando Martinez, Ingibjörg Jónsdóttir, and Þorvaldur Þordarson

In this presentation, we shall present results from studies of the Reykjanes Ridge (RR). RR is a continuous plate boundary extending some 1200 km from the Bight in the south to the north of Langjökull, Iceland. The boundary is oblique to the current plate motion. The RR has been mapped by multibeam techniques from the Bight fracture zone in the south to the Reykjanes peninsula. On land, however, the part of it that includes Reykjanes and extends to the Langjökull area in SW Iceland has been mapped by satellite techniques and photogrammetry. Thus, we have compiled all data for a morphometric study of its evolution. In this presentation, we shall focus on the past 1 Ma. The southernmost part of RR is characterised by a deep, well-defined rift valley, about 15 km wide, populated by en-echelon AVRs, extending to about 59° north. From there to Reykjanes (63.8° north), rift valleys are discontinuous and shallow, with densely populated and overlapping AVRs. On Reykjanes itself, the plate boundary becomes highly oblique, characterised by en-echelon fissures and AVRs, until it reaches the Hengill area (64° north). From Hengill to Langjökull (64.9° north), the system comprises shallow-to-deep rift valleys that widen to the north (13 → 30 km wide), with parallel AVRs. North of Langjökull, there is no clear evidence of RR continuation. The heading of different segments of the RR varies: from Bight to the Icelandic continental shelf at ~36°, on the continental shelf at ~50°, on the Reykjanes peninsula at ~65°, and from Hengill to its end at ~36°. At the same time, the spreading along the RR is at ~99°. The number of AVRs and thus magma production varies along the RR, being smallest in the south and increasing towards the north.

How to cite: Hoskuldsson, A., Martinez, F., Jónsdóttir, I., and Þordarson, Þ.: Current and past state of the Reykjanes ridge, from Bight to Langjökull SW Iceland. Magmatic and tectonic evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21605, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21605, 2026.

EGU26-23214 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Mechanical evolution of the wide diamond-shaped Española linkage zone, Rio Grande Rift: insights from structural analysis and analogue modelling 

Nicolas Dall Asta, Yoann Denèle, Monica Hernandez Leal, Vincent Regard, Anne Frayssignes, Bastien Hermant, Stéphane Bonnet, Mael Derian, Delphine Rouby, Paul Angrand, and Mathieu Bellanger

In heterogeneous continental lithosphere, rifts propagate by growth and linkage of discrete segments. Linkage zone geometries reflect this process with different segment overlaps, kinematics, and mechanical properties. Recently, analogue and numerical models compared to natural examples (East African and West European rifts) have allowed significant progresses in understanding the localized transfer zones. Here, we focus instead on wide linkage zones in exceptionally hot crust settings, which is relevant for geothermal exploration.

The Rio Grande Rift is a relatively narrow intra-mountainous system, active since the Miocene, contemporaneous with the Basin and Range extension. Despite substantial extension, rift basins remain at high elevations (>1000 m) with inherited rift shoulders reaching up to ~3700 m. These high elevations and Moho temperatures (800-900°C), indicate significant dynamic support.

To investigate linkage kinematics and strain distribution, we compared analogue models inspired from and structural analysis from DEM-derived fault trajectories and published slip data of the Española basin, a 60-km-wide linkage zone connecting the San Luis and Albuquerque segments. We tested various model rheologies (sand-silicone ratios) and extension velocities to assess their impact on the rift architecture, strain partitioning and fault network.  Our approach aims to constrain the 3D strain field evolution in the linkage zones and highlight the role of crustal rheology and inherited structures on the linkage zone geometry.

The NE-SW trending Española basin comprises early-rift grabens and half-grabens preserved, beneath younger volcano-sedimentary deposits, as ‘embayments’ along the basin margins. Seismic data reveals a two-stage evolution. The early wide rift stage (30-15 Ma) produced distributed shallow basins above low-angle normal faults, consistent with the extension of a thermally weakened crust after the Oligocene magmatism. The late narrow-rift stage (15 Ma-present) showed higher extension rates and high-angle normal faults, with thicker and narrower basins. Española basin is bounded by the NE-SW trending Embudo and Tijeras left-lateral fault systems. Within the linkage zone, fault traces are both concave and convex, indicating a rotational strain component. Late-rift faulting forms multi-scale en-echelon patterns resulting from interaction between the N-S intra-basin faults and the oblique border faults.

Xenolith studies documented Miocene crustal rheological changes: Oligocene crustal melting produced progressive granulitization and mechanical strengthening of the lower crust, which could have caused the localization of deformation during late rifting.

Analogue sand-silicone models with a brittle-ductile transition at 5-10 km depth reproduced the Española basin architecture. The distributed deformation across then multiple N-S to NE-SW sub-basins, matching the observed alternation of narrow half-graben and graben tips forming ‘embayment’. Rotational strain in the linkage zone, produce convex-concave faults similar to those observed in the Española basin. Increasing extension velocity promotes strain localization, particularly along the NE-SW left-lateral fault, replicating the present-day strain pattern.

These results demonstrate that the Española basin formed by rift segment linkage under simple orthogonal extension with increasing strain rate and progressive strengthening of the crust. Segment propagation drove a progressive tip rotation, oblique faulting, and localized strike-slip motion. The models reveal high fault connectivity within the linkage zones, with significant implications for geothermal exploration.

How to cite: Dall Asta, N., Denèle, Y., Hernandez Leal, M., Regard, V., Frayssignes, A., Hermant, B., Bonnet, S., Derian, M., Rouby, D., Angrand, P., and Bellanger, M.: Mechanical evolution of the wide diamond-shaped Española linkage zone, Rio Grande Rift: insights from structural analysis and analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23214, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23214, 2026.

EGU26-837 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Using stalagmite geochemistry to reconstruct paleoclimate in the Philippines during Heinrich Events 

Mira Hart, Street Senan, Jaren Yambing, Mónica Geraldes Vega, Bryce Belanger, Celia Kong-Johnson, Mart Geronia, Sharon Jalandoni, Carlos Primo David, Jessica Oster, David McGee, Daniel Ibarra, and Natasha Sekhon

The Indo-Pacific Warm Pool (IPWP), a region in the western Pacific Ocean known as the “heat engine of the globe”, is critical for modulating global climate patterns. Tropical island nations within the IPWP are especially well suited to study how the IPWP will respond to anthropogenic climate change. To understand the effects of future climate change within the IPWP, it is useful to look to past rapid climate change events, like Heinrich Events, which were periods of Northern Hemisphere freshwater forcing. Despite the critical role that paleoclimatic studies of Heinrich Events play in constraining the effects of future climate change, there are few terrestrial paleoclimate records from within the IPWP focusing on these events. 

Here, we use speleothems from the Puerto Princesa Underground River cave (PPUR) in Palawan, Philippines to reconstruct rainfall patterns during Heinrich Events. We present a combined record of δ18O, δ13C and trace elements (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, and Ba/Ca) for two stalagmites (GP-0 and GP-1) from PPUR’s Gaia Passage. GP-0 is 10.5 cm in length and grew between 41,855 ± 1099 to 31,637 ± 280 years B.P. (±2𝜎). GP-1 is 12.5 cm in length and grew between 40,849 ± 272 to 20,914 ± 206 years B.P. (±2𝜎). Taken together, our partially replicated record spans 41.9 to 20.9 ka and provides a robust dataset highlighting the effects of Heinrich Events 2, 3, and 4 on the southwestern Philippines and IPWP. Preliminary δ18O results show approximately 1.5 ‰ variability, suggesting fluctuations between wetter and drier intervals through time. In addition, statistically significant co-variation between Mg/Ca, δ18O, and δ13C indicates that prior calcite precipitation influences the GP-0 and GP-1 records. Additional statistical analyses between the geochemical results of GP-0 and GP-1 during coeval periods of growth will provide a strong understanding of the mechanisms driving rainfall in the Philippines during periods of rapid climate change. Regional comparisons to other archives (speleothems, marine core records) will help to elucidate the ocean-atmosphere feedbacks driving rainfall variability within the IPWP. A comparison to iTRACE climate model output across Heinrich Event 1 will broaden our understanding of the regional hydroclimate response to high latitude forcing. Furthermore, these results will inform much needed policy for water resource management and effective climate adaptation and resilience in the tropics. 

How to cite: Hart, M., Senan, S., Yambing, J., Geraldes Vega, M., Belanger, B., Kong-Johnson, C., Geronia, M., Jalandoni, S., David, C. P., Oster, J., McGee, D., Ibarra, D., and Sekhon, N.: Using stalagmite geochemistry to reconstruct paleoclimate in the Philippines during Heinrich Events, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-837, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-837, 2026.

Recent studies have demonstrated the efficacy of high-precision ∆′17O analysis in carbonates, biogenic and abiotic origin, to deduce geological and environmental processes. The δ17O values can be influenced by processes such as kinetic fractionation during carbonate precipitation, which is associated with the hydroxylation of CO2, thereby making it an emerging proxy crucial for interpreting the oxygen isotopic ratio in carbonates and improving the accuracy of palaeoclimate reconstruction efforts (Bajnai et al., 2024). Δ′17O in cave carbonates helps determine the various factors influencing speleothem formation, including evaporation, condensation, and cave kinetics, which have been inadequately captured by the conventional dual-isotope (δ18O and δ16O) systematics. We follow the framework developed by (Huth et al., 2022) wherein interpretations of speleothem formation are done by examining trends of data spread through the distribution of triple oxygen isotopes in Δ′17O versus δ′18O space, with the conventional excess of 17O expressed as Δ′17O = δ′17O – λRL * δ′18O. By comparing triple oxygen isotopic compositions across various speleothem samples from different caves in North East India, this study seeks to improve our understanding of the control mechanisms on Δ17O variability and its utility in reconstructing past environmental conditions. The analysis of samples involved the acid digestion (in ~105 % H3PO4) of carbonate powders (~10 mg) followed by the catalytic CO2-O2 exchange reaction method as followed in the triple oxygen isotope analysis (Fosu et al., 2020) using in-house equipment with a quartz reactor containing Pt sponge (99.98% trace metal purity). The results yielded Δʹ17O in the range of -83 to -129 per meg.  When plotted in the Δ′17O versus δ′18O space, the data expands across three dominant controlling factors, majorly indicating an interplay of cave kinetics, Rayleigh distillation and cave temperature. This study proves that Δ′17O in cave carbonates act as a potential proxy for identifying fractionation processes.

 

References

  • Bajnai, D., et al. (2024). Correcting for vital effects in coral carbonate using triple oxygen isotopes. Geochemical Perspectives Letters, 31, 38–43.
  • Huth, T. E., at al. (2022). A framework for triple oxygen isotopes in speleothem paleoclimatology. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 319, 191–219.
  • Fosu, B. R., et al. (2020). Technical Note: Developments and Applications in Triple Oxygen Isotope Analysis of Carbonates. ACS Earth and Space Chemistry, 4(5), 702–710.

How to cite: Subba, R. and Ghosh, P.: Identifying Cave Carbonate Isotope Fractionation Mechanisms through Triple Oxygen Isotope Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1039, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1039, 2026.

The karst of the Yorkshire Dales, situated in the Pennine hills of northern England, provides an under realised opportunity for paleo climate studies in mid latitudes. It was marginal to the Last Glacial Maximum British and Irish Ice Sheet.

The valley is surrounded by extensive moorland underlain by sandstone and mudstone dominated Millstone Grit Group strata. Underlying the Millstone Grit are strata of the cyclothemic Yoredale Group which include cavernous limestone units. The incision of the Upper Nidderdale valley has partially removed the clastic cover revealing limestone beds within the Yordale succession in three valley floor inliers.

By far the most extensive cave system is that beneath the main valley where the River Nidd in normal conditions sinks into the Limley inlier through impenetrable fissures upstream of Manchester Hole. The underground river from Manchester Hole flows into Goyden Pot, then onto New Goyden Pot to finally resurges at Nidd heads Risings forming a combined system with over 9 km of passages. The main stream passage and main chamber of Goyden Pot are floored by fallen blocks indicating collapse has played a major part in cave development. Some of the blocks consist entirely of speleothem and many show evidence of re-dissolution including incision and the development of scalloped surfaces cutting across the original depositional structure.

U-series dating of speleothem from the Goyden Pot cave system has shown that the incision of the upper reaches of the Nidd valley must have exposed the limestone strata of the Limley, Thrope and Lofthouse inliers prior to the Last Glacial Maximum and cave development was well underway by early MIS 3. The nature of the samples so far dated show the presence of significant detrital thorium seriously limiting the precision of the work.

The Canal Cave system is located in the Lofthouse inlier and consists of a narrow east-west orientated passage containing a 5 m climb with the upstream (western) end blocked by calcite. Down cutting of the River Nidd has intersected the route of the passage, thus draining the cave, which can be traced across the riverbed as a slot leading to the downstream continuation under the east bank. The sample was again contaminated by detrital thorium resulting in a considerable loss of precision as has been found elsewhere in the valley however a late Pleistocene date is indicated for the basal part of the sample (14136 +11.7 - 11.3 ka BP). This shows the cave was drained and thus valley of the River Nidd at Lofthouse had incised close to its present level by the very latest late Pleistocene.

How to cite: Murphy, P.: Incision, Instability and isolation-       attempting to constrain cave development in the most easterly of the Yorkshire Dales, northern England, UK, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2599, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2599, 2026.

EGU26-3142 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Holocene temperature variability in the Black Sea region recorded by speleothem fluid inclusions from Sofular Cave in northern Türkiye 

Frederick Held, Hai Cheng, R. Lawrence Edwards, Timon Kipfer, Okan Tüysüz, Stéphane Affolter, and Dominik Fleitmann

Quantitative paleotemperature reconstructions of the Holocene are crucial for understanding the evolution of the climate system in response to various natural and anthropogenic forcings and shed further light on the so-called “Holocene temperature conundrum” (Liu et al., 2014). In the eastern Mediterranean – Black Sea (EMBS) region, records of Holocene temperature variations in continental interiors are predominately based on palynological reconstructions, specifically, pollen records from lake and peat sediments (e.g., Davis et al., 2003). However, vegetation was severely compromised by human activities since the mid-Holocene period and possibly even earlier (e.g., Fyfe et al., 2018) causing uncertainties regarding the general temperature development over the course of the Holocene. In contrast to these biological paleoclimate archives, quantitative paleotemperature reconstructions can be provided by speleothem fluid inclusions (e.g., Affolter et al., 2019; Bernal-Wormull et al., 2025). Speleothems from Sofular Cave in northern Türkiye are known to be highly sensitive to climatic shifts on orbital to decadal timescales (Fleitmann et al., 2009; Held et al., 2024, 2025), making them an excellent archive for recording Holocene low-amplitude climate change.

Temperature estimates based on fluid inclusion isotope analysis average 11.7 ± 2.6°C for the mid- to late-Holocene period, which is almost identical with the modern cave air temperature of 11.8 ± 0.2°C. Overall, temperatures decrease by approximately 1.5°C from the mid- to late-Holocene (~7 ka – 3 ka BP), most likely related to orbital forcing and altering atmospheric circulation patterns in the EMBS region. The Sofular speleothem record also captures distinct temperature minima associated with the 4.2 ka event and the Little Ice Age. Both time intervals are characterized by a cooling of around 1-3°C within decades, although they differ in hydrological conditions, exhibiting wetter conditions during the 4.2 ka event and a dry period during the Little Ice Age in the Black Sea region.

 

References

Affolter et al., 2019: Central Europe temperature constrained by speleothem fluid inclusion water isotopes over the past 14,000 years, Science Advances, 5.

Bernal-Wormull et al., 2025: Temperature variability in southern Europe over the past 16,500 years constrained by speleothem fluid inclusion water isotopes, Climate of the Past, 21, 1235-1261.

Davis et al., 2003: The temperature of Europe during the Holocene reconstructed from pollen data, Quaternary Science Reviews, 22, 1701-1716.

Fleitmann et al., 2009: Timing and climatic impact of Greenland interstadials recorded in stalagmites from northern Turkey, Geophysical Research Letters, 36 (19), L19707.

Fyfe et al., 2018: Trajectories of change in Mediterranean Holocene vegetation through classification of pollen data, Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 27, 351-364.

Held et al., 2025: Hydrological variability in the Black Sea region during the last 670,000 years recorded in multi-proxy speleothem records from northern Türkiye, Quaternary Science Reviews, 367, 109534.

Held et al., 2024: Dansgaard-Oeschger cycles of the penultimate and last glacial period recorded in stalagmites from Türkiye, Nature communications, 15(1), 1183.

Liu et al., 2014: The Holocene temperature conundrum, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 111(34), E3501-E3505.

How to cite: Held, F., Cheng, H., Edwards, R. L., Kipfer, T., Tüysüz, O., Affolter, S., and Fleitmann, D.: Holocene temperature variability in the Black Sea region recorded by speleothem fluid inclusions from Sofular Cave in northern Türkiye, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3142, 2026.

EGU26-3642 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

Climatic controls on speleothem initial δ234U: evidence from Ejulve Cave over the last 260 ka 

Carlos Pérez-Mejías, Jian Wang, Youfeng Ning, Ana Moreno, Antonio Delgado-Huertas, R. Lawrence Edwards, Hai Cheng, and Heather M. Stoll

The use of δ234U as a paleoclimatic proxy in stalagmites has remained sporadic, despite uranium isotopes being routinely obtained through U-Th dating. Here, we investigate δ234U values in six stalagmites from Ejulve cave (northeastern Iberia) spanning the last 260 ka. Elevated δ234U values are attributed to selective leaching of 234U from damaged lattice sites and recoil-induced oxidation, with an additional accumulation of 234U recoils resulting from alpha-decay after growth hiatuses. This selective leaching mechanism weakens under conditions of enhanced bedrock dissolution, resulting in lower δ234U values.

The mechanisms controlling δ234U are primarily governed by infiltration frequency and the exposure of mineral surfaces to percolating solutions. However, the efficiency of these processes is strongly modulated by temperature, through its control on soil respiration, soil CO2 availability, and the intensity of bedrock dissolution. This interpretation is supported by the consistent long-term correlation between δ234U and sea surface temperatures from the Atlantic Iberian Margin, with lower δ234U values observed during warmer SST intervals. During stadials and glacial maxima, lower temperatures likely reduced vegetation cover and soil respiration rates, thereby decreasing soil CO2 concentrations and overall carbonate dissolution rates. Under such conditions, preferential leaching of 234U from bedrock surfaces is enhanced due to lower bulk rock dissolution. In addition, the high elevation of the study area and the occurrence of frequent winter frosts may have promoted repeated freeze–thaw cycles, inducing microfracturing and increasing the exposure of fresh mineral surfaces to selective leaching. 

Conversely, warmer conditions during interstadials and interglacials promoted higher soil respiration rates and soil CO2, accelerating bedrock dissolution and yielding low δ234U values. This coupling between bedrock dissolution intensity and δ234U is clearly expressed by its correlation with stalagmite growth rate, with important implications. The link between δ234U, bedrock dissolution, and the initial dripwater oversaturation indicates that δ234U can serve as a valuable complement to δ13C, as both proxies are strongly influenced by soil respiration and soil CO2, and thus reflect soil and vegetation productivity sensitive to both humidity and temperature. A further implication is that, unlike δ13C, uranium isotopes are not fractionated during prior calcite precipitation (PCP). Consequently, δ234U can be combined with PCP-sensitive proxies such as Mg/Ca or δ44Ca to disentangle PCP variations driven by changes in drip rate from those related to shifts in the initial saturation state of dripwater. Finally, we advocate for the broader use of δ234U as a paleoclimatic proxy in speleothem-based studies from other cave systems.

How to cite: Pérez-Mejías, C., Wang, J., Ning, Y., Moreno, A., Delgado-Huertas, A., Edwards, R. L., Cheng, H., and Stoll, H. M.: Climatic controls on speleothem initial δ234U: evidence from Ejulve Cave over the last 260 ka, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3642, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3642, 2026.

EGU26-3993 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

A LIBS hyperspectral imaging methodology for high-resolution element profiling of speleothems: applications within the LEAP project 

Christian Burlet, Sophie Verheyden, Koen Deforce, Possum Pincé, Soraya Bengattat, Mathieu Boudin, Giacomo Capuzzo, Philippe Crombé, Isabelle De Groote, Serge Delaby, Guy De Mulder, David Gillikin, Hannah Leonard, Elizabeth Olson, Christophe Snoeck, Hans Vandendriessche, Elliot Van Maldegem, and Marine Wojcieszak

Speleothems (stalagmites, stalactites, flowstones, …) are currently one of the best datable terrestrial archives valuably recording past environmental and climatic variability. Their geochemical composition reflects complex interactions between host rock, rainwater infiltration and soil processes dependent on climate (Fairchild & Baker, 2012). In particular, Mg, Sr and Ba are commonly linked to prior calcite precipitation related to water availability and therefore indirectly to rainwater amount (Fairchild et al., 2000), while other elements such as P or S, may reflect organic matter cycling or anthropogenic and marine aerosol inputs (Borsato et al., 2007). Despite their importance, high-resolution spatial profiling of trace elements in speleothems remain analytically demanding, often requiring destructive sample preparation and time-consuming laboratory workflows.

Within the framework of the LEAP project (Learning from the Past - https://www.leap-belgium.be/) funded by BELSPO, we developed and implemented a Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) hyperspectral imaging methodology to obtain rapid, minimally destructive trace-element profiles along speleothem growth axes. The approach combines automated raster scanning with synchronized multi-spectrometer acquisition, producing two-dimensional LIBS spectral images over scan widths of 15–20 mm at 100 µm spatial resolution. Elemental ratio maps (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, Ba/Ca) are generated from the hyperspectral data cube and converted into one-dimensional profiles by buffered averaging along growth-parallel transects. A robust filtering and masking strategy based on Ca signal thresholds and calculated plasma parameters allows efficient exclusion of spectra affected by surface defects, detrital inclusions or existing sampling holes.

The method was first validated through comparison with LA-ICP-MS elemental mapping on a reference speleothem section, showing consistent relative variations and stratigraphic coherence in Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Ba/Ca profiles. Following validation, multiple trace-element profiles were extracted from speleothems from Hotton, Père Noël and Remouchamps caves (Belgium). In the Père Noël cave for example, the approach enabled the extraction of a continuous >1 m long profile at 0.1 mm spatial resolution, demonstrating the capability of LIBS hyperspectral imaging to generate high-resolution geochemical records over large stratigraphic distances.

Applied to a flood-impacted speleothem (calcite floor) from the Hotton Cave, the LIBS-derived profiles also revealed distinct elemental profiles associated with thin detrital layers incorporated within the calcite. This allows a more precise and objective assessment of past extreme flooding events at that location that can be compared to population migration information and changes in funerary practices. This contributes to the investigation of the link between climatic and environmental changes and human behaviour in the LEAP project.

 

References:

Borsato, A., Frisia, S., Fairchild, I.J.,, Somogyi, A.,, and Susini,J. 2007. Trace Element Distribution in Annual Stalagmite Laminae Mapped by Micrometer-Resolution X-Ray Fluorescence: Implications for Incorporation of Environmentally Significant Species. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 71 (6): 1494–1512.

Fairchild, I. J., & Baker, A. (2012). Speleothem science: From process to past environments. Wiley-Blackwell.

Fairchild, I. J., Borsato, A., Tooth, A. F., Frisia, S., Hawkesworth, C. J., Huang, Y., McDermott, F., & Spiro, B. (2000). Controls on trace element (Sr–Mg) compositions of carbonate cave waters: Implications for speleothem climatic records. Chemical Geology, 166(3–4), 255–269.

How to cite: Burlet, C., Verheyden, S., Deforce, K., Pincé, P., Bengattat, S., Boudin, M., Capuzzo, G., Crombé, P., De Groote, I., Delaby, S., De Mulder, G., Gillikin, D., Leonard, H., Olson, E., Snoeck, C., Vandendriessche, H., Van Maldegem, E., and Wojcieszak, M.: A LIBS hyperspectral imaging methodology for high-resolution element profiling of speleothems: applications within the LEAP project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3993, 2026.

EGU26-4574 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Börtlüce Cave: A Natural Archive Linking Earthquakes, Volcanism, Climate Variability, and Human History in Western Türkiye 

Mesut Kolbüken, Ezgi Unal Imer, Chuan-Chou Shen, Chun-Yuan Huang, and Hsun-Ming Hu

Börtlüce Cave (Manisa) in western Türkiye has a unique geographical location, which is a transition zone between tropical and polar atmospheric circulation systems, increasing its climate sensibility, and is a tectonically active region generating significant earthquakes, and lastly close to Kula Volcanic Field with remarkably well-exposed young volcanic structures. The cave is surrounded by significant archeological settlements, such as the ancient city of Sardis in Salihli, the capital of the Lydian Kingdom in the Bronze Age, where fossil footprints in volcanic ashes dated back to 4700 years ago (Ulusoy et al., 2019). Potential speleothem records from this cave therefore provide a valuable opportunity to explore paleoenvironmental changes in detail and to better understand how human populations responded to such changes.

Employing state-of-the-art methods, including U-Th dating, stable isotope (δ18O and δ13C), and trace element analyses, enables high-resolution and reliable reconstructions of hydroclimate variability, environmental evolution, and the effects of volcanic activity and earthquake-induced processes on cave environments.

Here we present initial records from two Börtlüce Cave stalagmites, reflecting changes in the stalagmite growth such as abrupt surface steps, growth axis deviations, and growth interruption. First results indicate that the occurrence of pronounced hiatuses in the underlying layers in stalagmites, accompanied by changes in fabric/stratigraphy and growth orientation, are consistent with seismic disturbance recurrences affecting drip hydrology rather than climatic forcing over the mid-late Holocene.

In addition to earthquake-induced changes, the isotope records from both stalagmites display similar isotopic patterns throughout the mid-late Holocene, indicating negligible kinetic fractionation effects in the cave. The δ18O values range between −7.4 and −4.2‰, while δ13C values vary from −9.3 to −3.7‰ along the growth axes of the stalagmites. Between 6 and 4 ka, both δ18O and δ13C values are depleted, reflecting wetter climatic conditions and enhanced soil biological activity.  After ~4 ka and until ~2 ka, isotope values become progressively more enriched in both stalagmites, indicating a transition to drier climatic conditions accompanied by reduced soil activity. Two distinct dry intervals are recorded, corresponding to the 4.2 ka Bond event and a second event at approximately 3.2 ka. These intervals likely represent significant hydroclimatic deteriorations that may have impacted regional human communities. Understanding their responses will provide valuable information for assessing current and future climatic hazards such as droughts.

Ongoing analyses of both stalagmites, together with expanded sampling of additional stalagmites from Börtlüce Cave, aim to produce a comprehensive reconstruction of paleoenvironmental changes related to climate dynamics, volcanic influences, and seismic activity, and to evaluate their combined impacts on the archaeological record.

References

Ulusoy İ., Sarıkaya M.A., Schmitt A. K., Şen E., Danisik M., Gümüş E., 2019. Volcanic eruption eye-witnessed and recorded by prehistoric humans. Quaternary Science Reviews, 212, 187-198.

Acknowledgement

This research was granted by the National Science and Technology Council, Taiwan, ROC (111-2116-M-002-022-MY3;114-2116-M-002-016-MY3), Academia Sinica (AS-TP-113-L04), and National Taiwan University Core Consortiums Project (113L891902). The authors are grateful to Kamil Altıparmak, Ali Karataş, Tuğberk Yetiş, Yiğit Karakuzu, Faruk Bilmez, and Kula Municipality for their assistance during the fieldwork. The authors thank Mehmet Oruç Baykara for his support.

How to cite: Kolbüken, M., Unal Imer, E., Shen, C.-C., Huang, C.-Y., and Hu, H.-M.: Börtlüce Cave: A Natural Archive Linking Earthquakes, Volcanism, Climate Variability, and Human History in Western Türkiye, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4574, 2026.

EGU26-4828 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Influence of fluid Mg/Ca ratios on speleothem petrography – Insights from cave analogue experiments 

Pascal Hambsch, Sylvia Riechelmann, Daniel Herwartz, and Adrian Immenhauser

Speleothems are recognized as reliable archives of past continental climate dynamics. Depending on the research focus, both geochemical and petrographic proxies are employed. While previous studies have explored the petrographic features of speleothems - particularly mineralogy and crystal fabric development - the relationship between drip water geochemistry and the petrographic attributes of speleothems remains underexplored. Research indicates that several physicochemical parameters, such as drip rate, pH, supersaturation, growth rate, fluid Mg/Ca ratio, and organic matter content, influence the mineralogy and crystal morphology of cave carbonates. Among these, the Mg/Ca ratio of drip water is the most influential, directly affecting crystal morphology and serving as a proxy for prior calcite precipitation (PCP). Cave environments are subject to various factors that can alter drip water Mg/Ca ratios. To disentangle these effects, a series of cave analogue experiments were conducted in a climate chamber set to 15 °C and 70 % humidity under atmospheric CO2 conditions. Each solution was purified of organic material and maintained at a constant pH of 7.9 with a steady drip rate of 98 µL/min. Roughened watch glasses provided a crystallization surface for the carbonate precipitates. The fluid Mg/Ca ratio was the only variable, adjusted between experiments (0.5, 0.375, 0.25, 0.125). Each Mg/Ca ratio was tested both with and without the influence of PCP, with experiments lasting 90 days. Throughout this period, temperature, humidity, CO2 level, drip rate, conductivity, pH, and outflow element concentrations were continuously monitored. Carbonate precipitates were analyzed using SEM, EBSD, and EMPA. Initial results suggest that calcite crystal morphology varies with changes in fluid Mg/Ca ratio, and aragonite precipitates only form in experiments influenced by PCP at the same initial Mg/Ca ratio as non-PCP experiments.

How to cite: Hambsch, P., Riechelmann, S., Herwartz, D., and Immenhauser, A.: Influence of fluid Mg/Ca ratios on speleothem petrography – Insights from cave analogue experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4828, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4828, 2026.

EGU26-4830 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Kinetic carbon isotope effects during calcite precipitation: role of water–air exchange geometry and precipitation rate 

Serena Pietri-Orsini, Marina Gillon, Christophe Emblanch, and Florent Barbecot

Stable carbon and oxygen isotopes in calcite are widely used to reconstruct environmental and hydrological conditions, but kinetic isotope effects related to CO₂ degassing and carbonate precipitation are still poorly quantified [1]

In particular, the role of water–air exchange geometry and water height on the δ¹³C (and δ¹⁸O) of precipitated calcite remains difficult to isolate from that of other controls in natural systems [2].

Here we present a series of laboratory precipitation experiments to establish an empirical relationship between air–water exchange geometry surface and ¹³C fractionation between calcite and Dissolved Inorganic Carbon, providing a framework to quantify how changes in exchange surface area and water height modulate δ¹³C signatures.

CaCO₃ precipitates from the same Ca2+–HCO₃- rich bottled water in containers with two exchange geometries: low vs high air–water exchange, expressed as S/h (air–water surface area divided by water height), with the low-exchange configuration having S = 130 cm² and h = 11.5 cm and the high-exchange configuration having S = 273 cm² and h = 5.5 cm. All experiments start from identical temperature, volume and initial chemistry. Conductivity, pH and temperature are measured every 24 h. Major ions concentrations, δ¹³C of DIC and δ¹³C of precipitated calcite are measured each day. Precipitation rates are quantified from the temporal decrease in dissolved Ca²⁺ concentration. They are higher when air–water exchanges increase: 1.0 × 10⁻³ mol L⁻¹ d⁻¹ for low air–water exchanges vs 1.6 × 10⁻³ mol L⁻¹ d⁻¹ for high air–water exchanges during the first day of the experiment. δ¹³C of calcite is higher for high air-water exchanges than for low air-water exchanges at a same time step (e.g., at second day: −7.1 ±0.2‰ vs −9.2 ±0.3‰).

δ¹³C of DIC increases by +8.5‰ (mean) for high air–water exchanges compared to +5.7‰ (mean) for low air–water exchanges over 4 days. However, the evolution δ¹³C of DIC with DIC concentrations appears to depend little on the air–water exchanges and follows an apparent Rayleigh-type trend.

The calcite–DIC enrichment factor ε becomes more negative with increasing precipitation rate, indicating stronger kinetic fractionation under conditions favouring rapid CO₂ degassing, consistent with the rate dependent trends observed in cave analogue precipitation experiment [3]. At low precipitation rates 4.3 × 10⁻⁴ mol L⁻¹ d⁻¹ , ε is close to equilibrium near to 0.2‰ compared to the equilibrium value of 0.5–0.8‰ at 17–23°C [4], whereas at higher precipitation rates 1.87 × 10⁻³ mol L⁻¹ d⁻¹, ε shows a much larger deviation from equilibrium, reaching −2.8‰.

These experiments provide quantitative data on isotope effects linked to exchange geometry and precipitation kinetics, that could be used to interpretations of δ¹³C signatures in natural carbonate deposits such as speleothems and tufas.

[1]  Dreybrodt, W. & Fohlmeister, J. (2022)  doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120676

[2] Fairchild et al. (2006)  doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2005.08.003

[3] Hansen et al. (2019) doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.12.012

[4] Salomons, W. & Mook, W. G. (1986) doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-42225-5.50011-5

How to cite: Pietri-Orsini, S., Gillon, M., Emblanch, C., and Barbecot, F.: Kinetic carbon isotope effects during calcite precipitation: role of water–air exchange geometry and precipitation rate, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4830, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4830, 2026.

EGU26-4850 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Daily rainfall δ18O suggests Southern Thailand speleothem 18O records controlled by extreme winter monsoon events 

George Kontsevich, Helmut Duerrast, Mao-Chang Liang, Akkaneewut Jirapinyakul, Sakonvan Chawchai, Annapureddy Phanindra, Harsh Oza, and Ludvig Lowemark

For speleothems found in the Asian Monsoon region, variability in oxygen isotopes (18O) over time is often taken as an indicator of changes in monsoon intensity. In regions affected by both the summer and winter monsoons the picture is more complex, as each system may have its own mechanism for driving changes in rain 18O. To try to tease out the possible drivers behind changes in 18O, published speleothem records from a region of Southern Thailand are compared to over a decade of daily rainfall 18O measurements. When comparing winter and summer monsoon isotope averages, the seasonal difference is found to be too small to explain the changes seen in speleothems over the past several thousand years. This suggests a simple change in monsoon ratio is unlikely to be a direct driver. However, there is a strong indication that periodic intense winter monsoon pulses show a distinct isotopic signature. This signature is sufficient to explain past variability, and by extension suggests that speleothem 18O records from the locality mostly reflect changes in the winter monsoon system. We explore possible mechanisms driving these 18O-light pulses and what they suggest about the past climate configuration in the region.

How to cite: Kontsevich, G., Duerrast, H., Liang, M.-C., Jirapinyakul, A., Chawchai, S., Phanindra, A., Oza, H., and Lowemark, L.: Daily rainfall δ18O suggests Southern Thailand speleothem 18O records controlled by extreme winter monsoon events, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4850, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4850, 2026.

EGU26-5348 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Magnesium isotope time-series analyses of dolostone cave dripwater and speleothems: Proxy calibration and application 

Sylvia Riechelmann, Andrea Schröder-Ritzrau, Jasper A. Wassenburg, and Adrian Immenhauser

Speleothems are an important archive for reconstructing past climate variability. The Magnesium isotope proxy tested so far in limestone-hosted caves provides the possibility of reconstructing climate conditions from changes in the silicate-to-carbonate weathering ratio. Other caves, however, are situated in dolostone host rock. Consequently, the Mg content of the host rock is much higher than that of limestone. Dripwater monitoring in a set of dolostone-dominated caves in Germany and Morocco, as well as the collection of soil (silicate minerals), host rock (carbonate), and speleothem samples, aims to apply the Mg isotope proxy in dolostone-hosted caves. The time-series analyses of the Mg isotope composition of dripwaters revealed, for most dripwater sites, significant variations in δ26Mg values, which can be related to changes in the silicate-to-carbonate weathering ratio. Silicate weathering is enhanced under dry, warm conditions, whereas cold, wet conditions favour carbonate weathering. Due to significant differences in the Mg isotope composition of silicate (soil) and carbonate (host rock) minerals, changes in the weathering regime are detectable in drip-water Mg isotope ratios in both climate regions. In German caves, where changes in temperature are more pronounced than changes in rainfall amount, the weathering ratio is driven by temperature variations. In Morocco, however, both temperature and rainfall amount complement each other and drive changes in the silicate-to-carbonate weathering ratio. Furthermore, the different transfer times at each drip site ranged from a few months to at least a year. Some drip water sites show no variation in Mg isotope composition. In these cases, the signal of the weathering ratio is strongly buffered by longer water transfer times/residence times and mixing of waters in the aquifer. Although possible, no dependence of Mg isotope variations in the dripwaters on prior calcite precipitation was observed. Corresponding speleothems from the monitored dripwater sites exhibit varying Mg isotope compositions of calcite and aragonite. There is no overprint of other factors during carbonate precipitation; thus, these variations are solely due to changes in the silicate-to-carbonate weathering ratio and, consequently, changes in temperature and rainfall amount. Furthermore, observations on the Mg isotope fractionation factor of aragonite-dominated samples revealed a smaller Δ26Mg than for calcite speleothem samples. Generally, the Mg isotope proxy is a valuable tool for reconstructing past climate conditions in both limestone- and dolostone-dominated caves.

How to cite: Riechelmann, S., Schröder-Ritzrau, A., Wassenburg, J. A., and Immenhauser, A.: Magnesium isotope time-series analyses of dolostone cave dripwater and speleothems: Proxy calibration and application, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5348, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5348, 2026.

EGU26-7468 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Implementing a cave and climate monitoring system across the Swabian Alb, southwestern Germany 

Desirée Lo Triglia, Valdir Novello, Markus Maisch, Armelle Ballian, and Kira Rehfeld

Monitoring studies of cave systems are essential for understanding the hydrological and microclimatic processes that control the isotopic signatures preserved in speleothems and for improving the interpretation of paleoclimate records. Despite increasing efforts in recent years, many aspects of karst system responses to climate variability and change remain poorly constrained.

In 2023, a comprehensive cave and climate monitoring network was established across the Swabian Alb (N 48°30'60''; E 9°24'15''), a karstic region in southwestern Germany, covering both the Neckar and Danube catchments. Four caves were chosen for a monitoring infrastructure based on their location and accessibility: Bärenhöhle, Nebelhöhle, Schertelshöhle, and Hohle Fels. Continuous measurements of relative humidity, temperature and water dripping rates were conducted inside the caves. Measurements of cave air CO2 concentrations and dripping water samples were taken during periodic site visits. Dripping and spring water samples were analyzed for triple oxygen (δ18O and δ17O) and hydrogen (δD). External climate monitoring included temperature and precipitation measurements, as well as the isotopic analysis of rainfall and the calculation of δ17O-excess and δD-excess from rainwater collected at multiple locations on and around the Swabian Alb.

Preliminary results from the first year of monitoring indicate: (1) seasonal fluctuations in the concentration of CO2 in cave air due to winter ventilation and cave-air stagnation in summer, indicative of buoyancy-driven airflow between the surface and the cave; (2) a uniform air moisture source feeding the rainfall over the Swabian Alb; (3) caves and springs appear to be decoupled from short-term weather signals, implying integration over longer-term climatic conditions; and (4) the isotopic composition of rainwater seems to be related to the rainfall amount and temperature at the monitoring sites. By combining multiple-site and cave monitoring at different elevations and two basins of the Swabian Alb, this study provides new insights into the environmental factors controlling the isotopic signal and airflow dynamics in caves. These findings are essential for improving the interpretation of speleothem-based climate proxies and the sensitivity of karst systems to ongoing future climate change.

How to cite: Lo Triglia, D., Novello, V., Maisch, M., Ballian, A., and Rehfeld, K.: Implementing a cave and climate monitoring system across the Swabian Alb, southwestern Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7468, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7468, 2026.

EGU26-8808 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

A speleothem mineralogy perspective on interannual wet-dry cycles in Botswana during the Late Holocene 

Anupam Samanta, Nitesh Sinha, Jasper A. Wassenburg, Andrea Borsato, Silvia Frisia, Fulvio Franchi, Franziska Lechleitner, Yuna Oh, Yun Seok Yang, Hai Cheng, Laurent Bruxelles, Andy E. Moore, and Axel Timmermann

Interannual rainfall variability in the Kalahari Desert is strongly controlled by the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Paleo-reconstructions of hydroclimate (wet-dry) cycles in this area may therefore provide insights into the past behaviour of ENSO. Here, we present new petrographic and geochemical data of Late Holocene speleothem samples from Gcwihaba Cave, Botswana. The cave system, which is home (colony) to large numbers of bats, formed in highly karstified metamorphic dolomite. The studied speleothems consist of calcite and aragonite laminae at micrometer to millimetre-scales. High-resolution mineralogical, stable carbon (δ13C) and oxygen (δ18O) isotope ratios, and trace elemental concentrations, combined with chronological constraints (14C and U-Th data) and layer counting under the optical microscope, suggest that calcite/aragonite duplets record annual to interannual fluctuations in hydroclimate. Wet conditions favor calcite formation, whereas aragonite forms preferentially during the dry period. Speleothem lamina thickness is closely linked to the annual infiltration, which is controlled by seasonal aquifer recharge cycles. High-resolution laser-ablation trace-element (TE) analysis and isotope data support the petrographic observations. Calcite carbonate farming experiments in the cave revealed that aragonite and calcite are in distinct layers and well-preserved. There is no evidence in modern precipitates of dissolution-reprecipitation processes that lead to the transformation of aragonite to calcite. Of all TE, Y and La appear to be the best rainfall proxies, reflecting their transport pathway from the soil horizon at the top of the cave to the speleothem via drip water. Synchronous occurrences of higher Y and La with calcite phases suggest wet conditions, i.e., more rainfall. In contrast, aragonite layers exhibit higher concentrations of Sr, Ba, and U, and increased fluorescence due to the presence of organic matter, which possibly originates from bat guano deposits. However, this proposition requires further investigation. Aragonite formation can be linked to drier conditions in the cave, which are accompanied by an increase in the drip water Mg/Ca ratio. Drier conditions also increase the likelihood of preserving air-borne dust (guano particle) deposition rich in phosphorus from the cave interior within speleothem layers. Our results highlight that mixed calcite-aragonite speleothems provide a robust archive of high-frequency (annual to interannual) hydroclimate variability in southern Africa.

How to cite: Samanta, A., Sinha, N., Wassenburg, J. A., Borsato, A., Frisia, S., Franchi, F., Lechleitner, F., Oh, Y., Yang, Y. S., Cheng, H., Bruxelles, L., Moore, A. E., and Timmermann, A.: A speleothem mineralogy perspective on interannual wet-dry cycles in Botswana during the Late Holocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8808, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8808, 2026.

EGU26-10137 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

North Atlantic drivers of Southern Hemisphere rainfall: A high-resolution speleothem record from Waipuna Cave, New Zealand. 

Mathilde Dubois, Russell Drysdale, John Hellstrom, Agathe Lise-Pronovost, Bethany Fox, Sebastian Hoepker, and Adam Hartland

During the Last Glacial Period, Earth was characterised by rapid millennial-scale climate oscillations, known as ‘Dansgaard–Oeschger’ (D-O) events, associated with large-scale reorganisations of oceanic and atmospheric circulation. While such variability is well documented in Northern Hemisphere high-latitude archives, such as Greenland ice cores, its expression remains less constrained in the Southern Hemisphere mid-latitude, raising the question of whether these climate disturbances, initiated in the North Atlantic Ocean, influenced rainfall patterns thousands of kilometres away in the Southern Hemisphere’s Southwest Pacific.

Here we present a new high-resolution speleothem composite record from Waipuna Cave (North Island, New Zealand), integrating two cores from the same flowstone aligned using a dynamic time warping approach. The composite spans 36.2–11.1 thousand years before present, and is constrained by 61 U–Th ages, yielding a mean age uncertainty of ~250 years (2σ). Combined stable isotope (δ18O, δ¹³C) and trace element (Mg/Ca) profiles provide a multiproxy record of hydroclimatic variability at  Southern Hemisphere mid-latitudes.

The Waipuna record reveals rapid millennial-scale variability that resembles Dansgaard–Oeschger (DO) events. Periods of reduced regional water balance (precipitation minus evapotranspiration) on New Zealand’s northwest coast are consistent with large-scale atmospheric and oceanic reorganizations involving a shift of the rainfall belt, or the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), and modulation of the Southern Westerly Winds. Comparison with well-dated, monsoon-sensitive speleothem records from equatorial to subtropical latitudes suggests that the Waipuna hydroclimate variability forms part of a broader pattern of global atmospheric reorganisation.

These results highlight the sensitivity of the Southwest Pacific mid-latitude hydroclimate to the large-scale atmospheric circulation changes during the last glacial period and emphasize the importance of the Southern Hemisphere records for constraining the understanding of the interhemispheric climate coupling. In the context of ongoing climate change, such past analogues may inform future shifts in subtropical rainfall distribution and extreme precipitation events.

Keywords: Last Glacial Period, Speleothem, New Zealand, Interhemispheric teleconnections.

How to cite: Dubois, M., Drysdale, R., Hellstrom, J., Lise-Pronovost, A., Fox, B., Hoepker, S., and Hartland, A.: North Atlantic drivers of Southern Hemisphere rainfall: A high-resolution speleothem record from Waipuna Cave, New Zealand., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10137, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10137, 2026.

EGU26-10573 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Exploring sub-annual to decadal hydroclimate variability and tropical cyclone activity on the northeastern Yucatán peninsula  

Sophie Warken, Antonia Wantzen, Aaron Mielke, Nils Schorndorf, Fernanda Lases Hernández, Jerónimo Avíles Olguín, and Norbert Frank

Disentangling dominant patterns and underlying drivers of hydroclimate variability and tropical cyclone activity in the tropical Americas remains a challenge of paleoclimatology. To explore the potential of speleothem trace metal abundances to close this gap, we study a fast-growing stalagmite from Xplor Cave from Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula. High precision 230Th/U dating with average uncertainties of 5-6 years combined with annual layer counting confine XPL04’s growth between c. 1590 to c. 1970. Due to exceptionally high growth rates between 1 and 4mm per year, the record allows to assess sub-annually resolved proxy variations from post-Colombian times into the 20th century.

Laser Ablation ICP-MS trace metal data from speleothem XPL04 indicate pronounced patterns in hydroclimate sensitive elements. For example, increasing Mg/Ca values suggest a significant drying trend along with a rise in hydroclimate variability during the 20th century. Furthermore, multiannual transition metal changes covary with long-term tropical cyclone activity. Superimposed on that pattern, Cu concentrations and Cu/Ni ratios peak during major hurricane years, with the most pronounced speleothem responses corresponding with the largest events that made landfall at the cave site (the 1933 ‘Tampico’ Hurricane and a 1903 unnamed event).

This preliminary evaluation encourages in-depth analyses of sub-annual to decadal speleothem trace element variations. Future work will include the integration of elemental and isotopic proxies in order to construct a precisely dated multi-proxy record allowing to assess regional hydroclimatic changes on unprecedented timescales.

How to cite: Warken, S., Wantzen, A., Mielke, A., Schorndorf, N., Lases Hernández, F., Avíles Olguín, J., and Frank, N.: Exploring sub-annual to decadal hydroclimate variability and tropical cyclone activity on the northeastern Yucatán peninsula , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10573, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10573, 2026.

EGU26-10789 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Assessing millennial to orbital-scale controls of Caribbean hydroclimate variability via data-model-comparisons 

Francisca Lövenich, Aaron Mielke, Christoph Spötl, Martin Werner, Ángel Acosta-Colón, Isabel Rivera Collazo, Amos Winter, and Sophie Warken

Tropical rainfall is conventionally linked to orbital-scale insolation variability, with higher summer insolation corresponding to stronger precipitation. Yet speleothem d18O records from the greater Mesoamerican region show opposing behaviour (Lucia et al. (2024), Li et al. (2025)), hinting at other forcing mechanisms. Here, we present a precisely dated speleothem record from Puerto Rico covering the past 234,000 years, which is compared to isotope-enabled climate model time slice simulations. By combining our new data with speleothem data from northern Brazil we create climate indeces to assess local ITCZ position and width. The data-model comparison offers the opportunity for an orbital time scale analysis, where insolation is considered for different months and latitudes. Preliminary analyses indicate that the early-rainy season might play a bigger role than previously assumed. Furthermore, millennial-scale variability strongly characterises the proxy record, which cannot be attributed to orbital forcing, but suggests a persistent sensitivity to AMOC strength (compare Warken et al. (2020)). Future work will assess, why Caribbean hydroclimate appears to be not a classical monsoon system throughout MIS 7 to 1 but rather the result of multiple factors superimposing on different timescales.

 

References:

Lucia et al. (2024). Atlantic Ocean thermal forcing of Central American rainfall over 140,000 years. Nature communications. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-54856-0

Li et al. (2025). North Atlantic Subtropical High forcing of Atlantic Warm Pool hydroclimate variability on millennial to orbital timescales. Science Advances. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aea5042

Warken et al. (2020). Persistent Link Between Caribbean Precipitation and Atlantic Ocean Circulation During the Last Glacial Revealed by a Speleothem Record From Puerto Rico. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology. DOI: 10.1029/2020PA003944

How to cite: Lövenich, F., Mielke, A., Spötl, C., Werner, M., Acosta-Colón, Á., Rivera Collazo, I., Winter, A., and Warken, S.: Assessing millennial to orbital-scale controls of Caribbean hydroclimate variability via data-model-comparisons, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10789, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10789, 2026.

EGU26-10810 | Orals | CL1.2.3

A 12.7–5.7 ka multi-proxy stalagmite record from Cueva Fantasma (Atapuerca, N Spain): inland Iberian hydroclimate variability with combustion-derived laminae during the 8.2 ka interval. 

Altug Hasözbek, Javier Martín-Chivelet, Ana Isabel Ortega, Josep Parés Casanova, Josep Vallverdú Poch, Marcos Terradillo Bernal, Eric Font, Joana Ribeiro, Fernando Jiménez Barredo, Ismail Isintek, and Silviu Constantin

We present a multi-proxy record of a speleothem from Cueva Fantasma (Atapuerca, N Spain) spanning 12.7–5.7 ka that documents inland Iberian hydroclimate variability and a local expression of the 8.2 ka event.  U–Th chronology indicates continuous deposition with accelerated accretion (higher drip rates) between ~8.5 and 7.7 ka. From base to top, three morphological stratigraphic parts were defined: (i) transparent columnar calcite with low detrital input; (ii) a laminated interval of black, organic-rich calcite laminae with high detrital input; and (iii) an upper part reflecting post 8.2 ka event stabilization characterized by moderate growth, marked absence of black laminae, and lower detrital imprint. Fluorescence and oil-immersion petrography highlight that black carbon occurs as films and clustered particulates that follow the growth-lamina geometry, with films preferentially recorded or preserved along micro-columns. SEM–EDX identifies combustion-derived particulates comprising soot-like carbon films and ash-rich detritus within the calcite crystals and/or detritus matrix. Trace-element profiles exhibit co-enrichment especially in Mn and Th across 8.5–7.7 ka, consistent with enhanced soil flushing and drip-system reorganization. High-resolution δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C data indicate wetter, vegetation-active conditions prior to ~8.5 ka, a hydrological pulse during ~8.5–7.7 ka expressed by increased variability and δ¹³C–δ¹⁸O co-variability, and moderation thereafter. Thus, the 8.2 ka interval is captured not by a hiatus but by a facies and geochemical shift under wetter, more seasonal/flashy recharge, characterized by black laminae containing soot-like films and ash-rich detritus, Mn–Th peaks, and slightly accelerated growth. The combustion-derived particulates, soot-like films and ash-rich micrite/detritus, occur as closely spaced clusters which supports multiple discrete in-cave fire episodes. This interpretation is distinct from external wildfire fallout and is based on the tight lamina-scale coupling, and coeval hydrological proxies. This record provides the first speleothem evidence from Atapuerca of the 8.2 ka climatic anomaly embedded within regional Holocene hydroclimate variability, alongside independent evidence for repeated in-cave combustion during that interval.

How to cite: Hasözbek, A., Martín-Chivelet, J., Isabel Ortega, A., Parés Casanova, J., Vallverdú Poch, J., Terradillo Bernal, M., Font, E., Ribeiro, J., Jiménez Barredo, F., Isintek, I., and Constantin, S.: A 12.7–5.7 ka multi-proxy stalagmite record from Cueva Fantasma (Atapuerca, N Spain): inland Iberian hydroclimate variability with combustion-derived laminae during the 8.2 ka interval., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10810, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10810, 2026.

EGU26-11197 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Tropical Climate Variability During Interglacials of the Last 300,000 Years: Evaluation of High-Resolution LA-ICP-MS Trace-Element Data 

Aaron Mielke, Francisca Lövenich, Noreen Garcia, Christopher Charles, Frank Keppler, Isabel Rivera Collazo, Ángel A. Acosta-Colón, Amos Winter, Christoph Spötl, and Sophie Warken

Past interglacial periods with climatic conditions comparable to those of today, but shaped by different orbital configurations and greenhouse gas concentrations, provide valuable insights into natural climate variability. This project aims to address a major data gap in the highly heterogeneous tropics by developing a long, continuous, and high-resolution multi-proxy stalagmite record from the well-monitored Cueva Larga in Puerto Rico1. High-precision 230Th/U dating shows that this stalagmite archive enables a comprehensive comparison of interglacial periods over the last 300,000 years, covering MIS 1, MIS 5 (127 ka to 54 ka), MIS 7 (255 ka to 190 ka) and MIS 9 (310 ka to 280 ka).

We present multiple high-resolution time series of trace elements (Mg, P, Cu, Sr, Ba, U) obtained using LA-ICP-MS. Because the archive integrates data from several stalagmites, it is essential to account for in-cave variability, including effects of prior carbonate precipitation and CO2 exchange. These processes are evaluated through parallel growth phases of the stalagmites and in combination with stable carbon and oxygen isotopes. Here, we focus on the rigorous evaluation of the LA-ICP-MS trace-element records to ensure a reliable and reproducible reconstruction at decadal resolution.

Time-series analyses of this new composite multi-proxy dataset are expected to enhance both qualitative and quantitative understanding of interglacial environmental change, particularly with respect to precipitation intensity and variability. Ultimately, this work will improve assessments of tropical climate sensitivity to external forcing and provide critical context for evaluating the magnitude of  ongoing climate change relative to natural variability.

 

1 Warken et al. (2020). Persistent Link Between Caribbean Precipitation and Atlantic Ocean Circulation During the Last Glacial Revealed by a Speleothem Record from Puerto Rico. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, Vol. 35, No. 11, https://doi.org/10.1029/2020PA003944

How to cite: Mielke, A., Lövenich, F., Garcia, N., Charles, C., Keppler, F., Rivera Collazo, I., Acosta-Colón, Á. A., Winter, A., Spötl, C., and Warken, S.: Tropical Climate Variability During Interglacials of the Last 300,000 Years: Evaluation of High-Resolution LA-ICP-MS Trace-Element Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11197, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11197, 2026.

EGU26-11275 | Orals | CL1.2.3

The structure and timing of Termination I in the Central Mediterranean from a multiproxy speleothem record from Sicily (Southern Italy) 

Giovanni Zanchetta, Ilaria Isola, Andrea Columbu, Russell Drysdale, Giuliana Madonia, Timothy Pollard, Jhon Hellstrom, Stefano Natali, Marco Luppichini, Eleonora Regattieri, and Marco Vattano

The transition from the Last Glacial period to the Holocene (T-I) represents the major global climatic reorganisation of occurred in the recent Earth’ history. T-I shows a complex reorganization of ocean-atmospheric climatic system and is pervasively characterised by abrupt climatic changes driven by the instability of Northern Hemisphere ice sheets and the impact on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation. The iconic climatic phases recognised in Northern Europe and Greenland ice core records are generally recognised also in the Mediterranean region, but structure, timing and eventual regional differences are poorly understood. Here we present a high-resolution multi-proxy speleothem record (stalagmite V3) from Abisso del Vento (Madonie Mountains, Northern Sicily) that spans over the T-I interval (from ca. 20 ka to 10.5 ka BP), comprising stable isotope (δ18O, δ13C) and trace element (Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca) records. Despite V3 proxy data shows the general climatic pattern recognised in Greenland ice cores some differences are observed, especially during the Greenland Interstadial 1 (GI1). Comparisons with various continental and marine records highlight the complexity of the Mediterranean region during T-I, and V3 offers a robustly dated multiproxy records to clarify this complexity.

How to cite: Zanchetta, G., Isola, I., Columbu, A., Drysdale, R., Madonia, G., Pollard, T., Hellstrom, J., Natali, S., Luppichini, M., Regattieri, E., and Vattano, M.: The structure and timing of Termination I in the Central Mediterranean from a multiproxy speleothem record from Sicily (Southern Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11275, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11275, 2026.

EGU26-11483 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Pluvial periods in northern Arabia over the last 10 million years 

Samuel Nicholson, Hubert Vonhof, Huw Groucutt, Paul Breeze, Nick Drake, Faisal Al Jibreen, Matthew Stewart, Monika Markowska, Denis Sholz, Michael Weber, Axel Gerdes, Alfredo Martinez-García, Michael Petraglia, and Gerald Haug

Green periods are becoming an increasingly important facet of both understanding the climatic evolution of Arabia, and permitting mammal dispersals between Africa and Eurasia. Recent research from central Arabia has shown that recurrent phases of increased monsoonal rainfall extended back into the Miocene. However, the latitudinal extent of the tropical rainbelt and green environments, especially at potential dispersal entry points into Arabia, remains uncertain. Here, we provide information on the timing of northern Arabian pluvial periods over the last 10.5 million years. We applied U-Pb dating to a new set of 50 speleothems from 5 caves, showing that periods of enhanced rainfall occurred between ~1.2 to ~1.7 Ma, ~2.8 to ~3.7 Ma, ~4 to ~7.5 Ma and ~9.8-10.5 Ma. Speleothem fluid inclusion water δ18O and δD stable- sotopes plot in excellent agreement with monsoonal precipitation sources, indicating the tropical rainbelt migrated to at least 29°N over Arabia in Mio-Pleistocene green phases. Absence of speleothem deposition in northern Arabia following the Mid-Pleistocene Transition (1.2 Ma) indicate monsoonal rainfall did not reach high latitudes in sufficient amounts, and reveal a time-transgressive reduction in the northward extent of monsoonal rainfall. These highlight the role of enhanced glacial-boundary conditions as a suppressant to the northern extent of rainfall during green Arabia periods. Whilst Mid-Late Pleistocene lacustrine evidence indicates increased rainfall compared to modern climates, our data suggest that mammal (especially hominin) dispersals in this region took place during relatively drier pluvial periods compared to the Mio-Pliocene.

How to cite: Nicholson, S., Vonhof, H., Groucutt, H., Breeze, P., Drake, N., Al Jibreen, F., Stewart, M., Markowska, M., Sholz, D., Weber, M., Gerdes, A., Martinez-García, A., Petraglia, M., and Haug, G.: Pluvial periods in northern Arabia over the last 10 million years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11483, 2026.

EGU26-11764 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

Millennial-scale temperature and precipitation dynamics during Marine Isotope Stage 11a and 10 

Michael Weber, Hubert Vonhof, Alfredo Martínez-García, and Denis Scholz

Millennial-scale climate variability is a prominent feature of the last glacial cycle, intensively studied in Greenland ice cores as well as other marine and terrestrial climate archives. The most widely recognised expressions of abrupt millennial- to centennial- scale climate oscillations during this period are Dansgaard – Oeschger (D/O) events. For the past 125 ka, Greenland ice cores provide a benchmark for studying D/O events, but their restriction to the last glacial cycle limits investigations of the timing, duration and amplitude of D/O-type events during previous glacial cycles. Synthetic Greenland ice core data suggest that D/O-type millennial-scale climate variability occurred across all glacial phases of the past 800 ka. However, a major limitation for understanding the timing and dynamics of millennial-scale climate variability in preceding glacial cycles is the progressively more challenging dating of older material and the general lack of absolutely and precisely dated high resolution climate records beyond the last interglacial.

Here we present a new speleothem record from Cueva Victoria in SE Spain covering Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 11a and 10, showing millennial-scale climate variability in both temperature and precipitation. Previous studies confirm that speleothems from Cueva Victoria are sensitive archives of past atmospheric and hydrological changes on both millennial and orbital timescales. For the last glacial cycle, numerous D/O events have been identified in Cueva Victoria speleothem stable isotope records, demonstrating their strong connection to North Atlantic climate patterns.

During MIS 11a and 10, millennial-scale variability is evident in multiple high-resolution proxies in the Cueva Victoria speleothems, such as stable carbon and oxygen isotopes, Mg concentrations, as well as TEX86-derived cave temperatures. The structure and timing of those millennial-scale events align closely with millennial-scale variability in marine sediment records, especially from the Iberian Margin, enabling direct comparison of temperature and precipitation dynamics in the marine and terrestrial realm. All events are characterised by a rapid increase in temperature and moisture availability, followed by a more gradual cooling and drying trend. This results in distinct stadial-interstadial D/O-type oscillations, particularly pronounced during MIS 10. The timing of these oscillations matches with the predicted occurrence of D/O events based on the synthetic Greenland ice core record, highlighting the potential of Cueva Victoria speleothems to reconstruct millennial scale climate variability beyond the last glacial cycle.

How to cite: Weber, M., Vonhof, H., Martínez-García, A., and Scholz, D.: Millennial-scale temperature and precipitation dynamics during Marine Isotope Stage 11a and 10, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11764, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11764, 2026.

EGU26-12750 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Quantitative paleotemperature reconstruction from Cueva Victoria speleothems using nucleation-assisted fluid inclusion microthermometry 

Jennifer Burck, Michael Weber, Anna Nele Meckler, Yves Krüger, Hubert Vonhof, Alfredo Martinez-Garcia, and Denis Scholz

Cueva Victoria is located in the semi-arid region of south-eastern Spain, one of the driest regions in Europe with mean annual precipitation of 200–300 mm and pronounced seasonality. The cave is hosted in Triassic dolomites and limestones of the Alpujarride Complex, part of the Inner Betic Cordillera, where karstification has enabled the development of extensive cave systems and flowstone formation. These flowstone deposits provide a sensitive archive of past climate variability.

Previous studies established robust ²³⁰Th/U chronologies spanning the last ~450 ka, demonstrating that speleothem growth occurred during both interglacial and warmer glacial periods, such as Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 3, reflecting phases of enhanced regional moisture availability.

Here, we investigate flowstone samples VIC-III-4 and VIC-III-5, covering MIS 11c to MIS 7a (~430–190 ka), to evaluate their potential as quantitative paleotemperature archives. Preliminary nucleation-assisted (NA) fluid inclusion microthermometry measurements of a few flowstone samples yielded cave temperature estimates in agreement with the range of independently derived TEX₈₆-based temperature reconstructions from the same samples.

Detailed petrographic thin section analysis of the two flowstones indicates the presence of several fluid-inclusion-bearing growth layers that appear promising for NA fluid inclusion microthermometry. This provides the basis for targeted selection of additional microthermometry measurements and a more detailed analysis of the two flowstones. Although assisted (NA) fluid inclusion microthermometry has successfully been applied to speleothems from other regions, this study represents the first application to the Cueva Victoria flowstones and one of the first applications to a semi-arid cave system.

The combination of precisely dated high-resolution speleothem proxy records (stable isotopes, trace elements) with direct temperature reconstructions significantly enhances the potential of the Cueva Victoria flowstones for palaeoclimate reconstruction and will contribute to improving terrestrial paleoclimate reconstructions for the western Mediterranean region, an area highly sensitive to future hydroclimate change.

 

How to cite: Burck, J., Weber, M., Meckler, A. N., Krüger, Y., Vonhof, H., Martinez-Garcia, A., and Scholz, D.: Quantitative paleotemperature reconstruction from Cueva Victoria speleothems using nucleation-assisted fluid inclusion microthermometry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12750, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12750, 2026.

EGU26-12788 * | Orals | CL1.2.3 | Highlight

 Speleothems used by Neanderthals, in the Bruniquel Cave, Southern France. 

Sophie Verheyden, Jacques Jaubert, Christian Burlet, Soraya Bengattat, Kim Génuite, Serge Delaby, Hai Cheng, and Xuexue Jia

The Bruniquel Cave contains circular structures made of broken stalagmites, dated to 176.5 ka and attributed to Neanderthals (Jaubert et al., 2016). A key question concerns the origin of the speleothem pieces used in these structures (i.e., speleofacts) and whether Neanderthals intentionally broke stalagmites, or instead collected fragments already lying on the cave floor—an important distinction in terms of intentionality. A related issue is the provenance of these speleothems within the cave, implying a particular selection process indicating potential symbolic value of speleothems for Neanderthals.

Two broken stalagmite bases and one broken stalagmite near the structures in the Salle de la Structure were investigated. U-series dating of the outer layers of the broken bases and stalagmite, as well as of the initial calcite layers that subsequently covered them, yielded ages from 432.8 ± 29.8 ka to 121.3 ± 1.2 ka. The broken base BR-201, produced similar ages for the older and younger calcite, allowing a precise age of 176.5 ± 2.1 ka for the breakage of this ~20 cm diameter stalagmite—consistent with the age of the structures. This result strongly supports breakage by the same Neanderthals who built the structures, and suggests an opportunistic selection of building material.

Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) with an in-house portable device was performed on speleothems from different sectors of the cave, and on speleothem pieces incorporated into the structures. Multivariate statistical analysis (e.g., principal component analysis), reveal compositional differences, mainly in Mg content, between speleothems from the entrance zone and those from the deeper parts of the cave. To date, the geochemical signature of the speleothem pieces used in the structures matches that of speleothems from the interior of the cave, failing to attribute the building material to a specific place in the cave, which would be an argument for a specific symbolic value.

Other calcite deposits in the Salle de la Structure were dated to constrain the cave floor conditions during Neanderthal occupations. These ages range from 163.0 ± 39.3 ka to 2.8 ± 4.1 ka. The results indicate that calcite deposition occurred in some areas during or shortly after the construction of the structures, implying that the floor surface in these zones likely remained relatively stable thereafter. In contrast, other areas were covered by calcite only during the Holocene. These findings help identify surfaces where human traces may be preserved and contribute to reconstructing the cave’s morphology during Neanderthal times by spotting the more recent calcite deposits that should be removed from the 3D model of the cave.

The study is financed partly by the French Ministry of Culture (DRAC), the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO) and the Research Foundation Flanders (K208822N)

Jaubert J., Verheyden S., Genty D., et al., 2016. Early Neandertal constructions deep in Bruniquel Cave in southwestern France. 2016. Nature 534: 111 114.

 

 

How to cite: Verheyden, S., Jaubert, J., Burlet, C., Bengattat, S., Génuite, K., Delaby, S., Cheng, H., and Jia, X.:  Speleothems used by Neanderthals, in the Bruniquel Cave, Southern France., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12788, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12788, 2026.

EGU26-13781 | Orals | CL1.2.3

Dansgaard/Oeschger-like events detected in MIS 11 speleothem proxy records from Central Europe 

Dana F. C. Riechelmann, Hubert Vonhof, Bernd R. Schöne, Klaus Peter Jochum, and Denis Scholz

Two stalagmites, DH_Br2 and DH_Kn6, were sampled from excavations in Dechencave, western Germany. Both were precisely dated by the 230Th/U-method (Mainz University), thin sections were investigated (Mainz University), and both stalagmites were analysed for their stable oxygen and carbon isotope composition (Mainz University and Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz) as well as various trace element concentrations (Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz).

Both stalagmites show evidence for diagenesis, such as roundish voids and mosaic calcite fabric in their lower parts. These parts were excluded from further analyses due to the alteration of the 230Th/U-ages as well as the proxy data. The discussed section of stalagmite DH_Br2 started growing at 401 ka and stopped at 379 ka, which corresponds to late Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11c to mid-11a. Stalagmite DH_Kn6 grew between 394 and 390 ka and overlaps with that of DH_Br2. Overall, speleothem records from MIS 11 are rare, in particular from Central Europe.

The δ13C and δ18O records show different levels for both stalagmites, most probably related to different amounts of prior calcite precipitation (PCP) and disequilibrium isotope fractionation during calcite precipitation at the different drip sites. The trace element records of both stalagmites can be identified as different environmental proxies with Al and Y being proxies for detrital material in the stalagmites and P and U reflecting soil microbial and vegetation activity. Strontium and Ba were influenced by leaching of soil minerals as well as changes in stalagmite growth rates. The Mg records correlate well with the δ13C records indicating PCP as dominant controlling factor. All trace element records, except for Al and Y, and the δ13C values are proxies for past precipitation. As revealed by the proxy records of stalagmite DH_Br2, drier conditions prevailed between 401-395 ka as well as between 391-379 ka, whereas wetter conditions existed between 395-391 ka, which is probably related to insolation changes. According to the δ18O values of stalagmite DH_Br2, temperature was slightly lower during 389-379 ka, i.e., after the peak warm phase of MIS 11, in agreement with marine and Antarctic ice core records. During this period 389-379 ka, we observe millennial-scale oscillations, which are most prominent in the δ18O record of stalagmite DH_Br2. They are probably Dansgaard/Oeschger-like events, not described up to now from speleothems from Central Europe during MIS 11. These millennial-scale oscillations are in good agreement with sea surface temperature changes in the North Atlantic.

How to cite: Riechelmann, D. F. C., Vonhof, H., Schöne, B. R., Jochum, K. P., and Scholz, D.: Dansgaard/Oeschger-like events detected in MIS 11 speleothem proxy records from Central Europe, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13781, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13781, 2026.

EGU26-13872 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Is the 4.2-ka event visible in speleothem records from southwest Asia? 

Alice Paine, Mark Altaweel, Peyman Parvizi, Frederick Held, Stéphane Affolter, Christoph Raible, Morteza Djamali, Hai Cheng, and Dominik Fleitmann

The ‘4.2 ka event’ (~4200–3900 yr BP) is now a globally-recognised Holocene chronostratigraphic marker, delineating the boundary of the middle-to-late Holocene1. First identified as a drought signal corresponding to ~2200 BCE in the Tell Leilan stratigraphy (Syria), correspondence between this signal and the collapse of the Akkadian empire was interpreted as sign of a causal association, and one of the first explicit links made between a major climate shift and civilizational transformation2. Several studies have more recently presented evidence suggesting this drought was in fact a globally-pervasive phenomenon, linked to the decline of the ancient Egyptians, the de-urbanization of the Harappans, and the demise of the Neolithic Culture of China3,4,5. However, no clear consensus exists on whether the 4.2-kyr event was truly global in scale, nor whether the event was consistently marked by aridity6,7. But perhaps most critically, it is unclear whether a clear drought signal at 4.2-ka2 occurs consistently in paleoclimate records across southwest Asia8. Without a clear perspective on if, and how, regional climate signals relate to one another across this interval, it is difficult to ascertain whether changes occurring at ~4.2 ka are mechanistically distinguishable from internal noise in a highly sensitive, and complex climate system9. To address this uncertainty, we present a first look at new stable isotope, trace element, and fluid inclusion measurements from speleothems grown in Kuna Ba and Shalaii Caves (~400 km SE of Tell Leilan) in Iraqi-Kurdistan. By combining these results with published geochemical data from paleoclimate archives across southwest Asia, we will assess whether the hydro climatic changes recorded in these archives capture a distinct anomaly corresponding to the 4.2-ka event.  Hence, providing a chronologically-robust framework with which to assess the regional-scale timing, expression, and coherence of climate variability before, during, and after the proposed 4.2-ka event.

~~

1Walker et al. (2018) Episodes 41(4): 213-223 ; 2Weiss et al. (1993) Science 261 (5124): 995-1003 ; 3Weiss & Bradley (2001) Science 291(5004): 609-610 ; 4Carolin et al. (2019) PNAS USA 116(1): 67-72 ; 5Zhang et al. (2021) Science Advances 7(48): 1-9 ; 6McKay et al. (2024) Nature Communications 15: 6555 ; 7Nan et al. (2025) Earth-Science Reviews 265: 105128 ; 8Finné et al. (2011) Journal of Archaeological Science 38: 3153-3173 ; 9Zittis et al. (2022) Reviews of Geophysics 60: e2021RG000762.

How to cite: Paine, A., Altaweel, M., Parvizi, P., Held, F., Affolter, S., Raible, C., Djamali, M., Cheng, H., and Fleitmann, D.: Is the 4.2-ka event visible in speleothem records from southwest Asia?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13872, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13872, 2026.

EGU26-14602 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

Reconstructing Tropical Hydroclimate Variability using Speleothems from the Philippines During Abrupt Climate Events 

Natasha Sekhon, Street Senan, Mira Hart, Celia Kong-Johnson, Jaren Ocampo Yambing, Xiaojing Du, Mónica Geraldes Vega, Bryce Belanger, Mart Geronia, Sharon Jaladoni, Carlos Primo David, Jessica Oster, David McGee, and Daniel Ibarra

Understanding past climate trends is crucial for projecting future hydroclimate changes, especially in the context of rapid anthropogenic climate change. Here, we focus on reconstructing hydroclimate variability during periods of past climate change from the tropics , which remain underrepresented in climate variability studies despite their heightened vulnerability to ongoing climatic shifts.  

Here, we investigate ẟ18O, ẟ13C, and trace elements (Mg/Ca, Ba/Ca, Sr/Ca) in multiple speleothem samples across the Philippines. Speleothem sample, BH-1, was collected from Hinagdanan Cave (9.6253° N, 123.8009° E) and grew between 26-51 kyrs B.P. with an average growth rate of 8.12 μm/yr. Another speleothem sample PPUR-GP-3 collected from the Puerto Princesa Subterranean River National Park (10.1926° N, 118.9266° E) grew between 4-48 kyrs B.P. with a hiatus between 16,243 ± 146 years B.P. to 35,300 ± 538 years (±2𝜎). Collectively, speleothem growth encompasses critical periods of past climate change such as Heinrich Events 1 through 5, the Younger Dryas, and the last deglaciation. Modern climatology data and ongoing cave monitoring data suggests that Hinagdanan Cave and Princesa Subterranean River National Park recharges from summer precipitation. 

Initial geochemical findings indicate fluctuating trace element data suggesting drying trends over time, characterized by an increase in Mg/Ca and a decrease in Sr/Ca in PPUR-GP3. Change-point analysis conducted on the ẟ18O record in BH-1 reveals that Heinrich Event 3 in the Philippines experienced drying conditions. The drying is in alignment with ẟ18O trends reflected in Borneo stacked speleothem records. Further investigation of BH-1 and PPUR-GP3 trace elements and stable isotopes will disentangle regional (ẟ18O amount effect, moisture source) versus local (prior calcite precipitation) hydroclimate variability. Finally, we will compare our new geochemical results with existing isotope-enabled climate model simulations (iTRACE) to discern potential climate drivers that modulate IPWP hydroclimate during key climate events.

How to cite: Sekhon, N., Senan, S., Hart, M., Kong-Johnson, C., Yambing, J. O., Du, X., Vega, M. G., Belanger, B., Geronia, M., Jaladoni, S., David, C. P., Oster, J., McGee, D., and Ibarra, D.: Reconstructing Tropical Hydroclimate Variability using Speleothems from the Philippines During Abrupt Climate Events, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14602, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14602, 2026.

EGU26-14611 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

Residual stresses preserved in calcite from cave stalagmites and its impact on fluid inclusions 

Leonardo Pasqualetto, Yves Krüger, Luca Menegon, Matteo Demurtas, Silvia Frisia, Andrea Borsato, Mihály Pósfai, Peter Pekker, Hugo van Schrojenstein Lantman, and Nele Meckler

Stalagmites record valuable information within their crystal structure and composition about past climate and environmental changes. Stalagmite crystal fabrics reflect growth conditions: the crystallisation pathway influences the distribution of nano- to micro-particulates, crystal defects, and nano- to micro-porosities. These microstructures may act as nucleation sites for the formation of larger fluid inclusions — small cavities encapsulating relic drip water that are important climate archives. Stalagmite fluid inclusions are widely used for paleotemperature reconstructions using nucleation-assisted microthermometry and oxygen isotope thermometry. However, the influence of different crystallisation mechanisms and fabrics on fluid inclusion properties (e.g., water density and composition) and their preservation is still poorly constrained.

Here, we apply a crystallographic approach to investigate the internal crystal structure of two calcite stalagmites from Borneo and New Zealand. Our aim is to assess whether fluid inclusions are affected by post-growth deformation and/or volume changes and to quantify their impact on microthermometric data. This work seeks to identify non-thermal processes that could explain the observed scatter in microthermometry measurements from coeval fluid inclusions.

Previous electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analyses showed these samples exhibit columnar compact, open, and porous fabrics composed of mm- to cm-scale crystal domains, further subdivided into sub-domains characterised by rotations around the c-axis of up to 4°. Fluid inclusions are preferentially located along these sub-domain boundaries, indicating a strong relationship between fluid inclusion nucleation and crystal defects. High-angular resolution EBSD (HR-EBSD) reveals residual stresses up to 200–300 MPa located along the sub-domain boundaries. Since stalagmites form in a nominally stress-free environment, these stresses are interpreted as remnants of crystallisation energy stored in the lattice as crystallographic defects. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) confirms the presence of high densities of edge dislocations located along the sub-domain boundaries, that bend the crystal lattice and generate the observed misorientations and stress fields.

Our results demonstrate that fluid inclusions are located in mechanically fragile microstructural environments. The internal stresses stored by these microstructures may be released in response to external forces such as sample preparation or ambient temperature changes and could induce post-formation volume changes in fluid inclusions, ultimately biasing paleotemperature reconstructions. These quantified stress values provide a basis for evaluating the magnitude of this effect on microthermometric data.

How to cite: Pasqualetto, L., Krüger, Y., Menegon, L., Demurtas, M., Frisia, S., Borsato, A., Pósfai, M., Pekker, P., van Schrojenstein Lantman, H., and Meckler, N.: Residual stresses preserved in calcite from cave stalagmites and its impact on fluid inclusions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14611, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14611, 2026.

EGU26-16045 | ECS | Orals | CL1.2.3

Speleothem reconstructions of Holocene interannual climate variability in Botswana 

Nitesh Sinha, Anupam Samanta, Jasper A. Wassenburg, Andrea Borsato, Silvia Frisia, Fulvio Franchi, Franziska Lechleitner, Yuna Oh, Yung-Seok Yang, Hai Cheng, Laurent Bruxelles, Andy E. Moore, and Axel Timmermann

The natural variability of rainfall in the Southern African region remains, as yet, poorly understood due to scarce availability of long instrumental and pre-instrumental records and the sparse distribution of weather stations in remote areas. It is known that regional atmospheric circulation features, particularly the Botswana High, control the moisture distribution across the region on seasonal and interannual timescales. The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) further influences moisture transport, resulting in alternating wet and dry periods. Understanding the interplay between these forcing in modulating natural rainfall variability is crucial for effective water resource management, agricultural planning, and climate adaptation in a region heavily reliant on seasonal rainfall.

Speleothems (secondary mineral cave deposits) are known to record local hydrology and rainfall over thousands of years and can provide valuable knowledge about natural rainfall variability in Southern Africa. Here, we present two speleothems from Gcwihaba Cave, located in northwestern Botswana, that span the late Holocene period between 200 and 2500 years before present (yrs BP). Robust age models for speleothems were constructed using a combination of U-Th and 14C dating techniques, despite signs of biocorrosion from bat guano in the cave. The two well-laminated speleothems exhibit alternating bands of calcite and aragonite, likely identifying annual to multi-annual timescales. High-resolution stable-isotope (δ18O and δ13C) and trace-element data from these speleothems reveal pronounced interannual variability, suggesting large fluctuations in rainfall amounts in the area, which can be linked to ENSO, as suggested by water tagging experiments with an isotope-enabled climate model. Analyzing multidecadal changes in interannual isotope and trace-element variability provides further insights into low-frequency ENSO dynamics during the late Holocene, which can then be compared with other paleo-ENSO reconstructions.

How to cite: Sinha, N., Samanta, A., Wassenburg, J. A., Borsato, A., Frisia, S., Franchi, F., Lechleitner, F., Oh, Y., Yang, Y.-S., Cheng, H., Bruxelles, L., Moore, A. E., and Timmermann, A.: Speleothem reconstructions of Holocene interannual climate variability in Botswana, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16045, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16045, 2026.

EGU26-16599 | Orals | CL1.2.3

The anatomy of the Indian summer monsoon variability during the penultimate deglaciation (Termination II) 

Gayatri Kathayat, Kaustubh Thirumalai, Tan Liangcheng, Xiyu Dong, Christoph Spötl, Hanying Li, Ponnusamy Saravanan, Haiwei Zhang, and Hai Cheng

Abstract

Precisely dated East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) speleothem δ¹⁸O records frequently mirror Greenland ice-core variability during deglaciation and stadial–interstadial transitions, however, pronounced regional heterogeneity is evident, particularly during the penultimate deglaciation (Termination II; TII). Not all records align, and mismatches are often ascribed to chronological uncertainty despite high dating precision, yet they persist even in annually band-counted, confocal-imaged speleothem δ¹⁸O records, implying complexity beyond dating artifacts. This ambiguity sustains debate over whether EASM cave δ¹⁸O primarily encodes Asian monsoon intensity via moisture-source shifts or reflects upstream rainout, progressive isotopic distillation and is potentially modulated by precipitation seasonality.

In contrast, speleothem δ¹⁸O records from the Indian subcontinent provide a complementary perspective, with δ¹⁸O variability more directly reflecting Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM)  circulation strength. To better constrain first-order Asian monsoon variability, we present a high-temporal-resolution, precisely dated speleothem δ¹⁸O record from Mawmluh Cave in northeastern India (hereafter ML11 δ¹⁸O). The ML11 δ¹⁸O record spans Termination II (TII) and is derived from a ~70-cm-long stalagmite, with a mean temporal resolution of ~5 years and average ²³⁰Th age uncertainties of ±600 years. Our ML11δ¹⁸O  record resolves the evolution of the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) across TII, enabling robust assessment of monsoon structure and variability under changing boundary conditions. We examine what constitutes a “penultimate deglaciation” in a monsoon-dominated system, considering not only its precise timing but also its sensitivity to external forcing. Leveraging the high chronological precision of ML11 δ¹⁸O record, we evaluate similarities and potential differences between the ISM and EASM speleothem δ¹⁸O variability. Our new ISM δ¹⁸O record further tests whether the EASM speleothem δ¹⁸O reflects pan-Asian monsoon dynamics or is dominated by regional-to-local hydroclimate processes. These results highlight the need to integrate chronologically robust archives with regionally diagnostic proxy interpretations to better resolve monsoon behavior and improve constraints on monsoon sensitivity under future climate change.

How to cite: Kathayat, G., Thirumalai, K., Liangcheng, T., Dong, X., Spötl, C., Li, H., Saravanan, P., Zhang, H., and Cheng, H.: The anatomy of the Indian summer monsoon variability during the penultimate deglaciation (Termination II), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16599, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16599, 2026.

EGU26-16783 | Orals | CL1.2.3

Improved accuracy of oxygen and hydrogen isotope analysis in speleothem fluid inclusions: the importance of crusher temperature 

Jasper Wassenburg, Julian Schröder, Alfred Skeidsvoll, Sayak Basu, Jenny Maccali, A. Nele Meckler, Alvaro Fernandez, Alexander Budsky, Daniel M. Cleary, Alfredo Martinez-Garcia, Yun Seok Yang, Yuna Oh, Hai Cheng, Christoph Spötl, and Hubert B. Vonhof

Speleothem fluid inclusion isotope analysis provides the oxygen and hydrogen isotope composition of the parent water from which the carbonate precipitated (d18OFL; d2HFL). In contrast to carbonate isotopes, it is not affected by kinetic isotope effects. Fluid inclusion isotopes can be analyzed by crushing heated speleothem fragments and measuring the isotopic composition of the released water vapor. However, during this process, analytical artifacts related to pre-crushing evaporation and/or post-crushing adsorption can occur, potentially skewing the isotope values away from their origin and biasing temperatures calculated from the combination of d18OFL and d18OCc. In d2H-d18O cross-plots, analytical (pre-crushing) evaporation has been suggested to induce very shallow slopes down to 1.4, lower than trends induced by evaporation under natural conditions in the soil or inside the cave.

            In this study, we used a Picarro L2140i isotope analyzer with an artificially generated moist background setup to examine the effect of analytical evaporation by quantifying the water loss prior to analysis when applying different crushing temperatures. We targeted two layers with different calcite fabrics from a flowstone of Touhami Cave (GTOF2), Morocco, as well as speleothems from Scladina Cave, Belgium and Bloukrantz Cave, South Africa.

The samples have different water contents and show different isotope effects of analytical evaporation that highly depend on the crushing temperature. Our results indicate that high water content samples (>1-2 µL/g) are generally more reliable compared to low yield samples (<0.5 µL/g), although high yield samples can be altered significantly by in crusher evaporation. In contrast to crushing at 110°C or 125°C, crushing at 90°C prevents most analytical evaporation in the samples we analyzed, increasing the sample water yield by up to 50%. Furthermore, for our low water content samples different crushing temperatures of 110°C and 125°C result in different evaporation slopes. At 110°C, the evaporation slope can even be parallel to the global meteoric water line. A potential explanation for these different evaporation slopes involves various amounts of adsorption of water to freshly crushed calcite powder, although this requires further exploration.

These findings have crucial implications, especially for low yield samples, because data that plot in the vicinity of the global meteoric water line are generally regarded as trustworthy. In our experiments, crushing at 90°C produces accurate d18OFL, d2HFL, and d-excess values for all high yield samples. Realistic cave air temperatures from combined d18OCc and d18OFL analysis is retrieved from all samples analyzed, supported by consistent TEX86 temperatures and modern-day drip water isotope compositions.

How to cite: Wassenburg, J., Schröder, J., Skeidsvoll, A., Basu, S., Maccali, J., Meckler, A. N., Fernandez, A., Budsky, A., Cleary, D. M., Martinez-Garcia, A., Yang, Y. S., Oh, Y., Cheng, H., Spötl, C., and Vonhof, H. B.: Improved accuracy of oxygen and hydrogen isotope analysis in speleothem fluid inclusions: the importance of crusher temperature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16783, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16783, 2026.

EGU26-17289 | Orals | CL1.2.3

Quasi - Continuous growth of speleothems on the Yucatan Peninsula and possible drought modulated hiatuses 

Norbert Frank, Sophie Warken, Nils Schorndorf, Aaron Mielke, Fernanda Lases Hernandez, and Jeronimo Avìles Olguìn

The timing of drought occurrence on the Yucatán Peninsula has been a central focus of research linking Maya cultural evolution to regional hydroclimatic variability over the past several millennia. Climate proxy records that span periods of cultural decline and political instability are particularly valuable for constraining potential causal relationships. Numerous studies have proposed such links, most recently supported by sub-annual drought reconstructions (James et al. 2025, Science Advances). However, the precise and accurate determination of absolute ages for drought events and drought-related growth hiatuses remains a major challenge.

Advances in radiometric dating of speleothems, including 230Th/U and 14C methods, as well as independent stratigraphic approaches such as visual laminae counting and geochemical or isotopic proxy cycles, have substantially improved chronological resolution over the past decade. Nonetheless, combining independent dating techniques introduces important pitfalls related to systematic uncertainties. Corrections for initial 230Th can substantially degrade age accuracy, as they rely on the assumption of a single, well-characterized source rarely constrained by multiple measurements (e.g., isochrons). These corrections introduce systematic uncertainties that may exceed those associated with individual layer counts by up to two orders of magnitude. Conversely, layer counting alone provides absolute age control only when robust anchor points are available or when records are demonstrably continuous, and it requires independent constraints to interpret proxy-derived periodicities.

Here, we compile and assess available speleothem 230Th/U data from the Yucatán Peninsula to (i) evaluate the impact of variable initial 230Th on chronological precision and accuracy, (ii) identify pitfalls associated with combining radiometric dating and annual layer counting, and (iii) demonstrate quasi-continuous speleothem growth across the region over the past 3000 years. Our analysis reveals substantial geochemical variability in initial 230Th concentrations in drip waters from different cave systems, indicating a strong potential for underestimated systematic uncertainties, particularly at the onset of discontinuous chronologies. While annual layer counting based on geochemical proxies independent of water isotopic composition or vegetation changes can significantly reduce relative age uncertainties, systematic errors persist and require careful evaluation. Using more than 20 speleothem chronologies, we further document the frequency and regional coherence of growth hiatuses and their changes across the Terminal Classic Period. Integrating chronological data with soil-sensitive tracers allows assessment of critical thresholds in soil CO₂ concentration, drip-water availability, cave–drip water CO₂ gradients, and carbonate oversaturation.

Overall, our results highlight that accurately constraining drought timing from speleothem records remains challenging, underscoring the need for rigorous methodological integration and transparent quantification of systematic uncertainties.

How to cite: Frank, N., Warken, S., Schorndorf, N., Mielke, A., Lases Hernandez, F., and Avìles Olguìn, J.: Quasi - Continuous growth of speleothems on the Yucatan Peninsula and possible drought modulated hiatuses, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17289, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17289, 2026.

EGU26-17746 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

A climatic link between speleothem formation in south-eastern Spain and Eastern Mediterranean sapropel deposition? 

Alexander Budsky, Denis Scholz, Christoph Spötl, Michael Weber, and Hubert Vonhof

The modern Western Mediterranean climate is characterised by strong seasonality and, especially in south-eastern Spain, by limited rainfall. In contrast, terrestrial and marine archives indicate that the peak of the last interglacial was marked by warmer conditions and potentially more variable climate, partly driven by meltwater outbursts in the North Atlantic. High insolation during interglacials forced a northward displacement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, increasing rainfall over Northern Africa. Enhanced fluvial input leads to stratification of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea and ultimately to the deposition of sapropels. However, the climatic consequences of these large-scale processes for south-eastern Iberia have not yet been systematically investigated.

Several speleothems from Cueva Victoria, south-eastern Spain, cover the mid-Pleistocene to the Holocene. During the last glacial period, Dansgaard/Oeschger (D/O)-type variability is expressed in the speleothem stable isotope records. Variations in speleothem stable isotope values are interpreted in terms of changes in temperature (δ18O) and vegetation cover (δ13C). In general, warmer temperatures during D/O events are associated with lower δ18O values due to temperature and moisture source effects. Increased effective precipitation (precipitation-evaporation) is reflected by more negative δ13C values, resulting from higher soil microbial activity and denser vegetation cover.

Here, we present a compilation of speleothem records from Cueva Victoria spanning several interglacials and encompassing the timing of multiple sapropel layers in the Eastern Mediterranean. A comparison of speleothem stable isotope signatures during the formation of different sapropels reveals contrasting climatic responses in south-eastern Spain. During glacial phases, speleothem growth coincided with the timing of the sapropel deposition, indicating more humid conditions in south-eastern Spain. In contrast, during the Holocene Climate Optimum and the formation of sapropel 1, elevated δ13C values point to a decline in vegetation cover, interpreted as a result of enhanced seasonality. Speleothem formation is almost completely absent during sapropel 5 (≈ 122-128 ka), which may reflect enhanced seasonality with warmer temperatures associated with a reduction in precipitation-evaporation compared to the Holocene.

How to cite: Budsky, A., Scholz, D., Spötl, C., Weber, M., and Vonhof, H.: A climatic link between speleothem formation in south-eastern Spain and Eastern Mediterranean sapropel deposition?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17746, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17746, 2026.

Karst landscapes of Peninsular Malaysia preserve some of the most important terrestrial archives of Quaternary fauna and paleoenvironmental indicators. Due to its location in between the Indochina and Sundaic subregions, the peninsula is critical for assessing faunal dispersal, landscape contiguity, and climatic fluctuations effects on the ecosystem. Published fossil and geochronological evidence from cave sites across the peninsula are synthesised to evaluate the faunal habitat structure and ecological variation from the Middle Pleistocene to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).

Early Quaternary research in the peninsula was largely conducted through geological, sedimentological, and palynological records, often in placer tin-mining pits. It was suggested that vegetation cover during the LGM and earlier glacial phases was reduced and more open relative to the present day. Pollen preserved within alluvium deposits indicates cooler, drier climates, with grassland–savanna and pine woodland corridors. These interpretations were embedded within broader landscape evolution models including deep weathering of exposed basement in Mio-Pliocene time during the maximum extent of the Sundaland continent, regolith mobilisation after the initiation of slumping due to the rise of sea levels and precipitation, braided fluvial aggradation, episodic interglacial downcutting, the development of peneplanation and pedogenesis followed by the establishment of modern fluvial, infill of V-shaped valleys in association with high-sea level deposits along the coast during the Late Pleistocene.

Numerically dated karst cave fossil assemblages provide a new insight to complement these open-site models. The persistence of orangutan (Pongo sp.) at Batu Caves until ~60 ka implies continued lowland forest cover along the west coast during the last glacial phase. Pleistocene small mammal assemblages from Semadong Cave, located in the northern peninsula, feature environmental variability with the co-occurrence of grassland- and forest-affiliated taxa suggesting a mosaic vegetation model under cooler and drier conditions. Reflected by the occurrence of arboreal mammals including Pongo and colobine monkeys, the Middle–Late Pleistocene Layang Mawas Cave represents an assemblage that is dominated by species closely tied to tropical forest habitats.

Notable recent finding includes the first reported occurrence of Stegodon in Peninsular Malaysia, which was discovered together with a Pongo within the same Middle Pleistocene stratigraphic unit. Based on the ecological tolerances of modern Pongo and stable isotope evidence from fossil Pongo and Stegodon elsewhere in Southeast Asia and adjacent regions, it is reasonable to infer that the palaeoenvironment at this site was either under continuous forest cover or comprised a mixed landscape, with forest patches interspersed within more open vegetation. Recent studies on palaeoecological records across Southeast Asia and pollens from South China Sea during the LGM further challenge the “savanna corridor” paradigm and support the concepts of “forest” and “mosaic vegetation” across Sundaland.

Collectively, karst cave archives in Peninsular Malaysia add critical faunal constraints to existing sedimentary and palynological frameworks. Future combination of stable carbon and oxygen isotope data on fossil remains, with high-resolution rainfall and monsoon proxies will further refine paleoenvironmental reconstructions in the peninsula, subsequently contribute to a better understanding of the paleoenvironment in this region.

How to cite: Muhammad, R. F.: Karst Records of Quaternary Fauna and Environments in Peninsular Malaysia: A Literature Review, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18068, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18068, 2026.

EGU26-18529 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Evaluating the limits and potential of fluid-calcite δ¹⁸O and Δ₄₇ thermometry in modern speleothems from Borneo 

Alvaro Fernandez Bremer, Jenny Maccali, Yves Krüger, and Anna Nele Meckler

Speleothems are among the most important terrestrial climate archives, combining precise chronologies with sensitivity to temperature and hydrology, yet reconstructing absolute temperatures remains challenging. While fluid inclusion microthermometry provides the most direct temperature constraints, it requires large, well-preserved inclusions and is not applicable to all samples. Emerging approaches such as TEX86 may require site specific calibrations and remain in early stages of development. Consequently, stable isotope-based approaches including fluid-calcite δ18O thermometry and clumped isotope Δ47 thermometry represent promising options for speleothem paleothermometry, despite both being affected by isotopic disequilibrium inherent to speleothem growth. Here, we evaluate whether empirical calibrations that incorporate mean disequilibrium effects can yield meaningful temperature estimates in a tropical setting. Using actively growing speleothems from caves in Borneo, we assess whether δ18O and Δ47 based thermometers can be applied despite expected disequilibrium, whether disequilibrium effects are consistent among samples, and whether particular speleothem morphologies are better suited for clumped isotope thermometry.

We measured calcite δ18O and Δ47, together with fluid inclusion δ18O, in stalagmites, stalactites, flowstones, soda straws, and pool carbonates. We find that oxygen isotope derived temperatures calculated using a speleothem specific calibration such as Tremaine et al. (2011) agree well with modern cave temperatures, with a 1σ spread of approximately 1.5 °C across 22 growth layers from nine different stalagmites. In contrast, Δ47 based temperatures show large sample dependent disequilibrium effects, with an approximately 4 °C 1 σ catter across 14 specimens. Only pool carbonates record Δ47 values consistent with isotopic equilibrium. These results indicate that for Holocene samples fluid-calcite δ18O thermometry can provide meaningful absolute temperatures with an inherent uncertainty of ± 1.5°C, whereas Δ₄₇ disequilibrium effects are highly variable and indicate that an empirical calibration incorporating mean disequilibrium would not yield robust temperature estimates. Pool carbonates emerge as the only speleothem type consistently suitable for clumped isotope thermometry

How to cite: Fernandez Bremer, A., Maccali, J., Krüger, Y., and Meckler, A. N.: Evaluating the limits and potential of fluid-calcite δ¹⁸O and Δ₄₇ thermometry in modern speleothems from Borneo, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18529, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18529, 2026.

EGU26-19071 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Moisture Source Dynamics during the Penultimate Glacial Inception (MIS 7-6) in Northern Vietnam Stalagmite 

Chloe Riviera, Sebastian F M Breitenbach, Annabel Wolf, Jack Longman, Christopher D Standish, Adam B Jost, David McGee, Ryan J Rabett, Pham Sinh Khanh, Anh Duc Trinh, and Vasile Ersek

Marine Isotope Stage 7 (~243-191 ka BP) represents a complex interglacial period characterised by multiple climate substages and gradual orbital forcing changes, culminating in one of the most rapid glacial inceptions of the Pleistocene at the MIS 7-6 transition (~201-187 ka BP). Despite its importance for understanding monsoon responses to glacial inceptions under differing orbital configurations, monsoon dynamics during this interval remain poorly understood due to a paucity of high-resolution paleoclimate records from Southeast Asia. 
We present a multiproxy speleothem record from Boi Cave in northern Vietnam spanning 201-187 ka BP. In contrast to characteristic glacial-interglacial δ¹⁸O shifts observed at other Asian monsoon sites, our record exhibits minimal amplitude change across the MIS 7-6 transition. The δ¹⁸O signal instead preserves sustained high-frequency variability throughout the interval. Trace element geochemistry, however, documents clear local hydroclimate changes, with peak wet conditions at 197 ka and rapid monsoon reorganisation at ~191.4 ka. These hydroclimate changes align with glacial inception timing in other Asian speleothem records and correlate with North Atlantic and Mediterranean records, suggesting hemispheric-scale reorganisation of atmospheric circulation. Modern climate analysis reveals this region receives rainfall from both the Southwest Summer Monsoon and the Northeast Winter Monsoon systems during the soil recharge period, with the balance between moisture sources varying interannually.
We discuss how stable isotope and trace element proxies record different aspects of monsoon dynamics at this site. While trace elements document local infiltration in response to monsoonal rainfall, δ¹⁸O reflects the balance between Indian Ocean and Pacific moisture sources. This distinction arises from Boi Cave's unique geographical position, where both monsoon systems contribute to annual rainfall. This high-resolution reconstruction fills a critical spatiotemporal gap in understanding Southeast Asian monsoon dynamics during the penultimate glacial inception.

How to cite: Riviera, C., Breitenbach, S. F. M., Wolf, A., Longman, J., Standish, C. D., Jost, A. B., McGee, D., Rabett, R. J., Khanh, P. S., Trinh, A. D., and Ersek, V.: Moisture Source Dynamics during the Penultimate Glacial Inception (MIS 7-6) in Northern Vietnam Stalagmite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19071, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19071, 2026.

EGU26-19357 | Orals | CL1.2.3

A speleothem record of the Mid-Brunhes Transition from southern Europe 

Russell Drysdale, Timothy Pollard, Gianni Zanchetta, Eleonora Regattieri, Ilaria Isola, John Hellstrom, Jon Woodhead, Xianglei Li, Isabelle Couchoud, Lawrence Edwards, Julien Leger, Adrien Vezinet, Mathieu Däeron, Nele Meckler, Hai Cheng, Christoph Spötl, and Anthony Fallick

Antarctic ice cores and ocean-sediment records preserve evidence for an increase in the amplitude of glacial-interglacial cycles at around 430 ka, known as the Mid-Brunhes Transition (MBT). However, similar evidence from non-polar terrestrial environments is rare, casting some doubt on the global extent of this transition. Here we present a multi-proxy speleothem record from Corchia Cave (Alpi Apuane, Italy) that spans the MBT. It comprises a stacked d18O and d13C time series from multiple stalagmites anchored in time by U-Th and U-Pb ages; and trace element, 87Sr/86Sr, and d18O and d13C profiles from a subaqueous calcite deposit (CD3) that has grown continuously from 970 ka to the present. We anchored the CD3 record to the chronology of a stalagmite stack by synchronisation of their respective d18O and d13C profiles.

 

CD3 is well suited to this study because it yields a suite of proxies from just a single specimen that covers multiple glacial-interglacial cycles either side of the MBT. In particular, its d13C profile provides a reference for comparing the amplitude of glacial-interglacial temperature changes at Corchia to globally integrated ice-volume (LR04 benthic 18O/16O stack) and greenhouse gas (ice-core CO2 and CH4)time series. The CD3 temperature record builds on a previous trace element study, which revealed that the Mg/Ca in this speleothem is strongly influenced by mineralisation temperature (a proxy for external air temperature at the cave site). This is supported by subsequent clumped-isotope palaeothermometry. We thus developed a continuous palaeotemperature time series for CD3 extending to ~650 ka via a Mg-D47 transfer function.

 

The temperature profile reveals compelling evidence for a shift in glacial-interglacial amplitude across the MBT. Temperatures during the interglacials of MIS15e, 15a and 13a are lower in Corchia compared to those of MIS11c, 9e, 5e and the Holocene; temperatures during MIS7e and 7c are the exception, only reaching the levels of the pre-MBT interglacials. Minimum glacial temperatures for MIS16 and 14 are warmer in Corchia than those of the subsequent glacial maxima, and the MIS12 and 6 glacials are the coldest of the last 650 kyr. All of these patterns are consistent with existing global ice-volume and greenhouse gas records but provide a rare and important terrestrial perspective. This finding confirms previous assessments that the MBT was global in extent.

How to cite: Drysdale, R., Pollard, T., Zanchetta, G., Regattieri, E., Isola, I., Hellstrom, J., Woodhead, J., Li, X., Couchoud, I., Edwards, L., Leger, J., Vezinet, A., Däeron, M., Meckler, N., Cheng, H., Spötl, C., and Fallick, A.: A speleothem record of the Mid-Brunhes Transition from southern Europe, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19357, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19357, 2026.

EGU26-20247 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Northern Alpine temperature lapse rates from the mid Holocene and MIS 5 based on speleothem fluid inclusions 

Timon Kipfer, Dominik Fleitmann, Anamaria Häuselmann, Elisa Hofmeister, Frederick Held, Marc Luetscher, Hai Cheng, and Stéphane Affolter

Medium to high elevations in the European Alps may experience enhanced warming in the future (Kotlarski et al., 2023), potentially leading to a decrease of the temperature lapse rate. However, it remains unclear if such elevation dependent warming has happened during previous interglacials. Therefore, reconstructing temperature lapse rate estimates from past warm intervals offer a unique opportunity to investigate if elevation dependent warming has occurred in the past and whether we are to expect such a process in the future.

In order to examine the past temperature lapse rates, we used speleothem samples from caves collected along an altitudinal transect from the Jura mountains to the Swiss Alps. The speleothems contain past drip water that has been preserved in micrometric sized fluid inclusions (0.01 to 0.1 weight %). This drip water corresponds to precipitation water falling above the cave and thus constitutes an excellent archive of past precipitation (Affolter et al., 2025). By combining the stable isotopic compositions of speleothem fluid inclusion waters and calcite, absolute paleotemperatures can be estimated.

Here we present temperature lapse rates of the Northern Alpine region based on speleothem fluid inclusion water from the mid Holocene and the Marine Isotope stage 5 (MIS 5) intervals. Overall, ~140 fluid inclusions samples obtained from 18 stalagmites from 12 caves situated along a transect from the Jura mountains to the Swiss Alps, across elevations ranging from 373 to 1’890 meters.

Preliminary results indicate that very slight elevation dependent warming might have occurred.  However, especially for MIS 5, mountain uplift and erosion may significantly impact the temperature lapse rate as cave elevations have changed over time, increasing uncertainties. The average paleotemperatures show that modern air temperatures are ~1°C to ~1.5°C warmer compared to the mid Holocene.

How to cite: Kipfer, T., Fleitmann, D., Häuselmann, A., Hofmeister, E., Held, F., Luetscher, M., Cheng, H., and Affolter, S.: Northern Alpine temperature lapse rates from the mid Holocene and MIS 5 based on speleothem fluid inclusions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20247, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20247, 2026.

EGU26-20339 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Absolute paleotemperature evolution for MIS6 – MIS5 transition and moisture source changes based on Central European stalagmites 

Elisa Hofmeister, Dominik Fleitmann, Anamaria Häuselmann, Hai Cheng, Timon Kipfer, and Stéphane Affolter

Speleothems represent high-resolution continental archives that provide important information about past climate and paleo environmental changes. Their suitability for uranium-thorium dating enables the development of precisely constrained chronologies. Speleothems often contain small amounts of paleo drip water, which was trapped in the stalagmite fabric during the time of formation. The fluid inclusion oxygen (δ18Ofi) and hydrogen (δ2Hfi) coupled to the calcite δ18Ocalcite stable isotopes can be used for the reconstruction of absolute mean annual paleo temperatures. For our study site realm in Switzerland, δ18Ocalcite was often suggested to be interpreted as a temperature signal, at least during warm intervals such as the Holocene. However, δ18Ocalcite patterns are not able to provide absolute temperature estimates and can be controlled by several factors such as precipitation amount, temperature, and moisture source. Decoupling between δ18Ocalcite evolution and temperature signal can be clarified by comparing with an unambiguous temperature record based on a strong chronology and from the same realm. Such temperature records are scarce for the Central European lowland realm. The existing records are essentially based on biogenic proxies, which are summer biased and where dating can be sometimes difficult.

In this study, we present a new absolute mean annual paleotemperature record for the Central European realm based on fluid inclusion stable isotopes from two Milandre caves (Switzerland) stalagmites. As demonstrated in previous studies conducted within this cave, δ2Hfi has been shown to function as a key proxy for the reconstruction of mean annual paleotemperatures for the central European low elevation realm (Affolter et al. 2019). Here we provide temperature snapshots for the glacial – interglacial transition starting at the penultimate glacial maximum (MIS6) with an average temperature of ca. 4°C until the thermal maximum (MIS5). During MIS6 and the following transition, δ18Ocalcite pattern is decoupled from the temperature evolution. In order to shed light on the δ18Ocalcite interpretation, we discuss the evolution of two high resolution δ18Ocalcite pattern measured on the same stalagmites as the temperature snapshots. With the δ18Ocalcite/temperature comparison we suggest that δ18Ocalcite of the Milandre cave does not represent atmospheric temperature fluctuations during the examined time span. Instead, δ18Ocalcite likely provides information about the moisture source and its changes during the glacial period and the following transition.

How to cite: Hofmeister, E., Fleitmann, D., Häuselmann, A., Cheng, H., Kipfer, T., and Affolter, S.: Absolute paleotemperature evolution for MIS6 – MIS5 transition and moisture source changes based on Central European stalagmites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20339, 2026.

EGU26-20349 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Reconstructing coastal eastern African climate from speleothems: Implications for human biogeography 

Benjamin Tiger, Samuel Nicholson, Emmanuel Ndiema, Rahab Kinyanjui, Jeroen van der Lubbe, Gerald Haug, Denis Scholz, Michael Weber, and Hubert Vonhof

There is strong evidence that cyclical changes to Earth’s orbital configuration during the Pleistocene led to the periodic greening of vast areas of the Sahara, East African Rift Valley, and Arabia. The opening of these humid corridors facilitated the dispersal of humans out of eastern Africa into Asia and beyond. However, less is known about what happened under opposite circumstances, when these corridors dried up due to waning orbital forcing. One hypothesis is that human populations sought refuge in eastern Africa’s coastal forests when conditions in the African interior were inhospitable. We test this hypothesis by evaluating the stability of climate in coastal Kenya from our reconstruction vis-à-vis climate in the African interior from previously published work. Speleothem samples collected from limestone quarries near Mombasa and Kilifi provide a novel record of long-term climate change in eastern Africa and offer new insight into human biogeography. Preliminary U-Th age results suggest that these samples grew throughout the last glacial period and possibly during older glacial-interglacial cycles. This sustained growth indicates that eastern African coastal climate was characterized by stable conditions and a positive moisture balance, supporting the refugia hypothesis. To further constrain the climate dynamics governing coastal eastern Africa, temperature and hydroclimate reconstructions are being developed using fluid inclusion and TEX86 analyses.

How to cite: Tiger, B., Nicholson, S., Ndiema, E., Kinyanjui, R., van der Lubbe, J., Haug, G., Scholz, D., Weber, M., and Vonhof, H.: Reconstructing coastal eastern African climate from speleothems: Implications for human biogeography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20349, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20349, 2026.

EGU26-20503 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Multi-centennial hydroclimate shifts of Southeastern Brazil hydroclimate in response to North Atlantic cooling events over the past 7,500 years 

Julio Cauhy, Marcela Eduarda Della Libera, Nicolás M. Stríkis, Juan Pablo Bernal, Mathias Vuille, Francisco W. Cruz Junior, R. Lawrence Edwards, Valdir F. Novello, Hubert Vonhof, and Denis Scholz

New high-resolution trace element records combining stalagmites from Southeastern Brazil (SEBRA) evidence persistent multi-centennial shifts in hydroclimate conditions over the past 7,500 years, with wet anomalies associated with North Atlantic cooling events, including Bond events and the Little Ice Age (LIA). Our analysis reveals a coupling between the Bond events and increased South Atlantic Convergence Zone (SACZ) rainfall over SEBRA, with a persistent pattern over the Middle and Late Holocene. The most pronounced wet anomalies in SEBRA are synchronous with these events, and present a coherent structure with other records from the South American Summer Monsoon (SASM) region and the SACZ, and are in antiphase with Southern Brazil (SB) resembling the multi-centennial dipole between SEBRA and SB. This pattern indicates that large-scale reorganizations of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) are induced by North Atlantic cooling and a strengthened SASM/SACZ convection through changes in cross-equatorial heat transport related to a weakening of the AMOC. Furthermore, the interhemispheric antiphase relationship between SEBRA wet anomalies and drying across the Asian monsoon region evidences the global expression of AMOC–ITCZ modulation under North Atlantic cooling events. These findings demonstrate the pronounced response of SEBRA hydroclimate to even modest perturbations in the interhemispheric energy balance, evidencing the sensitivity of the region towards potential impacts under AMOC weakening scenarios.

How to cite: Cauhy, J., Della Libera, M. E., M. Stríkis, N., Bernal, J. P., Vuille, M., W. Cruz Junior, F., Edwards, R. L., F. Novello, V., Vonhof, H., and Scholz, D.: Multi-centennial hydroclimate shifts of Southeastern Brazil hydroclimate in response to North Atlantic cooling events over the past 7,500 years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20503, 2026.

EGU26-20601 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Exploring past environments based on temperature reconstructions from Pliocene Arabian speleothems 

Julian Schröder, Hubert B. Vonhof, Denis Scholz, Anna Nele Meckler, Monika Markowska, Samuel L. Nicholson, Michael Weber, Alfredo Martinez-Garcia, Yves Krüger, Jens Fiebig, and Gerald Haug

The Arabian Desert experienced multiple periods of wetter and greener conditions that sustained human populations and allowed the dispersal of mammal fauna across the Arabian Peninsula. A recently published speleothem-based paleoclimate reconstruction of central Arabia extends the record of such recurrent short-lasting humid periods over at least the past 8 million years. Here, we applied multiple recently developed paleothermometers to this late Miocene to late Pleistocene speleothem record: Fluid inclusion stable isotopes, microthermometry and dual-clumped isotopes. The data indicate that in the late Miocene and Pliocene, wetter episodes in central Arabia were up to ~4 °C warmer than current Mean Annual Air Temperature (MAAT). These temperature estimates imply that potential evapotranspiration was significantly higher during the late Miocene and Pliocene than during the late Pleistocene. From these temperature estimates, we calculated Pliocene potential evapotranspiration and estimated precipitation amounts for the humid periods in central Arabia. All the evidence from the speleothems combined (temperature, precipitation, δ¹³C values) suggests that over the past 8 million years, the wetter phases in central Arabia typically led to savanna-like environments.

Modern climate data show that our study area has already reached Pliocene MAATs in recent years due to anthropogenic warming. The concomitant drying trend in modern settings indicates that higher temperatures are not the key factor in creating wetter conditions on the Arabian Peninsula. Previously proposed orbital control on the incursion of monsoonal moisture from the south into the Arabian Peninsula remains the most important driver of humidity during these past humid periods. In the modern orbital configuration, monsoonal moisture advection is displaced to the south, and increasing temperatures will likely lead to increased potential evaporation and aridity in central Arabia.

How to cite: Schröder, J., Vonhof, H. B., Scholz, D., Meckler, A. N., Markowska, M., Nicholson, S. L., Weber, M., Martinez-Garcia, A., Krüger, Y., Fiebig, J., and Haug, G.: Exploring past environments based on temperature reconstructions from Pliocene Arabian speleothems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20601, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20601, 2026.

EGU26-20606 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

450,000 Years of Climate Variability: A Speleothem Composite from the Northern European Alps 

Alexandre Honiat, Jonathan Baker, Charlotte Honiat, Marc Luetscher, Gina Moseley, Jens Fohlmeister, and Christoph Spötl

Understanding continental climates across multiple glacial-interglacial cycles remains fundamentally limited by the scarcity of continuous, high-resolution terrestrial archives. During glacial periods, many terrestrial records are interrupted by prolonged depositional hiatuses. Although Greenland ice cores provide exceptional high-resolution records, they reach back only about 128,000 years, leaving earlier key climate intervals poorly constrained. Here, we present a composite record of subglacial speleothems from the European Alps spanning nearly half a million years (0-450 ka BP), providing a quasi-continuous, high-resolution record of continental climate variability supported by well-constrained chronologies.

Alpine and subglacial speleothems offer a unique paleoclimate window because they record both interglacial warmth during conventional growth phases and glacial conditions during deposition beneath ice cover, thereby capturing the full range of Quaternary climate states within a single archive type. Our Alpine composite reveals coherent oxygen isotope patterns across multiple cave systems and elevational gradients, reflecting regional-scale changes in temperature, precipitation, and moisture sources over five glacial-interglacial cycles.

Millennial-scale variability persists throughout the entire 450,000-year record, suggesting that rapid climate oscillations—often considered characteristic of the last glacial cycle—are instead a persistent feature of Quaternary glaciation dynamics. Orbital-scale forcing is clearly expressed across all cycles, albeit with notable deviations from the hemispheric trend. Most critically, beyond 250 ka BP, Alpine climate dynamics increasingly decoupled from global ice-volume signals while showing a strengthened coherence with global greenhouse gas concentrations.

Based on 37 speleothem records from 10 caves, this composite demonstrates that alpine and subglacial speleothems represent a transformative but underutilized terrestrial climate archive. Their ability to bridge the temporal gap between ice-core and marine records, combined with sub-millennial resolution and exceptional chronological control, opens new possibilities for reconstructing and understanding terrestrial climate evolution across extended Quaternary timescales.

How to cite: Honiat, A., Baker, J., Honiat, C., Luetscher, M., Moseley, G., Fohlmeister, J., and Spötl, C.: 450,000 Years of Climate Variability: A Speleothem Composite from the Northern European Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20606, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20606, 2026.

EGU26-20937 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Tropical South American temperature responses to rapid high-latitude climate shifts since the last deglaciation 

Marcela Eduarda Della Libera, Julio Cauhy, Valdir Novello, Angela Ampuero, Francisco W. Cruz Junior, Nicolás Stríkis, Alfredo Martínez-García, Hubert Vonhof, and Denis Scholz

Reconstructing past temperature variations is essential for understanding climate systems and improve projections for future climate changes. In central-east South America, modern warming has been shown to progress faster than global average. Nonetheless, paleotemperature records remain sparse in central South America, which limits our ability to evaluate the response of this region to rapid shifts in global forcings, such as during the deglacial period. Studies show that temperature evolution during the deglaciation was characterized by high-latitude rapid warming episodes associated with major reorganizations of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), which led to perturbations in inter-hemispheric heat distribution. Yet, how these perturbations affect temperatures in tropical South America and the thermal evolution of this region is still largely unknown. Here we present a new 15k-year paleotemperature reconstruction from a precisely dated speleothem collected in central-eastern Brazil. The temperature record is based on the glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) paleothermometer, revealing a total of 6.1°C±0.81 (2std = 0.81°C) of temperature shifts over the last 15k years. Our findings provide evidence of a non-linear temperature increase since the last deglaciation with abrupt warming and cooling events in response to high-latitude forcings, shifts in South Atlantic sea-surface temperatures (SSTs), and increases in atmospheric CO2. Finally, we present a temperature gradient within central-east Brazil and show how paleoclimate models might underestimate rapid temperature changes.

How to cite: Della Libera, M. E., Cauhy, J., Novello, V., Ampuero, A., Cruz Junior, F. W., Stríkis, N., Martínez-García, A., Vonhof, H., and Scholz, D.: Tropical South American temperature responses to rapid high-latitude climate shifts since the last deglaciation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20937, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20937, 2026.

EGU26-20944 | ECS | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Multi-proxy temperature records from a northern Borneo stalagmite reveal sample-specific challenges 

Hao Ding, Yves Krüger, Jenny Maccali, Alfredo Martínez-García, Leonardo Pasqualetto, and Anna Nele Meckler

Over the last decades, several new methods for quantitative paleo-temperature reconstructions with stalagmites have emerged, further enhancing the value of these powerful paleoclimate archives. Among these innovative stalagmite-based thermometers, fluid inclusion microthermometry (Krüger et al., 2011) is often regarded as the most precise and accurate method (Meckler et al., 2015), but its applicability is restricted to formation temperatures > 10 °C, specific calcite fabrics, and abundant fluid inclusions of appropriate size. Fortunately, other temperature proxies have been proposed that each have different strengths and weaknesses, allowing us to compensate for the limitations of individual methods. Many of them, including fluid inclusion water isotopes and TEX86, are still under active development, with substantial uncertainties remaining in their interpretation (e.g., Affolter et al., 2025; Baker et al., 2019). Applying multiple temperature proxies to the same stalagmite allows a direct comparison of proxy behavior, providing improved constraints on the reconstructed paleoclimate variability.

 

In this study, we reconstruct tropical temperature using stalagmite GC08 from northern Borneo, which spans multiple glacial cycles. Here we investigate the oldest part from approximately MIS 14 to MIS 11 (ca. 570 ka to 360 ka), which covers the Mid-Brunhes Transition (MBT; Yin, 2013) at the end of MIS 12. The MBT marks a fundamental change in the climate system with a significant increase in the amplitude of the glacial-interglacial cycles observed in various climatic archives (e.g., Barth et al., 2018). We use three different temperature proxies for the reconstruction: fluid inclusion microthermometry, fluid inclusion water isotopes, and TEX86. Our records reveal notably different temperature trends among the three proxies. Both fluid inclusion microthermometry and TEX86 indicate surprisingly little temperature change across the study interval. We note that the fabric is not ideal for fluid inclusion microthermometry, as large intervals are characterized by biogenic influence and/or diagenesis, which limit the applicability and accuracy of the method. TEX86 seems to be influenced by soil-derived compounds in part of the stalagmite. Fluid inclusion water isotopes appear to be affected by large evaporation or other fractionating effects, as indicated in a cross-plot of oxygen and hydrogen isotopes. Correction attempts do not yield realistic temperatures, with an unrealistically large amplitude of 20 °C. These findings highlight the limitations of individual stalagmite-based paleo-thermometers and emphasize the critical role of depositional context in their interpretation. We therefore call for caution when interpreting single-proxy temperature evidence in the absence of constraints on in-cave processes in future stalagmite-based paleo-temperature studies.

How to cite: Ding, H., Krüger, Y., Maccali, J., Martínez-García, A., Pasqualetto, L., and Meckler, A. N.: Multi-proxy temperature records from a northern Borneo stalagmite reveal sample-specific challenges, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20944, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20944, 2026.

EGU26-21458 | Orals | CL1.2.3

Reconstructing Fire, Vegetation, and Climate Variability over the Last ~1800 Years from a High-Resolution Speleothem Record in the Central Balkans 

Nicolò Ardenghi, Andrea Columbu, Giovanni Zanchetta, Monica Bini, Nicole DeSantis, Ilaria Isola, Eleonora Regattieri, Chuan-Chou Shen, John Hellstrom, Russell Drysdale, Ivica Milevski, and Elena Argiriadis

Understanding long-term interactions between fire activity, vegetation dynamics, and climate variability is essential for contextualizing recent environmental change in the Mediterranean/Balkan region. Speleothems represent a promising yet still underutilized archive for paleofire reconstructions, offering robust chronologies and the integration of multiple environmental proxies within a single, continuous terrestrial record.

Here we present biomarker results from a 220 mm long speleothem from Golubarnica Cave (North Macedonia), spanning approximately the last 1800 years. The record is continuous and constrained by U-Th dating, and combines polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) as indicators of fire activity with n-alkanes reflecting vegetation composition and terrigenous organic matter inputs. Individual sampled layers integrate on average ~30 years, with both integration windows and temporal spacing ranging from sub-annual to multi-centennial scales, allowing the identification of long-term trends and abrupt shifts in fire-related molecular assemblages. This speleothem forms part of the PROMETHEUS project, which investigates fire-climate-ecosystem interactions using speleothem-based multi-proxy approaches.

The PAH record reveals multi-centennial phases of fire activity broadly corresponding to major late-Holocene climatic intervals. Low and relatively stable PAH concentrations characterize the early part of the record (approximately 2nd-6th centuries CE), indicative of a background fire regime. Fire activity increases during the Medieval Climate Anomaly, peaks in the 12th-13th centuries CE, and declines abruptly toward the end of the 13th century, marking the onset of a prolonged phase of reduced fire activity broadly consistent with cooler

conditions during the Little Ice Age. Fire-related signals increase again from the late 16th century onward toward the present. While primarily interpreted in terms of hydroclimatic variability, potential contributions from medieval socio-environmental changes and land-use practices cannot be excluded.

Throughout the record, PAH variability closely mirrors speleothem δ¹⁸O, indicating a persistent hydroclimatic control on regional fire regimes. The main fire maximum is chemically distinct, dominated by an extreme increase in retene (up to two orders of magnitude above background levels) and accompanied by pronounced increases in higher-molecular-weight PAHs, suggesting a major shift in fuel type and/or fire intensity involving resin-rich woody biomass rather than a simple increase in fire frequency. Low-resolution n-alkane data show a synchronous response during this event, including a temporary increase in total n-alkanes, a minimum in average chain length, and a subsequent increase in carbon preference index, pointing to short-lived changes in vegetation-derived organic matter inputs and/or preservation.

Overall, this study highlights the potential of high-resolution speleothem hydrocarbon records to capture multi-decadal to centennial variability in fire regimes and associated environmental processes, identifying hydroclimate as a primary driver of fire activity in the central Balkans during the late Holocene.

How to cite: Ardenghi, N., Columbu, A., Zanchetta, G., Bini, M., DeSantis, N., Isola, I., Regattieri, E., Shen, C.-C., Hellstrom, J., Drysdale, R., Milevski, I., and Argiriadis, E.: Reconstructing Fire, Vegetation, and Climate Variability over the Last ~1800 Years from a High-Resolution Speleothem Record in the Central Balkans, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21458, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21458, 2026.

EGU26-21838 | Posters on site | CL1.2.3

Spatial behaviour of water isotopes in past global precipitation recorded in speleothem fluid inclusions 

Stéphane Affolter, Timon Kipfer, Elisa Hofmeister, Martin Werner, and Dominik Fleitmann

Recovering liquid water from past precipitation on continental areas from mid- to low-latitude and analysing its water isotopes presents significant challenges. Paleoclimate archives such as groundwater, ice or speleothems provide direct access to paleowaters. Most of the paleoclimate reconstructions linked to past precipitation water isotopes are not directly based on analysis of paleo liquid water. They are measured, for instance, on carbonate, sediment or cellulose, all of which primarily derive from precipitation water, yet remain influenced by various fractionation processes during their formation.

Speleothems are advantageous as they can be found in all karstic regions of the Earth, at every latitude and on every continent. They contain fluid inclusions that encapsulated fossil drip water, corresponding to a mixture of precipitation water that fell above the cave area approximately at the time the inclusions were formed. It therefore constitutes thus a unique window into the past hydroclimate cycle for mid- to low latitude. Having better access to paleowater at lower latitudes than those of polar regions allows us to gather global information and understand the behaviour of past meteoric water.

Using published and novel speleothem fluid inclusion data from ~140 caves, we investigate the global behaviour of water isotopes in the past. We explore the spatial distribution of paleoprecipitation, construct a global meteoric water line and develop paleo-isotopic lapse rates for the Holocene and Pleistocene. Furthermore, we compare the speleothem data with observational stable isotope data and two model simulations, i.e. the AWI-ESM-wiso and the ECHAM6-wiso simulations.

How to cite: Affolter, S., Kipfer, T., Hofmeister, E., Werner, M., and Fleitmann, D.: Spatial behaviour of water isotopes in past global precipitation recorded in speleothem fluid inclusions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21838, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21838, 2026.

Many proxies reveal that the low-latitude precipitation varies at a periodic of ∼23 ka, which is governed by precessional forcing. Classical theory proposed that precession-induced increased summer insolation in the Northern Hemisphere (perihelion) corresponds to decreased summer insolation in the Southern Hemisphere (aphelion), hence, controlling the inter-hemisphere temperature contrast and driving the meridional shift of the ITCZ. Accordingly, the low-latitude precipitations are expected to be in-phase (for the Northern Hemisphere) or anti-phase (for the Southern Hemisphere) with the Northern Hemisphere summer insolation. However, in the past two decades, collective proxies showed that the low-latitude precipitation follows very different rhythms, very often out-of-phase with hemispheric summer insolation. For example, the Eastern Asian precipitation evolutes resembling the Northern Hemisphere summer insolation, whereas the Malaysian precipitation correlates the variations in October insolation. The mechanism driving this phenomenon has puzzled the paleoclimate community for more than two decades, however, remains elusive. In this study, by combining theoretical analysis, numerical simulations, and geological records, we proposed a new hypothesis, suggesting that the precession regulates the low-latitude precipitation by altering the latitude of perihelion. The “latitude of perihelion” is defined as the latitude of overhead Sun at the time of perihelion. We demonstrated that wherever (the latitude) and whenever (the season) perihelion occurs, the incoming solar radiation at the corresponding latitude reaches its maximum, driving the strongest land-sea temperature contrast and regional precipitation over land in the corresponding season. The perihelion occurs towards different latitudes and in different seasons depending on the precessional phase. Therefore, the precipitation at different latitudes naturally follow different rhythms.

How to cite: Yang, H.: Precession of the Earth's rotation axis drives naturally asynchronous precipitation variation at low-latitudes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21886, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21886, 2026.

EGU26-250 | ECS | Orals | GM8.1

The Krishna Slide: A newly discovered massive submarine slide off the Eastern Indian Margin 

Bijesh Cheriya Moothoor, Abhimanyu Rajan, and John Kurian Palayil

Submarine mass-wasting processes significantly shape continental margins and represent major geohazards, such as tsunamis and damage to offshore infrastructure. Despite being a classic example of a passive margin, the Indian continental margin remains relatively understudied in terms of submarine mass-wasting processes compared to other global margins. This margin contains several petroliferous basins, with the Krishna-Godavari Basin being a key area for deep-water hydrocarbon exploration along the Eastern Indian Margin.
Recent high-resolution multibeam bathymetric data from the Krishna Basin have revealed, for the first time, the presence of a giant submarine slide. The headscarp lies about 10 km offshore, near the mouth of the Krishna River, which delivers a large sediment load to the margin. Morphometric analysis reveals a slide scar with a perimeter of approximately 60 km and a surface area of about 1,600 sq. km, making it one of the largest documented submarine slides along the Indian continental margin. The associated mass transport deposits (MTDs) extend over an area of ~5000 sq. km, reaching up to 160 km seaward from the scar, indicating a large-scale sediment remobilisation event.
The morphology of the slide scar and the widespread distribution of the MTDs suggest the occurrence of multiple landslide events following an initial megaslide. An integrated analysis of marine geophysical data and geological context indicates that several factors likely contributed to slope instability. These include the presence of gas hydrates, high sediment influx in the upper slope region from the Krishna River, regional fault systems, and neotectonic activities - all of which appear to be primary contributors to the megaslide. Additionally, recent studies propose that intense cyclonic activity in the Bay of Bengal may also act as a trigger for recurrent submarine slides, highlighting the complex interplay of geological and climatic influences in this region.

How to cite: Cheriya Moothoor, B., Rajan, A., and Palayil, J. K.: The Krishna Slide: A newly discovered massive submarine slide off the Eastern Indian Margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-250, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-250, 2026.

Methane stored in shallow marine sediments significantly affects seafloor stability, and influence ocean-atmosphere interactions. Since methane is a potent greenhouse gas, its release influences regional biogeochemical cycles and benthic ecosystems. Along continental margins, favourable conditions promote biogenic methanogenesis and gas hydrate formation. Understanding how methane migrates beneath the base of hydrate stability is therefore essential, particularly because hydrate dissociation near the feather edge of continental slope releases methane to the seabed. Pockmarks form when gas escapes from shallow overpressure zones. Overpressure may develop through hydrate dissociation or through the accumulation of free gas below low-permeability layers. Once pressure exceeds the sealing capacity of the overlying sediments, gas can migrate upward and eventually vent at the seabed.

In the offshore Taranaki Basin, west of New Zealand’s North Island, high-resolution 3D seismic data reveal ~300 pockmarks between 300-700 m water depth. Beneath many of these pockmarks, the seismic data show tiers of near-vertically stacked shallow-gas bright spots, indicating focused migration pathways in the shallow subsurface across the foresets of a prograding clinoform system.

The theoretical stability limit for pure methane hydrates locally aligns with the shallowest bright anomalies. However, most anomalies lie within the free-gas zone landward of the methane-hydrate outcrop and beneath large parts of the pockmark field. Over the past ~16 kyr, bottom-water temperatures along the slope have warmed by ~2.25 °C, shifting the hydrate-stability feather edge downslope by ~1.7 km. This warming-driven retreat  can account for only ~20% of the observed pockmarks. While the presence of gas hydrates can deflect gas updip, there is no clear seismic evidence for a bottom-simulating reflection. Instead, gas appears to ascend upslope through a range of stratigraphic heterogeneities, such as cyclic steps that climb obliquely, scour rims, channel cuts, and levee deposits, which collectively provide localized pathways for migration.

In gently dipping (2-3°) slope, free gas beneath the hydrate stability zone would preferentially migrate updip along permeable strata toward the shelf edge. However, 3D seismic data show bright spots concentrated within scour rims, channel levees, and the crests of cyclic steps that act as effective traps updip of the upper limit of hydrate stability at the clinoform foresets. Gas is accumulated within levee deposits of vertically aggrading and laterally shifting channel-levee systems, where repeated cut-and-fill cycles build stacked fining-upward units. The climbing geometry of cyclic steps redirects gas vertically upslope along their crests, enhancing upward migration, while fine-grained scour infill inhibit lateral migration.3D visualization shows that such traps form multiple tiers of shallow-gas pockets linked by focused gas-flow. Together, these relationships demonstrate that fluid migration is strongly controlled by sedimentary architecture shaped by turbidity current-controlled depositional processes at the foresets of the prograding clinoforms. The clustering of numerous pockmarks above these vertically stacked gas zones strongly indicates that stratigraphic focusing, rather than along-slope migration at the base of the hydrate stability zone, controls gas ascent.

How to cite: Bhattacharya, I. and Sarkar, S.: Stratigraphic Controls on Gas Migration and Pockmark Formation at the foreset of a Prograding Clinoform System west of North Island, New Zealand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-724, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-724, 2026.

EGU26-747 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Characterizing Arctic cold seep habitats from shelf to slope (a case study in the Vestbakken province) 

Fereshteh Hemmateenejad, Arianna Caneva, Carlotta Redaelli, Luca Fallati, Inés Barrenechea Angeles, Claudio Argentino, Giuliana Panieri, and Alessandra Savini

Understanding methane seepage dynamics in Arctic cold seep systems is crucial for knowing the implications of their impact on the Arctic Ocean habitats. The Barents Sea, characterized by active sub-seafloor fluid flow, serves as an ideal setting for investigating the environmental factors that interact with seepage dynamics in Arctic cold seep habitats. This study presents a multidisciplinary investigation of cold seeps explored during the AKMA3 expedition (May 2023) along the Vestbakken shelf and slope (SW Barents Sea). The research combines (i) detailed visual analyses of seafloor imagery acquired by the Aurora Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV), (ii) sedimentological and biogeochemical analyses on three ROV-collected push cores and blade corers, and (iii) a preliminary assessment of living benthic foraminiferal communities. ROV video annotation allowed the identification and classification of multiple distinct microhabitats and cold seep indicators along the explored seafloor based on seafloor characteristics. A clear relationship between sediment type and the distribution of chemosynthetic communities on the seafloor is evident in ROV track analysis. Sedimentological and geochemical data provided quantitative evidence of seep-related processes and enabled a refined characterization of the substrate associated with each microhabitat type. Geochemical profiles revealed fine-scale lateral variability in sediment composition and porewater chemistry, reflecting the heterogeneous and dynamic nature of seepage in the area. The analysis of living foraminiferal assemblages revealed systematic differences between shelf and slope sites, indicating biological responses to seep-driven environmental gradients and variations in the depth of the sulfate–methane transition zone (SMTZ). Together, these multidisciplinary observations provide new insight into the significance of seafloor composition in controlling seepage dynamics near the sediment-water interface and, ultimately, shaping these habitats in the high Arctic.

How to cite: Hemmateenejad, F., Caneva, A., Redaelli, C., Fallati, L., Barrenechea Angeles, I., Argentino, C., Panieri, G., and Savini, A.: Characterizing Arctic cold seep habitats from shelf to slope (a case study in the Vestbakken province), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-747, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-747, 2026.

Deltaic sedimentation plays a crucial role in shaping submarine geomorphology. During the deposition of the Neogene Hanjiang Formation, the Enping Sag was situated at the front of the ancient Pearl River delta. Influenced by the interplay of fluvial, wave, and tidal hydrodynamics, it developed a complex submarine geomorphological pattern. Investigating the genesis and distribution of sand bodies at the Neogene delta front in this area is essential for understanding the spatial arrangement of various sedimentary bodies and their geomorphological effects. Based on a high-frequency sequence stratigraphic framework, this study integrates core, thin-section, well-log, and seismic data. Utilizing seismic sedimentology, thin-layer seismic inversion, and 3D geological modeling, combined with fifth-order relative sea-level curves, we systematically characterize the three-dimensional distribution of sedimentary microfacies within sub-layers of the Hanjiang Formation and their impact on submarine geomorphology. Results indicate that sedimentation during this period was predominantly controlled by fluvial-wave interactions, forming delta-front deposits comprising five microfacies. Subaqueous distributary channels, trending approximately north–south, consist mainly of medium-grained sandstone with muddy intraclasts and scour-fill structures, forming a distinct submarine channel system. Channel-adjacent deposits (e.g., crevasse splays and natural levees) form belt-like gentle slopes or levee microtopography along channel margins, characterized by poor sorting. Wave influence promoted the development of shore-parallel coastal sand bars and extensive inter-bar sheet sands. Coastal bars are composed of medium- to fine-grained sand, exhibit segmented grain-size curves and bioturbation, and form elongated uplifted geomorphological units. Sheet sands are dominated by silty fine sand containing bioclasts, forming broad, flat submarine plains. Relative sea-level fluctuations significantly influenced submarine geomorphological evolution: during lowstands, subaqueous distributary channels and adjacent sands dominated, producing an incised and aggradational channel–levee landscape; during highstands, coastal bars and sheet sands were widespread, shaping a shore-parallel bar–sheet sand geomorphology.

How to cite: Bai, Y., Wang, G., and Yin, Z.: Impact of Delta-Front Sedimentation on Submarine Geomorphology: A Case Study of the Neogene Hanjiang Formation, Northern Enping Sag, South China Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1516, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1516, 2026.

EGU26-4426 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Earthquake regulation of nitrogen dynamics in subduction zone  

Shen Li, Rui Bao, Xianbiao Lin, Mingzhi Liu, Macheal Strasser, and Mengfan Chu

Hadal trenches at subduction margins represent hotspots where episodic tectonic events can reorganize sedimentation and biogeochemical processing. In particular, earthquake-triggered depositional pulses may redistribute and rapidly bury matter including nitrogen. Despite this potential importance, nitrogen burial in the deepest trench environments is still poorly constrained, and how earthquakes modulate nitrogen inputs, internal cycling, and delivery toward subduction remains unclear. Here, we measured elemental and isotopic geochemical parameters from high-resolution long sediment cores drilled at the Japan Trench during IODP Expedition 386. By integrating high-resolution event stratigraphy with robust chronological constraints, we quantified nitrogen inputs, transformations, and burial under two contrasting depositional regimes: background sedimentation and earthquake-triggered event deposition. We find that earthquake event layers deliver nitrogen-bearing material and are associated with substantially enhanced nitrogen burial relative to background intervals. Estimated nitrogen burial fluxes rise from ~24 to ~300 Tg N yr-1 and the event-driven flux exceeds published deep-sea mean burial estimates by ~1.5×102. In addition, earthquake-triggered event deposition markedly increases the relative proportion of bioavailable nitrogen in trench sediments, from 82.6% in background intervals to 91.4%. Collectively, these changes in the bioavailable nitrogen supply may diversify nitrogen transformation pathways, manifesting as a more complex nitrogen-cycling signal in hadal trench sediments. We propose a "seismic nitrogen pump" in which earthquakes transiently accelerate nitrogen cycling through organic matter activation and mass transport, enhancing sedimentary retention and potentially reshaping the subducting nitrogen reservoir. Our findings challenge the view of trenches as static nitrogen repositories, identifying tectonic forcing as a key driver of subduction-zone biogeochemistry and underscoring the need to incorporate episodic perturbations into global nitrogen budgets and deep carbon–nitrogen coupling frameworks.

How to cite: Li, S., Bao, R., Lin, X., Liu, M., Strasser, M., and Chu, M.: Earthquake regulation of nitrogen dynamics in subduction zone , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4426, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4426, 2026.

EGU26-5211 | ECS | Orals | GM8.1

Field observations of a delta-lip failure generating a turbidity current in a lake 

Stan Thorez, Ulrich Lemmin, D. Andrew Barry, and Koen Blanckaert

Turbidity currents are one of the largest sediment-moving processes across our planet, connecting terrestrial sources to deep sea sinks. They play an important part in the transport and burial of organic material, transport contaminants such as microplastics and can reach velocities of multiple meters per second, at which point they form a hazard to submarine infrastructure. In lacustrine environments, they influence water quality by delivering nutrients and oxygen along the water column. Understanding what triggers the formation of turbidity currents is therefore key. Recently, some works have shed a light on the role of transient storage of sediment in the triggering of turbidity currents in oceans. In this model, the near-shore sea bed is preconditioned by the delivery of fresh sediment, either by river inflow or alongshore transport, until it is remobilized by wave action, slope failure or otherwise, and a turbidity current forms. However, the role of transient sediment storage in lakes has received little attention. In this contribution, its potential to precondition the bed for turbidity current generation in the Rhône River-fed lacustrine channel in Lake Geneva will be investigated.

A combination of repeat event-wise gridded boat-towed Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler (ADCP) measurements, years-long infrared timelapse camera imagery and months-long moored ADCP measurements were used to study the occurrence of turbidity currents and coinciding changes in the bed depth near the Rhône River mouth at Lake Geneva.

The boat-towed ADCP measurements revealed an aggradation over three months and a subsequent degradation over two weeks of up to 11 m near the river mouth. The structure of the bed changes pointed out that they were caused by a progradation and transgression of the delta lip. Timelapse images of the Rhône River plume showed an abrupt plume retreat symptomatic of a sudden slope failure, rather than a gradual erosion of the bed. In fjord systems, such failures have been proven to cause strong turbidity current events. Indeed, in this work timelapse images of a similar abrupt plume retreat were linked to a strong turbidity current event in the Lake Geneva lacustrine channel, establishing a link between transient storage of sediment followed by slope failures, and strong turbidity current generation in lakes.

How to cite: Thorez, S., Lemmin, U., Barry, D. A., and Blanckaert, K.: Field observations of a delta-lip failure generating a turbidity current in a lake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5211, 2026.

EGU26-6914 | ECS | Orals | GM8.1

Noto Canyon, Sicily: Terminal Spillway of the Zanclean Flood and Earth’s Largest Fossil Waterfall Indicating a ~2200 m Sea-Level Drawdown 

Benedikt Haimerl, Christian Hübscher, Aaron Micallef, and Angelo Camerlenghi

The subsequent refilling of the Mediterranean Sea following the Messinian Salinity Crisis (~5.33 Ma) represents one of the most extreme flood events in Earth history.

The magnitude of the sea level drawdown during the Messinian Salinity Crisis is heavily debated since its discovery in the 70s. Previous studies utilized a diverse range of methods and proxies to quantify the drawdown. Estimates vary significantly, spanning from less than 500 metres to more than 2 km. This variability largely reflects the method-dependent nature of the reconstructions: flexural–isostatic models typically yield lower drawdowns (hundreds of metres), geomorphic canyon analyses suggest intermediate to large values (~500–1500 m), while evaporite mass-balance and isotopic approaches imply the highest drawdowns, consistent with kilometre-scale or greater drops in the Eastern Mediterranean.

New marine seismic reflection data reveal a prominent, amphitheatre-shaped, erosional scarp at the base of the Noto Canyon, whose morphology and dimensions are consistent with its interpretation as the terminal spillway of the Zanclean Flood. The feature represents the largest fossil waterfall identified to date. The morphology of the canyon and the geometry of its scarp, including its amphitheatre shape, relief, and lateral extent, are the products of the extraordinary hydraulic energy unleashed during the catastrophic Atlantic inflow.

The geological setting is challenging, featuring steep canyon flanks, out-of-plane reflections, and complex sedimentary layering. Notwithstanding, the geomorphology that has been preserved enables an estimation to be made of a sea-level drawdown of approximately 2200 m in the Eastern Mediterranean. Numerical hydrological and landscape-evolution models reproduce similarly large drawdowns, but emphasise temporal and local variability rather than a single static lowstand, suggesting that much of the published spread reflects methodological sensitivity, rather than fundamentally incompatible sea-level scenarios.

These findings demonstrate the substantial influence of gateway geomorphology in constraining past sea-level changes, and provide a more accurate understanding of both the magnitude and erosional impact of the Zanclean Flood and the associated ~2200 m sea-level drawdown in the Eastern Mediterranean, with broader implications for Mediterranean palaeogeography and hydrodynamics during extreme paleo-flood events.

How to cite: Haimerl, B., Hübscher, C., Micallef, A., and Camerlenghi, A.: Noto Canyon, Sicily: Terminal Spillway of the Zanclean Flood and Earth’s Largest Fossil Waterfall Indicating a ~2200 m Sea-Level Drawdown, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6914, 2026.

EGU26-7538 | Posters on site | GM8.1

Integrated Geohazard Risk Assessment for Offshore Operations Combining Multiple Data Sources 

Federico Borsari, Matteo Fornari, and Muttoni Luigi

Offshore drilling operations in continental and ultra-deep waters are mandatory to guarantee energy security and perform CCUS activities to reduce the environmental impact of O&G Industry.
However, offshore environments are related to high levels of risk that must be taken into consideration during operation planning. This is mainly because of shallow and buried geohazards that could potentially occur and affect asset integrity and operations, with time and economic losses, damage to equipment and in extreme cases environmental issues and human losses.

ENI has developed a workflow in accordance with IOGP standards for offshore drilling operations to identify and characterize natural hazards on and below the seafloor and eventually provide solutions to meet the project requirements for different departments (e.g. Exploration, Engineering, Drilling and Completion). This goal is achieved through continuous analyses and integration with bathymetric, seismic, geotechnical, satellite data and well-logs.

The workflow investigates two different domains, seafloor and sub-seafloor, both at regional and local scale.
The seafloor domain is examined through the computation of morphometric attributes to detect and characterize obstacles like boulders and depressions along the seabottom, perform heterogeneity analyses and identify preferential flow-paths. A flow analysis is further developed internally to estimate the energy of debris flows against the assets in terms of velocity and excess density.
The sub-seafloor domain is investigated by means of seismic interpretation and seismic attribute computation from available data to identify and characterize buried faults and landslides, hard-grounds and seismic anomalies possibly related to oil or gas spikes. Direct Hydrocarbon Indicators are further evaluated to classify the seismic anomalies in terms of negligible, low, moderate or high gas risk.
Open-source SAR images are then interpreted to detect natural oil seeps in the environment and link them to geological objects like salt diapirs, faults and fracture networks.
This allows a better understanding of the migration paths of natural oil and gas to the surface mitigating also the possible environmental impact.
Field data like CPTUs and core-logs are interpreted to detect buried landslides or local hard grounds and estimate geotechnical parameters of the shallow soil cover up to 30 m. These results are further implemented to perform a slope stability analysis and risk zonation close to the facilities.
In conclusion, cross-sections, detailed slope analyses and statistics are performed to detect geohazards close to the well location and along the pipeline route.
If available, well-to-well correlations are investigated by means of well-logs to identify different soil units.

All these results are collected into a final report comprehensive of geomorphological, bathymetric and slope maps. The report contains also a top-hole prognosis indicating all the geohazards crossed by the asset to support offshore operations.

Geohazard studies are continuously updated from the exploration to the development phases of the project to obtain a complete and functional knowledge of the area of interest as new data are available.
This integrated approach has been effectively applied to different scenarios, significantly reducing the uncertainties and allowing the quick detection and management of geohazards to mitigate the risks of offshore activities.

How to cite: Borsari, F., Fornari, M., and Luigi, M.: Integrated Geohazard Risk Assessment for Offshore Operations Combining Multiple Data Sources, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7538, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7538, 2026.

EGU26-9687 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Accurate Recognition of Deep-Sea Small-Size Polymetallic Nodules Based on Multi-source Data and Deep Learning Model 

Mingwei Wang, Ziyin Wu, Linghe Kong, Yutong Liu, Dineng Zhao, Jianbing Chen, Haiyang Hu, and Xiang Meng

Solid mineral resources form the essential material foundation for the sustainable development of human society. The international seabed hosts vast and potentially valuable mineral deposits, among which deep-sea polymetallic nodules represent a key marine resource. Focusing on a specific area in the Western Pacific, this study aims to identify and classify small-scale polymetallic nodules in the deep-sea environment. We employ super-resolution reconstruction methods to enhance the resolution of deep-sea hydroacoustic images. Subsequently, a super-pixel segmentation approach is applied to construct a sample enhancement model for deep-sea objects, enabling in-depth extraction of multi-dimensional heterogeneous features from seabed targets and facilitating the effective development of training samples. Constrained by geological seabed samples, an accurate recognition model for seabed polymetallic nodules is established, achieving intelligent mineral classification based on multi-source data such as bathymetry and backscatter. Ultimately, by leveraging the generalization capability of the model, the recognition and classification of untrained samples can be accomplished, thereby promoting the application of the proposed algorithm in large-scale deep-sea mineral exploration.

How to cite: Wang, M., Wu, Z., Kong, L., Liu, Y., Zhao, D., Chen, J., Hu, H., and Meng, X.: Accurate Recognition of Deep-Sea Small-Size Polymetallic Nodules Based on Multi-source Data and Deep Learning Model, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9687, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9687, 2026.

The submerged landforms that presently form part of the continental shelf of northern Spain, constituted the coastal environment during the late Pleistocene, when sea levels were significantly lower. These landscapes likely included large floodplains, various river mouths and estuarine conditions that are largely absent from modern coastal settings. These landforms are crucial for reconstructing topographic features and resource availability during the Pleistocene, prior to the inundation of the Atlantic margin during the sea level increments of the Holocene.  

The research presented is an ongoing Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) project that aims to explore the modern continental shelf and delineate areas of high potential for human territorial evidences. It employs the geophysical and sedimentary analysis of data from a series of exploration projects that were conducted along the continental shelf to investigate the palaeoenvironment, namely the PaleoSUB Project (2017-2020). Initial sea bed surveys were carried out using sonar equipment to produce digital elevation models (DEMs) and seismic datasets to serve as the foundations for the reconstruction of this submerged landscape. Moreover, the bathymetric surveys are complemented with data extracted from vibro-core samples, collected from off-shore contexts within the bathymetric survey zone. The data includes sedimentological analysis, malacofauna species and isotopic analysis, and x-ray florescent (XRF) geochemical assessments of the submarine deposits. Radiocarbon and Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) dating were also conducted to place the datasets within a chronological framework.  

The integration and interpretation of these results allow for clearer temporal identification of palaeoshorelines and seasonal environmental variations derived from the aforementioned multiple proxy indicators. Collectively, these approaches aim to reconstruct the most accurate localised environmental scenarios along the continental shelf of northern Spain, contributing to an improved understanding of human territorial expansion through geomorphological and morphometric analyses, modelling techniques, and prehistoric contextualisation within an underwater landscape. This interdisciplinary approach is the first of its kind in the region, combining the physical properties with the theoretical knowledge of human practices. 

How to cite: Mifsud, J.: Lost Pleistocene Territories: Exploration of Submerged Geomorphological Palaeo-Landforms along Northern Spain., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10463, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10463, 2026.

Accurate hydrographic surveying in coastal environments requires not only high-resolution multibeam echosounder (MBES) measurements but also structured and reproducible data processing workflows that enable validation of applied corrections. This study presents a stepwise methodology for MBES data processing and quality assessment, focusing on the evaluation of successive correction stages and their impact on bathymetric products. The workflow is implemented using the open-source software GLOBE and demonstrated on MBES data acquired in the Argolic Gulf (Greece), provided by the Hellenic Navy Hydrographic Service (HNHS).

The Argolic Gulf is a semi-enclosed coastal basin with variable bathymetry, making it a suitable test case for assessing the influence of navigation, sound velocity, and tidal corrections. The dataset originates from a nearshore hydrographic survey conducted with a hull-mounted SeaBat 7125 multibeam echosounder system. Data delivered by the HNHS included raw multibeam soundings, associated navigation data, sound velocity profiles, and official tide information required for standard hydrographic post-processing. Processing of sound velocity profiles was carried out using DORIS, an open-source software package.

The proposed workflow consists of a sequence of correction steps, including navigation correction, sound velocity adjustment, tidal referencing, geometric transformations, and targeted filtering of outliers. Each step is evaluated independently through the generation of intermediate Digital Terrain Models (DTMs), enabling direct comparison of bathymetric surfaces before and after each correction. Stepwise validation is based on systematic map comparison. Intermediate DTMs generated in GLOBE, are imported into the open-source GIS environment QGIS, where thematic depth maps, bathymetric difference surfaces, and representative depth profiles along characteristic transects are produced. This combined map- and profile-based evaluation supports supervision and validation of applied corrections, facilitating the identification of systematic artefacts such as sound velocity–related curvature patterns, navigation-induced shifts, and localized swath-edge noise.

The stepwise comparison of intermediate bathymetric surfaces enables systematic validation and supervision of MBES corrections, demonstrating that individual correction effects can be assessed independently and that the reliability of the final bathymetric product can be evaluated prior to acceptance. The proposed workflow supports reproducible hydrographic surveying and contributes to improved reliability and interpretability of MBES-derived bathymetric surfaces in coastal and nearshore environments.

How to cite: Boursoukis, I. and Anastasiou, D.: Stepwise Validation of Multibeam Echosounder Data Processing Using an Open-Source Processing Workflow: A Case Study in the Argolic Gulf (Greece), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11449, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11449, 2026.

EGU26-12660 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Submarine geomorphology and late Quaternary evolution of the Taranto offshore (southern Italy) under natural and anthropogenic controls. 

Vito D'Abbicco, Francesco De Giosa, Alessia de Luca, Teresa Fracchiolla, Guglielmo Gianolio, Stefania Lisco, Giuseppe Mastronuzzi, and Massimo Moretti

This study presents a multidisciplinary geological and environmental characterization of the submerged offshore area of Taranto (Apulia, southern Italy), developed within the framework of the Italian National Cartographic Project (CARG), coordinated by ISPRA. The investigated area includes Mar Piccolo, Mar Grande, and the northern Ionian Sea, forming a complex coastal–marine system characterized by strong environmental heterogeneity, high marine biodiversity, and intense anthropogenic pressure.

The study area comprises three marine basins with different geomorphological and hydrodynamic settings: the shallow and semi-enclosed Mar Piccolo, the circular Mar Grande basin and the open northern Ionian Sea, reaching depths of up to 1,500 m. This variability exerts a strong control on sedimentary processes, habitat distribution, and the spatial imprint of human activities on the seafloor.

The research integrates high-resolution geophysical and acoustic datasets acquired through Multibeam Echosounder (MBES), Side-Scan Sonar (SSS) and Sub-Bottom Profiler (SBP) surveys. Seabed morphology and habitat mapping are primarily based on Side-Scan Sonar data acquired using a dual-frequency system (100–500 kHz). The data were processed into georeferenced acoustic mosaics with a spatial resolution of 0,50 m and analyzed within a GIS environment for detailed seabed classification and interpretation.

Acoustic backscatter analysis allowed the identification and mapping of benthic habitats, including seagrass meadows and bioconstructions, through correlation with substrate type, bathymetry, and light penetration. The high spatial resolution of the SSS mosaics also enabled the recognition of seabed features related to anthropogenic activities, such as dredging marks and infrastructure-related modifications, whose distribution was mapped at an areal scale due to their density and spatial extent.

Stratigraphic interpretation is based on the identification of key seismic unconformities and depositional sequences within a sequence-stratigraphic framework spanning from the Last Glacial Maximum to the present. In the Mar Piccolo basin, this framework is constrained by borehole data, radiocarbon dating, and sedimentary facies analysis. Correlation with the shelf domain is locally hindered by the disturbances related to the anthropic activities, while the correlation with the slope domain is is made more complex by the presence of substrate outcrops and chaotic seismic bodies, interpreted as submarine landslides related to sea-level fall stages.

The resulting integrated geodatabase gives its contribution to the first comprehensive geological map project of the Italian seabed and provides a robust framework for reconstructing sedimentary dynamics, sea-level fluctuations, and cumulative anthropogenic impacts. These results support sustainable coastal management, marine ecosystem conservation, and ecological transition strategies in line with current Blue Economy and environmental policy objectives.

How to cite: D'Abbicco, V., De Giosa, F., de Luca, A., Fracchiolla, T., Gianolio, G., Lisco, S., Mastronuzzi, G., and Moretti, M.: Submarine geomorphology and late Quaternary evolution of the Taranto offshore (southern Italy) under natural and anthropogenic controls., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12660, 2026.

EGU26-13394 | Orals | GM8.1

The spatial extent of trawl marks in the German Baltic Sea basins and their relation to the composition of the subsurface.  

Peter Feldens, Inken Schulze, Elisabeth Seidel, Jacob Geersen, Judith Piontek, and Mischa Schönke

Bottom trawling represents the largest anthropogenic source of physical disturbance to seafloor morphology, sediment texture and composition, and benthic habitats. Past studies have shown that the morphological traces left by bottom trawling in the Baltic Sea remain stable for a year to more than a decade depending on area. The persistence of trawling-induced morphology is particularly relevant with the currently declining fishing pressure. The steeply declining trawling intensity provides the opportunity to establish baseline maps of trawling impacts and investigate how a trawled seafloor re-naturalizes after trawling has stopped. Here, we train a convolutional neural network to map trawl marks in bathymetric grids of 1 m resolution largely provided by the German Federal Maritime Agency for Kiel Bay, Fehmarn Belt, Mecklenburg Bay and Arkona Basin in the Western Baltic Sea. The model operates directly on bathymetric grids and is robust to artifacts, allowing monitoring of trawl marks with low effort. The calculated trawl mark density is a measure of the cumulative morphological impact of trawling in the different areas. For the Fehmarn Belt marine protected area, where bottom trawling was excluded in 2025, differential bathymetric data show no substantial seafloor recovery after one year, and new trawl marks are observed. Small areas of low trawling activity around seafloor obstacles such as pockmarks, boulders and wrecks allow the direct comparison of a pristine (Holocene-like) seafloor with an adjacent heavily trawled seafloor. Here, seafloor roughness decreases with increasing trawling intensity, potentially related to sediment resuspension and flattening by ground ropes that are not directly image by acoustic surveys. Untrawled seafloor locally elevates slightly above the surrounding trawled seafloor, potentially caused by long-term erosive effects of sediment reworking by bottom trawling. Initial results suggest a relationship of near-subseafloor free methane fronts to areas of intense trawling, suggesting that trawling can also effect the flux of climate relevant trace-gases into the water column. We further analyze vertical profiles of benthic microbial communities at stations with different trawling intensity.

How to cite: Feldens, P., Schulze, I., Seidel, E., Geersen, J., Piontek, J., and Schönke, M.: The spatial extent of trawl marks in the German Baltic Sea basins and their relation to the composition of the subsurface. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13394, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13394, 2026.

EGU26-13908 | Posters on site | GM8.1

Post-obduction tectono-sedimentary architecture of the Cornes Sud platform (New Caledonia): New insights from the POPCORN geophysical cruise (April 2026) 

Virginie Gaullier, France Pattier, Jean-Baptiste Parmentier, Nadège Champilou, François Schmitt, Maximilien Mathian, Alain Zanella, and Peggy Gunkel-Grillon

The lake region of the Massif Sud of New Caledonia, designated as a Ramsar site in 2014, represents the largest freshwater reservoir on the island and hosts fossil remnants of an ancient detrital system, the Fluvio-Lacustrine Formation (FLF). This formation is mainly composed of sediments eroded from the surrounding lateritic massifs and displays a high degree of internal structural complexity. Recent studies conducted at ISEA (University of New Caledonia) have shown that certain sedimentary levels are particularly enriched in metallic elements, raising questions about potential recurrent transfers between these sediments and present-day fluvial systems. To investigate the system as a whole using a “source-to-sink” approach, we carried out the POPCORN campaign (Post-obduction tectono-sedimentary characterization of the Cornes Sud platform of New Caledonia: What influence of ultrabasic massifs?), scheduled from 2 to 22 April 2026. The campaign aims to acquire very high-resolution (VHR) Sparker seismic profiles and multibeam bathymetry across the Cornes Sud platform, extending offshore from the FLF, combined with Kullenberg coring to provide geological and chronostratigraphic calibration of the geophysical data. The Cornes Sud platform, located between Grande Terre and Île des Pins, has received very limited investigation compared to the southwestern lagoon (Le Roy and Cabioch, 2004; Le Roy and Jorry, 2013; Le Roy et al., 2008, 2019) and the eastern margin (Chardon et al., 2008; Le Roy et al., 2022a, 2022b; Kerouédan et al., 2024a, 2024b). The western and eastern lagoons display contrasting morphologies associated with opposite vertical movements since the New Caledonian obduction (Lagabrielle et al., 2005 ; Tournadour et al., 2021). The Cornes Sud platform lies in direct continuation of the Massif Sud and forms the southern link between these two lagoons. It is characterized by several channelized systems (5-Miles, Prony, and Port Boisé), all affected by the Havannah Fault. The acquisition of Sparker seismic profiles and multibeam bathymetry, combined with sediment sampling, will allow identification and characterization of the tectono-sedimentary architecture of this poorly explored area and reconstruction of sedimentary and associated metallic element transfer pathways from continental fluvio-lacustrine systems (Fluvio-Lacustrine Formation, FLF) to carbonate platform deposits. This campaign forms part of a strategic research effort aimed at improving geological and environmental knowledge of a largely unexplored coastal zone. It is integrated within a broader research program focused on the FLF conducted by the same scientific team (TelluS-SYSTER PONCES and METALFLAP projects) and represents a key component of the land–sea continuum. The diversity of methodologies employed, together with the multidisciplinary nature of the research team, will enable reconstruction of the post-obduction evolution of the Massif Sud of New Caledonia based on sedimentary records, from the onshore Fluvio-Lacustrine Formation to the offshore Cornes Sud platform. Preliminary results from the POPCORN campaign will be presented here, focusing on seafloor morphology, sedimentary architecture, and styles of tectonic deformation within the study area. Particular emphasis is placed on identifying offshore expressions of the Fluvio-Lacustrine Formation previously studied on land.

How to cite: Gaullier, V., Pattier, F., Parmentier, J.-B., Champilou, N., Schmitt, F., Mathian, M., Zanella, A., and Gunkel-Grillon, P.: Post-obduction tectono-sedimentary architecture of the Cornes Sud platform (New Caledonia): New insights from the POPCORN geophysical cruise (April 2026), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13908, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13908, 2026.

EGU26-14867 | ECS | Orals | GM8.1

Surface morphology and internal architecture of Holocene Halimeda bioherms in the northern Great Barrier Reef 

Zsanett Szilagyi, Luke Nothdurft, Stephanie Duce, Jody Webster, Mardi McNeil, Juan-Carlos Braga, Trevor Graham, Maria Byrne, Bethany C. Behrens, Yusuke Yokoyama, Robin Beaman, Victorien Paumard, Jeffrey Shragge, Amy Nau, Christopher Berry, Catherine Kim, Sarah Goh, Jacquelin Reeves, Lara Picton, and Helen Bostock

Halimeda (calcareous green algae) bioherms are among the largest accumulations of biogenic sediment within the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, covering more than 6000 km2 of the continental shelf and exceeding the area of adjacent coral reefs at equivalent latitudes1. Previous studies have documented their circular to reticulate shapes, the internal structure and thickness, underscoring their uncertain genesis and major contribution to the global Holocene neritic carbonate factory2,3. However, a detailed understanding of the formation and development of these uniquely shaped bioherms has been limited by the lack of high-resolution bathymetric maps, surface sediment samples, and densely spaced core material that target geomorphological variability.

This study presents new data from the RV Investigator voyage IN2022_V07 “Halimeda bioherms: Origins, function and fate in the northern Great Barrier Reef (HALO)”. The first sub-metre resolution (50 cm) multibeam bathymetry data and sub-bottom profiles reveal spectacular bioherm shapes and patterns not previously visible on 30 m models. Geomorphometric analysis of the 50 cm DEMs using ESRI ArcGISPro 3.3 quantified the surface characteristics and produced the first benthic terrain classification based on pattern recognition rather than differential geometry to define benthic features (Geomorphon Landforms tool).

Sixty-nine surface grab samples were collected using Boxcorer and Smith-McIntyre grab from three sites between 15° and 13° S. These samples were analysed for grain size, total carbonate and composition to characterise sedimentary variation across modern bioherms. Results highlight variability among different benthic structures, implying distinct and dynamic environmental settings.

In addition, forty-two densely spaced vibrocores (up to 6 m long) were recovered and scanned with high-resolution CT. Split cores were logged for facies and scanned with multi-sensor core logger (magnetic susceptibility, spectrophotometer, X-ray fluorescence). Subsamples at regular intervals (10cm) have been processed for grain size, total CaCO3% and microfossil analysis. Radiocarbon dates indicate the cores range from 12 ka to present. Initial observations revealed a range of morphotypes, including Halimeda floatstone-rudstone and Foraminiferal wackestone-packstone facies and layers of dense coral, mollusc, rhodolith and lithified clumps. This new dataset significantly advances our understanding of Halimeda bioherm morphology, development, and regional influences, providing new insights into their formation processes and ecological significance.

References:

1. McNeil, M. A., Webster, J. M., Beaman, R. J., and Graham, T. L., 2016, New constraints on the spatial distribution and morphology of the Halimeda bioherms of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia: Coral Reefs, v. 35, no. 4, p. 1343-1355. doi: 10.1007/s00338-016-1492-2

2. McNeil, M., Nothdurft, L. D., Dyriw, N. J., Webster, J. M., and Beaman, R. J., 2021, Morphotype differentiation in the Great Barrier Reef Halimeda bioherm carbonate factory: Internal architecture and surface geomorphometrics: The Depositional Record, v. 7, p. 176– 199. doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.122

3. McNeil, M., Nothdurft, L. D., Hua, Q., Webster, J. M., and Moss, P., 2022, Evolution of the inter-reef Halimeda carbonate factory in response to Holocene sea-level and environmental change in the Great Barrier Reef: Quaternary Science Reviews, v. 277. doi: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.107347

How to cite: Szilagyi, Z., Nothdurft, L., Duce, S., Webster, J., McNeil, M., Braga, J.-C., Graham, T., Byrne, M., Behrens, B. C., Yokoyama, Y., Beaman, R., Paumard, V., Shragge, J., Nau, A., Berry, C., Kim, C., Goh, S., Reeves, J., Picton, L., and Bostock, H.: Surface morphology and internal architecture of Holocene Halimeda bioherms in the northern Great Barrier Reef, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14867, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14867, 2026.

EGU26-16800 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Enigmatic buried scours provide new clues for the Middle to Late Pleistocene paleolandscape reconstruction of the outer Belgian Continental Shelf 

Warre Dekoninck, Marc De Batist, Tine Missiaen, Ruth Plets, and Thomas Mestdagh

The breaching of the Weald–Artois Ridge, which once connected the UK to mainland Europe, represents one of the most significant events shaping the paleolandscape of the Belgian, UK, and French sectors of the Southern North Sea from the Middle Pleistocene onwards. The timing and mechanism of its breaching, which led to the formation of the Dover Strait, remain the subject of ongoing debate. This event marks the onset of regular inundation of the Belgian Continental Shelf (BCS) during sea-level highstands, alternating with exposure during sea-level lowstands. In this region, erosion is dominant, resulting in the frequent exposure of Paleogene-Neogene strata. Nevertheless, a discontinuous cover of Pleistocene and Holocene sediments persists. Together with erosional features, this sedimentary record offers valuable evidence of the region’s complex history.

In recent years, new and higher resolution 2D seismic and acoustic datasets have been acquired for both scientific and commercial purposes in the more offshore sections of the BCS, an area where data availability was previously limited. This study integrates these datasets to develop a more comprehensive understanding of the discontinuous Pleistocene deposits. In a first step, the erosional boundary between Paleogene– Neogene strata and overlying Quaternary deposits was mapped and gridded in unprecedented detail. The resulting surface not only refines the position and morphology of previously described escarpments and valleys but also reveals new escarpments and a series of elongated linear and curved scours of uncertain origin. As these scours are possibly related to either tidal, fluvial, glacial or ice berg scouring, understanding the origin and sequence of these features is essential for reconstructing Quaternary palaeolandscapes and may provide further insights in the breaching of the Weald-Artois Ridge.

Finally, this study aims to identify, sample and describe the various Pleistocene units in the area. Supplementary analyses, such as pollen and microfossil studies, as well as radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating will ultimately enable the development of a comprehensive and updated reconstruction of the palaeolandscape evolution of the outer BCS and adjacent regions.

How to cite: Dekoninck, W., De Batist, M., Missiaen, T., Plets, R., and Mestdagh, T.: Enigmatic buried scours provide new clues for the Middle to Late Pleistocene paleolandscape reconstruction of the outer Belgian Continental Shelf, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16800, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16800, 2026.

EGU26-16869 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Iceberg scours at almost 1 km water depths on the newly discovered Dana IV Seamount, Greenland Sea, North Atlantic 

Christoph Böttner, Mads Ramsgaard Stoltenberg, Aisling O’Brien, Oliver S. Hansen, Henrieka Detlef, Caroline Gjelstrup, Marit-Solveig Seidenkrantz, Colin Stedmon, and Christof Pearce

Iceberg scours are created by drifting icebergs that plough into the seafloor with their keels. These prominent geomorphic features are widespread in the Arctic and provide critical insights into past ice-sheet dynamics and ocean circulation. At local scales, iceberg scours influence benthic ecosystems, pose risks to offshore seafloor infrastructure, and can trigger submarine landslides. Here, we report on multibeam echosounder and subbottom profiler data from the 2025 AOC cruise on R/V Dana that document iceberg scours from the newly discovered Dana IV seamout (71°40’N, 15°W) in more than 975 m of water depth. Semi-automated mapping of 212 iceberg scours shows that they are predominantly oriented in northeast-southwest direction. Iceberg scours occur in two clusters around  810 m and 860 m water depth and are typically  ~20 m deep, 330 m wide, and >2 km long. The longest iceberg scour is more than 10 km long and more than 60 m deep, crossing the entire seamount. Some iceberg scours trend parallel indicating multi-keeled or tabular icebergs. One iceberg scour terminates in a landslide scar, documenting that icebergs can be geohazards hundreds of kilometers away from their source. Sediment core data from the top of the seamount indicate that the timing of scouring is older than the Last Glacial Maximum. Given the large water depths in which we find iceberg scours and evidence for multi-keeled icebergs, we attribute them to giant or tabular paleo-icebergs that were more than 1 km thick. The absence of parallel lineations speak against a grounded iceshelf this far south in the North Atlantic. We conclude that these scours are formed by individual icebergs that probably came from an ice sheet calving front at the Northeast Greenland shelf edge or migrated from the Arctic Ocean southward through the Fram Strait during past glacial maxima.

How to cite: Böttner, C., Ramsgaard Stoltenberg, M., O’Brien, A., S. Hansen, O., Detlef, H., Gjelstrup, C., Seidenkrantz, M.-S., Stedmon, C., and Pearce, C.: Iceberg scours at almost 1 km water depths on the newly discovered Dana IV Seamount, Greenland Sea, North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16869, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16869, 2026.

EGU26-17122 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Seafloor Morphology and Evolution of Eastern UAE’s Offshore, Gulf of Oman 

Omar Aldhanhani, Mohammed Ali, Aisha Alsuwaidi, and Ahmed Abdelmaksoud

The seabed in the western Gulf of Oman, offshore of Fujairah, UAE remains poorly characterised and mapped. Earlier regional studies were too coarse to resolve the origin and evolution of Holocene seafloor geomorphic and tectonic features. Here, we integrate high-resolution multibeam bathymetry and derivative terrain attributes (slope and bathymetric position index), multibeam backscatter, and seafloor grab samples to map seabed morphology and constrain sediment distribution. The surveyed area reveals a wide array of geomorphic elements, including paleoshoreline terraces, paleoreefs, sandwaves, sand ridges, sandbanks, circular and eroded pockmarks, contourite sandwaves, submarine landslides, and fault traces to name a few. These observations enable the reconstruction of Quaternary seafloor evolution, highlighting the coupled influence of tectonics, eustatic sea-level change, and deep marine currents on the seabed development. The refined mapping also resolves several previously misidentified features from earlier basin-scale interpretations. This improved understanding provides a robust geologic framework for offshore geohazard assessment and supports evidence-based planning for marine infrastructure in the eastern UAE Offshore.

How to cite: Aldhanhani, O., Ali, M., Alsuwaidi, A., and Abdelmaksoud, A.: Seafloor Morphology and Evolution of Eastern UAE’s Offshore, Gulf of Oman, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17122, 2026.

EGU26-18126 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Pockmarks in the southern Baltic Sea 

Elisabeth Seidel, Peter Feldens, Jacob Geersen, and Christoph Böttner

This study is part of the KOMSO project that focusses on standardised measurement methods for the long term carbon storage potentials in the Baltic Sea while the contemporaneous methane release of the seafloor works as an antagonistic player. We want to understand how pockmarks are formed and how stable these structures are. Another open question is whether vessel traffic affects the shape and degassing amount of the structures.

The Baltic Sea was formed during the last Weichselian glaciation and underwent a multi-phase development. It was finally flooded during the Littorina transgression, while the basins and bays of the southern Baltic Sea contain thick glacial and post-glacial sediments. In particular, the Littorina and late Holocene deposits contain sediments rich in organic matter. Depending on the varying depth of the sulphate-methane transition zone in the different basins, which is partly modified through submarine groundwater discharge, methane is produced below this zone. This results in the accumulation of free gas within the sediments. The migration of the shallow biogenic gas forms gas fronts and leakage zones in the form of pockmarks at the seafloor.

In a first step, we mapped the pockmarks in the various basins using a bathymetric grid with a general resolution of up to 10 m, in smaller areas also up to 1 m. We catalogued the mapped pockmarks according to the following criteria: (i) their location (near the coast or in the central basin, and water depth), (ii) their lateral and vertical dimensions (diameter and depth), and (iii) their form (elongate or round, single structure or clustered, depression/negative or upbending/positive). Additional parametric sediment echo sounder (SES) profiles (vertical 2D sections) allow further conclusions to be drawn, such as the stratigraphic affiliation of the gas escaping from the pockmarks and the depth of the underlying gas front.

Adjacent to some existing pockmarks, the seafloor forms upward bulges above gas chimneys that may indicate the build-up of methane overpressure in the shallow subsurface. Whether these doming structures develop into new pockmarks needs to be evaluated with future differential bathymetric surveys. During the course of the projects, we will repeat SES profiles in order to determine any possible temporal or seasonal variation in the size of the pockmarks.

How to cite: Seidel, E., Feldens, P., Geersen, J., and Böttner, C.: Pockmarks in the southern Baltic Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18126, 2026.

EGU26-19223 | Orals | GM8.1

Erosional processes on the slopes of Rennell Island and the Indispensable Reefs (Solomon Islands, Western Pacific) 

Alexander Petrovic, Joana Gafeira, Joe O'Callaghan, Lizzy Myers, Todd Bond, Kate von Krusenstiern, and Heather Stewart

Large erosional products such as scalloped scars, mass transport complexes and rockfalls are common features found on the steep slopes of isolated carbonate platforms. Factors and processes controlling these instabilities and their interactions are a subject of ongoing discussion. Here we are presenting novel multibeam data and seafloor imagery from the slopes of Rennell Island and the Indispensable Reefs, Solomon Islands.

Rennell Island and the Indispensable Reefs are located in the western Pacific Ocean, around 200 km south of the main Soloman Islands archipelago on top of the Louisiade Plateau. The plateau is separated by the San Cristóbal Trench from the Solomon Block, an elongate microplate underlying the main Solomon Islands and bounded by a dual subduction zone between the Australia and Pacific plates. While the Indispensable Reefs consist of three atolls reaching the modern sea surface, Rennel Island is an uplifted, dolomitized reef complex surrounded by modern coral reefs. These data were collected during several cruises, May to August 2025 onboard RV Hydra, and showcases spectacular slope morphologies and erosional features.

Seafloor imagery reveals calcareous algae (e.g., Halimeda, coralline algae) as major carbonate producer from the photic down to the mesophotic zone on the slopes of both Rennell Island and the Indispensable Reefs. The southwestern slope of Rennel Island is characterized by several scalloped scars along the upper slope ranging in width from 2.5 to 17.6 km. In combination with large reef blocks (> 6 km long) located on the lower slope, these scars document multiple historic catastrophic slope failures. In addition, the presence of numerous gullies, each hosting downslope wandering sandwaves, suggest regular export of skeletal carbonate sands. The three atolls of the Indispensable Reefs are separated from each other by two E/NE–W/SW striking channels ranging in width from 3.4 to 4.3 km. Reef blocks located in the central part of both channels indicate rockfalls derived from the adjacent atoll flanks. The southwestern slopes of all three atolls are characterized by several scalloped scars ranging in width from 4.6 to 10 km and dozens of u-shaped gullies, each 10s of meters wide. A prominent, 15 km long canyon deeply incises the central atoll. Its head has a width of 7.2 km and is sourced from several gullies connected via incised channels to the shallow water lagoon. Combined with a higher number of channels cutting through the western reef rim compared to the eastern rim, this canyon represents a main off-platform export path. However, the frequent presence of gullies along the northeastern mid-slope, followed towards the slope-foot by downslope wandering sandwaves, indicate an additional sediment export system.

The large number of prominent head scarps on the southwestern slopes suggests that the leeward sides of both platforms tend to be more easily destabilised, which might be caused by the tectonic regime. Platform-top morphologies indicate a strong influence of the North Vanuatu Jet on the westward-driven sediment transport, while the presence of gullies and sandwaves on the eastern slope of the Indispensable Reefs suggest a more complex sediment dynamics.

How to cite: Petrovic, A., Gafeira, J., O'Callaghan, J., Myers, L., Bond, T., von Krusenstiern, K., and Stewart, H.: Erosional processes on the slopes of Rennell Island and the Indispensable Reefs (Solomon Islands, Western Pacific), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19223, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19223, 2026.

EGU26-19299 | Orals | GM8.1

Last Deglacial to early Holocene changes in activity of the Levant Submarine Channel, Eastern Mediterranean Sea 

Oded Katz, Lea Sivan, Orit Hyams-Kaphzan, Mor Kanari, and Adi Torfstein

Submarine channels in the Levant Basin, eastern Mediterranean Sea, are prominent morphological features that provide key insights into sedimentary processes and basin evolution. These northward trending channels were formed by turbidity currents and play an important role in shaping the basin morphology and stratigraphy. The most prominent channel is the >200 km-long Levant Channel (LC), originating from the northern Sinai Peninsula margins. Yet, its present activity and the recurrence interval of turbidity-current events remain poorly constrained.

In this study we aim to address these knowledge gaps by sampling a series of downcore records along LC, combining stratigraphic and micropaleontological analyses with radiocarbon-based geochronological constraints. Piston and box cores were collected from two sites along the LC thalweg: a southern site located ~60 km offshore Tel Aviv at ~1300 m water depth, and a northern site ~45 km farther down-channel at ~1500 m water depth. Piston cores reach lengths of up to ~6.5 m, while box cores recover shorter sequences (≤0.5 m), complementing the stratigraphic record and providing high-resolution coverage of surface sediment.

Sediment in both cores are predominantly non-laminated and clastic, yielding last-glacial radiocarbon ages, with the lowermost sections exceeding the radiocarbon dating limit (>45 ka BP). Sediment in reverse stratigraphic order (i.e. a downcore decrease in sediment age) is observed in the southern core. Age reversals, together with the clastic, non-laminated facies indicate mixed sediment deposition, most likely associated with repeated turbidity-current events. Above this interval, a finely laminated sediment dated to ~9 ka BP corresponding with Sapropel S1, is observed, reflecting undisturbed hemipelagic sedimentation.

Foraminiferal assemblages independently support the radiocarbon-based age model and provide additional evidence on sediment mixing. The warm-water planktonic species Globigerinoides ruber (pink), characteristic of warm interglacial conditions, is restricted to Sapropel S1 and younger sediments, whereas the cold-water species Globorotalia scitula, typical of glacial conditions, occurs exclusively below S1. Coexistence of these species in the upper glacial interval of the northern core indicates sediment mixing. Shelf-derived benthic foraminifera (e.g., Ammonia tepida, A. parkinsoniana, Cribroelphidium vadescens and Planorbulina mediterranensis) are abundant throughout both Holocene and glacial sediments in the southern core but are largely absent from the northern core, suggesting sustained delivery of shallow-shelf material at least to the southern LC site.

In summary, the Levant Channel was active during the last glacial period, with shelf-sourced turbidites, but became largely inactive during the Holocene, with hemipelagic sedimentation prevailing. This shift reflects the impact of eustatic sea-level rise and related continental shelf widening on submarine mass transport across continental margins. Similarly, previous regional studies on submarine landslides and turbidite activity within submarine canyons along the eastern Mediterranean continental margin revealed intense mass wasting activity in the last glacial period that declined through the deglaciation and the transition to the Holocene.

How to cite: Katz, O., Sivan, L., Hyams-Kaphzan, O., Kanari, M., and Torfstein, A.: Last Deglacial to early Holocene changes in activity of the Levant Submarine Channel, Eastern Mediterranean Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19299, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19299, 2026.

EGU26-20325 | Orals | GM8.1

SEAMAP: targeted underway bathymetry for mapping uncharted seamounts and assessing their role in the ocean system 

Lars Ruepke, Gauvain Wiemer, Anne-Cathrin Wölfl, Daniel Damaske, Saskia Brix, Christian dos Santos Ferreira, Colin Devey, Boris Dorschel-Herr, and Franziska Schwarzkopf

Seamounts number in the hundreds of thousands across all ocean basins and constitute a fundamental component of the ocean floor. They provide constraints on intraplate magmatism, mantle melting processes, lithospheric stress and flexure, and the evolution of oceanic plates. At the same time, seamounts are hotspots of biodiversity, and their morphology modifies ocean circulation and mixing, further influencing benthic ecosystems. Addressing these aspects requires high-resolution bathymetric mapping, yet most seamounts inferred from satellite-derived gravity data have never been directly surveyed.

The German marine research community contributes to systematic seafloor mapping during transits of the large German research vessels through the underway research-data project coordinated within the German Marine Research Alliance (DAM). While this approach steadily improves coverage and contributes to international efforts such as Seabed 2030, the scale of the remaining mapping gap of about 75% motivates complementary strategies that increase scientific return without substantially increasing ship time. Within the SEAMAP project, we pursue a collaborative approach in which research vessel transits are actively planned to intersect previously uncharted seamounts, with minimal impact on cruise logistics and primary scientific objectives. The goal is to link underway data acquisition to active research questions in geodynamics and ocean sciences.

We present initial results from SEAMAP. Modified transits have so far been planned for five research cruises, resulting in new multibeam bathymetric coverage of approximately 80 previously unmapped seamounts across a range of tectonic settings and plate ages. The acquired data are being integrated into studies addressing intraplate volcanic construction, machine-learning-based bathymetry prediction and validation, and flow–topography interactions, including enhanced mixing and turbulence in seamount wakes. In parallel, SEAMAP supports rapid data availability by integrating new bathymetric products into the harmonized data streams for German research vessels established by DAM. These results illustrate how targeted seamount mapping during transit legs can efficiently improve seafloor coverage while supporting interdisciplinary ocean science on the role of seamounts within the Earth system.

How to cite: Ruepke, L., Wiemer, G., Wölfl, A.-C., Damaske, D., Brix, S., dos Santos Ferreira, C., Devey, C., Dorschel-Herr, B., and Schwarzkopf, F.: SEAMAP: targeted underway bathymetry for mapping uncharted seamounts and assessing their role in the ocean system, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20325, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20325, 2026.

EGU26-20423 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Multidomain observations of internal wave-induced shelf-to-basin sediment transport in the Eastern Levant Basin 

Omri Gadol, Yizhaq Makovsky, Or Bialik, and Leonardo Azevedo

Shelf-to-basin sediment transport plays a key role in the evolution of continental margins and the carbon cycle. Yet, the mechanisms linking oceanographic forcing to sediment resuspension and redistribution remain poorly quantified. Intermediate nepheloid layers (INLs) are widely recognized as substantial sediment conveyors in this context, but their formation mechanisms, morphologic imprint, and spatio-temporal evolution remain elusive in direct observations and process-based interpretation.
Here, we present multidomain observations from the Eastern Levant Basin (ELB) that document the internal-wave-induced origin and seasonal recurrence of INLs. We integrate ultra-high-resolution (decimeter-scale) multichannel Seismic Oceanography (SO), high-resolution bathymetry, in situ conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) profiles, oceanographic reanalysis products from the Copernicus Marine Service, and spaceborne Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery, to link water-column stratification, internal wave activity, sediment resuspension, sediment transport, and their morphologic outcomes. These data sets span multiple years and capture the same processes during comparable seasonal stratification regimes, allowing assessment of process persistence rather than isolated events.  

Our results show that during periods of strong seasonal column stratification (i.e., Brunt-Vaisälä frequencies in the order of N ≈ 0.01 s⁻¹), shoaling internal waves promote sediment resuspension from the shelf edge and basinward transport. Seismic profiles reveal laterally continuous, gently inclined low-amplitude reflection packages with thicknesses of up to 10 meters that detach from the seabed and are interpreted as INLs flowing up to 10 km from the continental slope. This is confirmed by in-situ CTD measurements showing aligned water-column turbidity peaks up to 10 kilometers offshore the area of resuspension. Calculated internal wave (IW) beam angles relative to local slope show a clear correlation between transmissive (subcritical) zones, seafloor erosion, and locations of sediment detachment, while reflective (supercritical) areas show the appearance of sediment-wave patterns interpreted as upslope-migrating steps. Our results are consistent across different years and geophysical datasets. Co-located SAR imagery independently confirms the presence and orientation of internal wave packets during these periods.

Together, these observations provide robust field-based evidence that internal wave-driven sediment mobilization is a seasonally recurrent process, governed by water-column stratification and seafloor criticality.  These observations link sediment transport, oceanographic dynamics, and slope geomorphology in an increasingly stratified, warming ocean.

How to cite: Gadol, O., Makovsky, Y., Bialik, O., and Azevedo, L.: Multidomain observations of internal wave-induced shelf-to-basin sediment transport in the Eastern Levant Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20423, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20423, 2026.

EGU26-21389 | ECS | Posters on site | GM8.1

Towards a Relationship Between Acoustic Backscatter and Soil Geotechnical Properties: insights from Bay of Morlaix, France 

Venilla Manikanta, Marco Terzariol, Ridha Fezzani, Axel Ehrhold, Antonio Cattaneo, Laure Simplet, and Frauke Klingelhoefer

Offshore infrastructures are essential for energy production, telecommunication, and transportation sectors. High-frequency offshore acoustic backscatter is widely used as a proxy for seabed and soil classification. When properly interpreted, it can significantly reduce exploration costs by optimizing survey design, guiding targeted sampling strategies, and improving the detection and interpretation of natural seafloor features. In the context of offshore wind farms, acoustic backscatter data are particularly valuable for early-stage site screening, preliminary economic assessment, and the identification of potential geohazards prior to detailed geotechnical investigations. Although hydroacoustic surveys can cover large areas efficiently, their ability to estimate geotechnical properties is still limited.   Hence, this study aims to investigate the relationship between high-frequency acoustic backscatter and geotechnical parameters of marine sediments. The dedicated research cruise RHYSMA was conducted in the Bay of Morlaix to acquire both hydroacoustic and geotechnical data on 8th of May 2025 during ten days. Eleven sites were selected to represent a wide range of sediment types with average water depth varying approximately 3m to 50m, ranging from muddy sediments to boulders, and exposed rock. Such diversity provides a natural laboratory to investigate the interaction between acoustic signals and sediment properties. Acoustic measurements were performed using SIMRAD EK80 single beam echosounders with frequencies ranging from 90 kHz to 440 kHz, with incidence angles varying from 0° to 70°. In total 10 cores were obtained; 840 kg of sediments and 9 hours of seafloor videos were recovered. Hydroacoustic data was calibrated and fitted using the Generic Seafloor Acoustic Backscatter (GSAB) model to estimate the seabed angular response and to assess the influence of angle and frequency on different sediment types. Typical backscatter ranges from -15 dB up to -4 dB in the exposed rock. Geotechnical results show particle sizes ranges from 4 microns up to 8 cm boulders, while dry densities range from 1 to 1.6 g/cc and specific gravity spans from 2.64 to 2.96 and fine content for sediment ranges from 1% percent to 56%. Preliminary results indicate an emerging relationship between acoustic backscatter and sediment porosity particularly for high frequency response at near-normal incidence angles (~0°). Overall, this study improves the understanding of acoustic backscatter behavior across contrasting sediment types and highlights the complexity of seabed acoustic responses.

How to cite: Manikanta, V., Terzariol, M., Fezzani, R., Ehrhold, A., Cattaneo, A., Simplet, L., and Klingelhoefer, F.: Towards a Relationship Between Acoustic Backscatter and Soil Geotechnical Properties: insights from Bay of Morlaix, France, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21389, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21389, 2026.

EGU26-361 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.6

Frequent event deposits in IODP Hole U1433A (South China Sea) over the past 800 kyr: Implications of a revised methodology for chronology and paleoclimate reconstruction 

Xunpeng Li, Shuang Sun, Yuwei Zhang, Ziqiang Mao, Lina Jin, Yulong Zhao, G. Ian Alsop, Zhifei Liu, and Yin Lu

Instantaneous event deposits (e.g., turbidites and slumping layers) are common and occur frequently in the abyssal plain of marginal seas. These instantaneous deposits represent seconds to days in duration, and may significantly impact age-depth models and interpretation of paleoclimate history based on sedimentary sequences recovered in deep cores. However, these event deposits have rarely been considered when investigating IODP/ODP deep cores from marginal seas. To resolve this problem, we take the South China Sea as a typical research example, which is one of the largest active marginal seas worldwide. We apply the methodology of high-resolution event sedimentology to Hole U1433A (189-0 m, 800-0 kyr) from the SW South China Sea deep basin. We identify centimeter-to-meter-scale turbidite layers (N=129) using high-resolution NGR, GRA, magnetic susceptibility data, and core images. These instantaneous event deposits account for ~16% of the total sediment thickness in Hole U1433A. We refine the preliminary age-depth model that is based on paleomagnetic and microfossil ages recovered from the hole by removing those instantaneous event deposits. We further test the effectiveness of our revised approach by comparing paleoclimate profiles that either include or omit those event layers. This test indicates that the event-free approach is effective and essential for a better reconstruction of the age-depth model and paleoclimate history based on the IODP deep core. Our innovative sedimentological methodology may also prove suitable for other marginal seas with frequent instantaneous event deposits elsewhere in the world.

How to cite: Li, X., Sun, S., Zhang, Y., Mao, Z., Jin, L., Zhao, Y., Alsop, G. I., Liu, Z., and Lu, Y.: Frequent event deposits in IODP Hole U1433A (South China Sea) over the past 800 kyr: Implications of a revised methodology for chronology and paleoclimate reconstruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-361, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-361, 2026.

EGU26-1558 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.6

Sedimentary source-to-sink and landscape evolution in the northern Barents Sea during the Cenozoic 

Amando P. E. Lasabuda, Grace Shephard, Tristan Salles, and Sabin Zahirovic

The deep-time Cenozoic history (the last 60 Myr) of the Barents Sea shows complex interplay between tectonics, climatics and surface processes. What did the actual paleotopography look like back then? How did the climate perturbation control the sediment transfer from the source area to the sink? We use a coupled model of GPlates tectonic reconstruction software and Badlands – basin and landscape open-source codes to untangle these intricate processes. The model is calibrated using available seismic and well datasets, including biostratigraphy data. The outcome of this study is important to understand the impact of climate and how our Earth responded in the past, e.g. PETM (Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum). The basin-landscape configuration along the Barents Seaway is also crucial for analysing the ocean circulation between the Atlantic and Arctic oceans during the Cenozoic, which is key for ocean/climate modelling and has also global climatic implications.

How to cite: Lasabuda, A. P. E., Shephard, G., Salles, T., and Zahirovic, S.: Sedimentary source-to-sink and landscape evolution in the northern Barents Sea during the Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1558, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1558, 2026.

The Sunda Shelf is the most extensive tropical epicontinental shelf and is the second largest drowned continental shelf on Earth. Unlike much of the Sunda Shelf, where stratigraphic successions have been disrupted or removed by tectonic deformation, the eastern Sunda Shelf preserves a complete Cenozoic stratigraphic archive that records the evolution of regional tectonics, sea level change, and paleoenvironmental histories. However, the basin‐scale stratigraphic architecture and their links to tectonic and sea-level fluctuation are poorly constrained in the eastern Sunda Shelf. These gaps limit our ability to evaluate the role of the Sunda Shelf in global climate and carbon-cycle regulation. In this work, we integrate extensive 2D (~8,000 km) and 3D (~4,000 km²) high resolution seismic reflection data with lithologic and age information from wells to reconstruct the tectonic and sedimentary evolution of the eastern Sunda Shelf. We identified four basin‐scale stratigraphic evolution stages: (1) tectonically controlled syn-rift stage (Late Oligocene, ~28-23 Ma), dominated by alluvial-fan and lacustrine systems that developed under rapid fault-controlled subsidence and relatively arid climatic conditions. (2) Post-rift subsidence-dominated stage (latest Oligocene to Early Miocene, ~23-17 Ma), characterized by thermal sagging and a major transition from terrestrial to shallow-marine environments. (3) Mixed tectonic-eustatic stage (Middle to Late Miocene, ~17-11.6 Ma), during which mild basin-margin uplift, inversion, and rising and falling sea level jointly influenced accommodation, sediment supply, and depositional patterns. (4) Sea-level dominated stage (Late Miocene to Quaternary, ~11.6 Ma to present), when tectonic activity waned and sedimentation became primarily governed by glacial-interglacial sea-level fluctuations, resulting in widespread shelf-edge clinoform development, channel complexes, and incised-valley systems. Our results demonstrate that the eastern Sunda Shelf underwent terrestrial-lacustrine-marine transitions with cyclical climate change, revealing how the long-term effects of Indian-Eurasian plate interactions were progressively overprinted by ice-age sea-level fluctuations. The early rift-related structural confinement, mild Middle Miocene inversion, long-term tectonic stability since the Late Miocene, and the high-frequency sea-level fluctuations since the Pliocene collectively enabled the eastern Sunda Shelf to preserve a complete tropical stratigraphic archive. This framework provides a critical geological foundation for future International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) drilling aimed at resolving low-latitude sea-level change, tropical carbon-cycle dynamics, and hydroclimate evolution across the Sunda Shelf region.

How to cite: Wu, N.: From Tectonic Influence to Sea-Level Dominance: Cenozoic Stratigraphic Evolution of the Tropical Eastern Sunda Shelf, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2869, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2869, 2026.

EGU26-4026 | Posters on site | SSP3.6

Deconvolving Sunda River Systems Using Multi-Proxy Provenance Tools 

Peter Clift, Becky McGanity-Smith, Tim Breitfeld, Amy Gough, and Andrew Carter

The rivers draining towards the northeast into the southwestern South China Sea maybe derived from a number of potential sources both in mainland Asia, the Malay Peninsula, as well as the islands of Borneo and Sumatra. Reconstructing the evolution of drainage systems is important if we are to understand how the evolving patterns of rivers that emerged during each sea level low stand period changed through time since these may be important in increasing rates of biological speciation, at least during the Pleistocene. We investigated whether different areas yielded sediments that can be distinguished from one another and from the Mekong and Chao Phraya by analysing modern river sands. Major element compositions are rarely unique for given source areas, being strongly affected by grain size and degrees of chemical weathering. There is no single process that controls the intensity of chemical weathering across SE Asia and this likely reflects the combined influence of temperature, rainfall and tectonics in controlling transport speed and rates of alteration. The different tectonic provinces do however show coherent differences in Sr and Nd isotopes, although it is unclear if Sabah can be distinguished from Sarawak within Borneo. Detrital zircon U-Pb dating is even more effective at resolving these sources. All the samples differ from the relative similar Chao Phraya and Mekong rivers that are dominated by Indosinian, Inthanon Zone (200-300 Ma) grains and a significant “Caledonian" (440-600 Ma) population. In contrast, all samples from the Malay Peninsula are almost entirely Indosinian/Inthanon. All Sumatran rivers contain large proportions of <20 Ma grains, derived from the active arc, as well as 80-140 Ma grains from older Mesozoic arc basement, similar to that seen in the Schwaner Mountains of Borneo. As for the Sr-Nd isotopes the rivers of Borneo has similar populations in Sabah and Sarawak, with the largest being an Indosinian population, but also with large minority populations of Schwaner and Caledonian ages. Borneo is the only source area with a notable 800-1000 Ma “Gondwana” population that is otherwise restricted to the Mekong and Chao Phraya. Our work indicates that these tools can constrain sediment provenance on the Sunda Shelf. They also imply that the continental basement under southern Sumatra has similarity to that of Borneo, especially the Schwaner Mountains, in contrast to some older reconstructions.

How to cite: Clift, P., McGanity-Smith, B., Breitfeld, T., Gough, A., and Carter, A.: Deconvolving Sunda River Systems Using Multi-Proxy Provenance Tools, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4026, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4026, 2026.

The Middle to Late Triassic Jilh Formation is a mixed siliciclastic-carbonate succession with complex stratigraphy. It is recognized across the Arabian Peninsula as hosting complete petroleum systems, including source rocks, reservoirs, and seals, as well as aquifers. Despite its economic significance, research on the Jilh Formation remains limited, largely due to its internal complexity and production challenges, such as overpressure zones. Furthermore, its depositional and ichnological characteristics remain poorly constrained.

This study investigates a 45-meter-thick outcrop of the Lower Jilh Formation in the Riyadh Region through an integrated sedimentological and ichnological approach. Field-based analyses were complemented by laboratory investigations, including thin section petrography and geochemical characterization.

Six siliciclastic facies were identified: (1) green, massive, fissile shale with sparse bioturbation; (2) yellow to reddish, massive to faintly laminated siltstone with limited Skolithos and Arenicolites; (3) horizontally laminated very fine-grained sandstone with sparse bioturbation and diverse ichnofauna; (4) heavily bioturbated, very fine- to fine-grained sandstone dominated by monospecific ichnogenera (e.g., Taenidium, Skolithos, and Rhyzoliths); (5) current-rippled, very fine- to fine-grained sandstone with moderate bioturbation (e.g. Skolithos and Lockeia); (6) low- to high-angle cross-bedded, fine- to medium-grained sandstone devoid of bioturbation.

These facies represent an estuarine to fluvial system, including channels, point bars, proximal estuarine settings, and a central estuarine basin. The dominance of monospecific ichnofacies, low bioturbation intensities, and absence of fully marine trace fossils suggest environmentally stressed conditions, likely related to salinity fluctuations, rapid sedimentation, and intermittent subaerial exposure.

Geochemical analysis of the outcrop reveals distinct vertical variations in elemental concentrations, delineating three distinct geochemical zones: from bottom to top (1 moderate Si and Al concentrations, indicative of mixed siliciclastic input, with minor peaks in Ca and Mg suggesting intermittent carbonate influence; (2) high Si content accompanied by a sharp decline in Al, Ca, and Mg, reflecting a dominance of coarse, quartz-rich terrigenous sediment; and (3) moderate Si and Al values with localized increases in Ca and Mg, pointing to a return of mixed siliciclastic–carbonate deposition. These geochemical trends can further be utilized to interpret paleoproxies, such as weathering intensity, paleoprovenance and fluctuating depositional conditions within the Jilh Formation.

Despite evidence supporting a fine-grained fluvial system, lateral facies correlation remains challenging due to the erosional nature of thick channel deposits and frequent pinch-outs of sedimentary units. Future studies should include multiple outcrop descriptions to address these limitations. Nonetheless, this study contributes to a deeper understanding of the heterogeneity and paleoenvironmental characteristics of the Lower Jilh Formation, offering valuable insights for improved reservoir characterization.

How to cite: Insuasti Iles, L. A. and Ayranci, K.: Triassic Facies Evolution of the Lower Jilh Formation: Integrated Sedimentological, Ichnological, and Geochemical Insights from Central Saudi Arabia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5066, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5066, 2026.

Clinoforms are characterized by basinward-dipping chronostratigraphic surfaces. They are ubiquitous sedimentary slope architectures in continental-margin settings worldwide. The growth of clinoforms records the influence of sea-level change, sediment supply, and basin subsidence. Quantifying clinoform geometry provides a basis for reconstructing these controlling processes through geological time. We use high-resolution 3D seismic data covering approximately 6,000 km² in northwestern Sichuan Basin, South China. In the study area, the Ediacaran to Cambrian succession records three major shifts in sedimentary environments, from mixed siliciclastic-carbonate shelf system (Doushantuo Formation), to carbonate-dominated platform system (Dengying Formation), to clastic-dominated deepwater system (Maidiping and Qiongzhusi Formation), and ultimately to carbonate-dominated shallow-water system (Longwangmiao Formation). Here, we focus on the clastic-dominated succession of the Qiongzhusi Formation to reconstruct sediment provenance, constrain sedimentary evolution, and evaluate the influence of regional tectonics. Seismic interpretation reveals the lower section of the Qiongzhusi Formation contains submarine fans, turbidite channels, and mass-transport complexes, indicating gravity-driven depositional processes in a relatively deepwater environment. Within the upper section, we interpret at least seven clinoform sets (C1~C7). These clinoform sets show oblique stacking, recording a progradational, basinward migrating shelf-edge trajectory, which is consistent with limited accommodation and sea-level fluctuations during the evolution. To infer progradation rates and total sediment flux during clinoform evolution, we calculate the progradation factor (Pf) and volumes (Ve) of the clinoform sets. Based on the results, we demonstrate that the clinoforms developed in multiple phases, corresponding to periods of intensified and weakened orogenic loads caused by tectonic activity in the northwestern region. In the first stage (Start to C1-C2), the orogenic loading intensified and resulted in a rapid increase in sediment influx and accelerated progradation, as reflected by elevated Pf and Ve values. In the second stage (C1-C2 to C3-C4), the orogenic loading was subdued and led to slower progradation and reduced sediment flux, as indicated by decreased Pf and Ve values. In the third stage (C3-C4 to C6), the orogenic loading intensified again. In the final stage (C6 to End), the orogenic loading neared termination, as evidenced by an abrupt decrease in Pf and Ve values. Thus, we propose that the increases and decreases in sediment flux were driven by the orogenic activity (i.e. Motianling Orogeny) in the northwestern region of Sichuan Basin. In conclusion, the alternating stages of intensified and subdued orogenic activity, and the associated increases and decreases in sediment flux, ultimately controlled the infill processes. We also suggest that quantitative analysis of clinoform sets can effectively reveal the detailed infill processes of sedimentary basins through time and can be readily applied to basin analyses in other similar settings. 

How to cite: Han, Z., Wu, N., and Gu, Z.: Sedimentary Evolution of the Cambrian Qiongzhusi Formation, Northwestern Sichuan Basin: Insights from Quantitative Clinoform Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6250, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6250, 2026.

EGU26-6958 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.6

From uplift to deposition: Tectonic controls on source-to-sink evolution during ophiolite collision in East Sulawesi. Insights from the Batui Fold-Thrust Belt 

Isbram Ginanjar Hikmy, Benyamin Sapiie, Alfend Rudyawan, Amy Gough, and Max Webb

The island of Sulawesi in eastern Indonesia has been shaped by multiple periods of complex tectonic interaction and volcanism, driving recent scientific interest in regional geohazards (e.g., earthquakes and landslide-drive tsunamis) and the formation of natural resources (e.g., natural hydrogen). Despite this, fundamental questions about the geological evolution of Sulawesi remain understudied, such as the timing and style of the collision between the Banggai-Sula Microcontinent and the East Sulawesi Ophiolite. This collision zone has been largely overlooked due to the remote and rugged terrain along the suture. Here, we present new fieldwork data from the Batui Fold-Thrust Belt of the East Arm of Sulawesi, along with remote sensing, petrographic, and biostratigraphic data to reveal the stratigraphic and structural features of this suture zone, highlighting the key depositional environments that developed before, during, and after collision.

Fieldwork, petrography, and biostratigraphy data reveal dismembered upper mantle and lower crustal rocks of the East Sulawesi Ophiolite in tectonic contact with Middle to Late Miocene shallow marine limestone of the Salodik Formation. These limestones interfinger with coeval siliciclastic rocks of the Poh Formation recording a transition from fore- and back-reef environments to a foreshore setting. These rocks are overlain by conglomerates of the Pliocene Bongka Formation that was deposited in a disconformable contact atop the East Sulawesi Ophiolite and marks final merging of the Banggai-Sula microcontinent. Crucially, the Middle to Late Miocene age of the Salodik Formation, together with reworked Eocene foraminifera, indicates uplift and progressive reef closure prior to renewed shallow-marine deposition. This has not been previously recognised from this formation elsewhere in Sulawesi during NW-directed Miocene collision. These interpretations are further supported by SE-verging structures in the hanging wall of the Batui Fold-Thrust Belt, which defines the main regional suture zone. By constraining the timing of uplift and reef shutdown, this study defines the source-to-sink boundary conditions for sediment generation, transport, and deposition during ophiolite collision in eastern Indonesia.

How to cite: Hikmy, I. G., Sapiie, B., Rudyawan, A., Gough, A., and Webb, M.: From uplift to deposition: Tectonic controls on source-to-sink evolution during ophiolite collision in East Sulawesi. Insights from the Batui Fold-Thrust Belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6958, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6958, 2026.

EGU26-7183 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.6

Sinks Before the Sea: Rethinking Source‑to‑Sink Pathways in a Dam‑Stepped River. An example from the Citarum River, Java, Indonesia. 

Sam Holmes, Amy Gough, Isbram Hikmy, Alfend Rudyawan, Uisdean Nicholson, and Thomas Dodd

Hydropower is increasingly central to low carbon energy strategies worldwide, yet its geomorphic and ecological impacts remain incompletely understood. While reductions in downstream sediment load below dams is well documented, a key unresolved challenge lies in quantifying how sediment capture by reservoirs alters sediment composition and disrupts source-to-sink pathways. These compositional changes influence nutrient transfer, habitat quality, and long-term landscape evolution making it essential to understand how dams reshape sediment routing.  

The Citarum River, West Java, Indonesia, provides an ideal setting to investigate these dynamics. Flowing ~300km from its source in the volcanic highlands above Bandung to the Java sea, the river hosts three well established dams, Saguling, Cirata, and Jatiluhur, characterised by well-constrained geology and rapid hydropower expansion.  Indonesia aims to produce an additional 16GW of hydropower by 2034 as part of a wider goal to increase their overall renewable energy share. Sediment samples were collected along the Citarum River over two field seasons. The 2023 campaign targeted the main channel, comparing sediments entering and exiting reservoirs with upstream reference sites to evaluate the influence of artificial sediment sinks.  The 2024 campaign expanded sampling to tributaries to contextualise downstream compositional changes and address gaps identified in 2023. Heavy mineral analysis has been completed for 16 samples, providing a sensitive tracer of sediment provenance and transport processes. 

Heavy mineral assemblages are dominated by pyroxene and hornblende, reflecting the volcanic lithologies of West Java. Systematic shifts occur across hydrological boundaries: modern sediments exhibit a low hornblende-pyroxene ratio, whereas ancient deposits within Saguling reservoir show a significantly higher hornblende-pyroxene ratio, potentially reflecting longer residence times and preferential pyroxene alteration under hot, humid conditions. Increased hornblende-pyroxene ratios in modern low-energy settings further support energy-dependent mineral sorting. Reduced diversity in the Cirata reservoir, followed by downstream increases in e.g., rutile, xenotime, and zircon highlight disruptions in source-to sink-connectivity linked to reservoir trapping, tributary inputs, and/or channel erosion. Hydrological and sediment-transport modelling in MATLAB with TopoToolbox and CASCADE Toolbox, incorporating discharge, rainfall, and runoff datasets is underway to evaluate the influence of Java’s strong seasonal hydrology on sediment transport and composition. Integrating these models with heavy mineral stratigraphy will help assess the reliability of mineralogical signals as proxies for dam-driven perturbations to sediment routing.  

This combined stratigraphic and modelling approach provides new insight into how hydropower infrastructure reshapes sediment pathways from source to sink, with implications for future hydropower development in Indonesia and other rapidly urbanising, energy‑intensive regions. 

How to cite: Holmes, S., Gough, A., Hikmy, I., Rudyawan, A., Nicholson, U., and Dodd, T.: Sinks Before the Sea: Rethinking Source‑to‑Sink Pathways in a Dam‑Stepped River. An example from the Citarum River, Java, Indonesia., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7183, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7183, 2026.

Clinoforms are inclined depositional units formed by sedimentary processes, commonly developed in a wide range of subaqueous environments. They constitute key geomorphic elements within source-to-sink systems and play an important role in the transport of terrigenous clastic sediments and the evolution of sedimentary basins. Compared with marine settings, the architecture, evolution, and controlling processes of clinoforms in lacustrine basins remain comparatively underexplored, due to the limited availability of high-resolution 3D seismic data. In this study, we integrate sedimentary cores and well logs from 16 industry wells, along with a 3D seismic dataset covering c.1500 km2 to investigate the sedimentary evolution of lacustrine clinoforms within the Triassic Yanchang Formation on the southwestern margin of the Ordos Basin. Seismic interpretation interprets eight clinoforms (C1-C8). These clinoforms are characterized by sigmoidal and oblique geometries, with slope gradients ranging from 0.77° to 1.10° for the sigmoidal type and 0.55° to 0.93° for the oblique type. The eight clinoforms record a three-phase evolution. Stage I (C1-C2) is dominated by oblique clinoforms, Stage II (C3-C5) by aggradational to progradational sigmoidal clinoforms, and Stage III (C6-C8) by oblique clinoforms. The thickness of these clinoforms shifts from the topset to the foreset and ultimately to the bottomset, indicating a progressive progradation of the depocentre from the southwestern toward the central (northeastern) lacustrine basin. Well-log interpretation shows that the base of the topset is typically composed of 2.5-10 m thick sandstones overlain by 0.5-5 m thick mudstones, with sandstone content exceeding that of mudstone. Core observation indicates that cross bedding and parallel bedding are the dominant sedimentary structures. In the foreset, well-log interpretation indicates 3-15 m thick mudstones interbedded with thin (1-5 m) sandstone layers. Core observation shows deformed bedding, flaser bedding, and homogeneous mudstones. In the bottomset, well-log interpretation reveals thick (2-10 m) sandstone packages with minor (1-5 m) mudstone intercalations. Core observation documents massive to graded sandstones, slump-related deformation structures, and flame structures. Based on seismic interpretation, well-log analysis and core observation, we interpret that the topset is dominated by meandering fluvial depositional environments, including channel and point-bar settings. The foreset corresponds to slope environments associated with headwall scarps of mass-transport complexes and background muddy sedimentation, whereas the bottomset represents deep lacustrine environments dominated by gravity-flow deposits, including slumps, debris flows, and turbidity currents. In contrast to clinoforms developed in submarine settings, where large accommodation commonly prevents preservation of complete slope infill successions, the lacustrine clinoforms of the Yanchang Formation record a complete infilling evolution of lake basins. Understanding the infilling evolution of lacustrine clinoforms therefore provides a robust sedimentological framework for reconstructing basin evolution that is difficult to resolve in submarine settings.

How to cite: Peng, J., Wu, N., and Hui, X.: Clinoform Evolution in a Triassic Lacustrine Environment, Southwestern Ordos Basin: Insights from Core, Well-Log, and 3D Seismic Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8701, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8701, 2026.

EGU26-9548 | Orals | SSP3.6

Provenance of Paleogene to Early Miocene deep-water sedimentary rocks in Sabah, northern Borneo and implications for the Proto-South China Sea subduction 

Tim Breitfeld, Marco W.A. van Hattum, Robert Hall, Stuart Burley, Juliane Hennig-Breitfeld, Max Franzel, Simon S. Suggate, Pieter Vermeesch, and Max Webb

The Sabah province of northern Borneo records a long-lived achieve of deep marine turbidite deposition ranging in age from the Mesozoic to the Early Miocene. Whilst the Mesozoic is poorly preserved, the Paleogene to Early Miocene deep water deposits form a relatively complete succession that was deposited along the southern margin of the Proto-South China Sea (PSCS). This comprises the Sapulut and Trusmadi Formations of central-south Sabah, the Labang and Kulapis Formations of eastern Sabah, the Kudat Formation of NW Sabah and the Crocker Formation of western Sabah. Sandstone petrography, heavy mineral analysis and detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology reveal the changing provenance sources associated with the evolution of the PSCS across key stratigraphies and can be used to reconstruct its subduction history. Most analysed formations contain abundant ultra-stable heavy minerals and Mesozoic zircons which indicate multi-recycling from southern sources. However, volcanic lithic fragments in some Labang Formation samples and Middle Eocene zircons in a lower Crocker Formation sample, as well as unstable heavy minerals such as apatite and epidote, indicate input from contemporaneous volcanism, likely derived from the PSCS subduction arc to the north. The thickest and most extensively exposed deep water sequence, the Crocker Formation in western Sabah, was deposited by two different drainage systems. The lower part of the Crocker Formation has a provenance similar to the Rajang Group in Sarawak and is interpreted as a more distal equivalent sourced by multi-recycling of Borneo and Malay Peninsula sources with some input from the Cagayan/PSCS arc. In contrast, the upper Crocker Formation has a provenance similar to the Nyalau Formation in Sarawak and is interpreted as its deeper marine continuation, sourced by sediments from the Sunda Shelf-Malay Peninsula transported in a drainage system which by-passed SW Borneo. The detrital mineralogy of parts of the Labang and Kulapis Formations suggest an extension of this Nyalau-Upper Crocker depositional system into eastern Sabah. In the Early Miocene the Palawan microcontinental fragment collided with the Cagayan Arc and finally closed the PSCS. The forearc was uplifted and mélanges preserved across eastern Sabah document this collision. The uplifted forearc was most likely the source of sediments in the Lower Miocene Temburong Formation in western Sabah, which marks the end of deep marine deposition in Sabah.

How to cite: Breitfeld, T., van Hattum, M. W. A., Hall, R., Burley, S., Hennig-Breitfeld, J., Franzel, M., Suggate, S. S., Vermeesch, P., and Webb, M.: Provenance of Paleogene to Early Miocene deep-water sedimentary rocks in Sabah, northern Borneo and implications for the Proto-South China Sea subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9548, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9548, 2026.

Carbonate platforms represent important end-member source-to-sink systems, yet their sediment production, export pathways and sinks under glacial–interglacial sea-level fluctuations remain insufficiently constrained. The Zhongsha Atoll, the largest ring-shaped atoll in the South China Sea, preserves relatively intact Quaternary reef–bank systems and provides an important archive for investigating carbonate platform evolution. This study examines the Quaternary stratigraphic evolution and carbonate export of a drowning carbonate platform based on a lagoon drilling core from Zhongsha Atoll. A sequence stratigraphic framework is established, and the responses of major geochemical proxies across sequence boundaries are evaluated. Limited U–Th and Sr isotope ages are used as absolute chronological constraints.The lagoon core can be subdivided into 11 depositional sequences corresponding to interglacial stages from MIS 1 to MIS 23. Elemental geochemical results show that mean concentrations of Sr, U and Na decrease stepwise with depth between successive reef–shoal sequences. Abrupt downward shifts in these elemental contents coincide with exposure surfaces, suggesting that such geochemical features may serve as indicators of sequence boundaries in Quaternary carbonate platform systems. Facies analysis indicates that lagoonal deposits dominate lowstand systems tracts, whereas progradational reef deposits prevail during highstand systems tracts.From a glacial–interglacial perspective, the results highlight the role of sea-level amplitude, rise rate and highstand duration in controlling reef accretion and carbonate export from the platform. Integration with regional exploration seismic data provides preliminary constraints on carbonate delivery to adjacent deep-sea areas. These findings improve the understanding of Quaternary carbonate platform evolution and offer insights into the future response of reef systems in the South China Sea to sea-level change.

How to cite: Chen, W.: Quaternary evolution, carbonate export and controlling factors of a drowning carbonate platform in the South China Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12922, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12922, 2026.

EGU26-14353 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.6

Mesozoic source rock systems at the junction between Eurasia and Gondwana: Tethyan vs Boreal controls in the Southeastern Caucasus, Northeastern Azerbaijan  

Orhan R. Abbasov, Arastun I. Khuduzade, Ibrahim S. Guliyev, Ulviyya J. Yolchuyeva, Elnur E. Baloglanov, Rena A. Jafarova, Ruslan R. Akhundov, Elmar S. Samadov, and Orkhan Kh. Bashirov

Northeastern Azerbaijan occupies a complex geodynamic setting at the convergence of the Scythian-Turanian (Epihercynian) Platform and the Meso-Tethyan accretionary prism, evolving along the Northern Gondwana margin. Functioning as a key segment of the regional North Crimea – Greater Caucasus – Kopetdagh Meso-Tethys marginal sea, the accretionary prism records a pivotal transition from Lower-Middle Jurassic shale-rich aspid facies to Cretaceous flysch sequences. Despite decades of research on Mesozoic source rocks formed within this complex geodynamic setting, the lack of a global realm-based framework has historically led to contradictory evaluations of the stratigraphic attribution of effective source rocks. This study resolves these inconsistencies by integrating geochemical and paleontological data, revealing that the Jurassic-Cretaceous succession reflects a distinct Boreal-Tethyan polarity. This polarity is interpreted to arise from contrasting source-to-sink configurations that controlled the accumulation and preservation of organic-rich sediments.

We identify the massive Middle Jurassic (Aalenian-Bajocian) shale succession as a regional gas-prone-dominated system (max. TOC 2.43%); its mixed Type II/III kerogen signature and paleoenvironmental context mirror those of European epicontinental basins. Consistent with global platformal trends, the Neocomian unconformity lies directly upon Middle Jurassic shales across the northern domain. This confirms the negligible regional role of the Upper Jurassic Callovian-Tithonian succession, globally recognized as the most prolific Mesozoic source rock interval, which is here constrained by uplift-driven erosion and low-latitude (~15°N) aridity, except in restricted zones where preserved biohermal limestones reflect warm Meso-Tethyan influence.

Consequently, the overlying Neocomian succession exhibits marked heterogeneity, with geochemical evidence aligning with regional paleontological records. While predominantly regressive and gas-prone in the Boreal northern sector, southern zones subject to intensive Meso-Tethyan influence record "pulse-like" Tethyan transgressions that deposited discrete, high-quality oil-prone shale intervals, mainly within the Hauterivian-Barremian (max. TOC 5.96%; HI up to 557 mg HC/g TOC). These pulse-like inflows created temporary anoxia in the southern flysch basin, favoring high-quality organic matter preservation comparable to that in the oil-prone Tethyan Zagros Basin (Garau Fm.), characterized by Type II kerogen and HI values reaching 600 mg HC/g TOC.

Crucially, the Upper Cretaceous Cenomanian-Coniacian shale succession (Kemishdagh and Kemchi Fms.) emerges as the region’s primary oil-prone system (TOC 2.92-6.02%; HI 406-479 mg HC/g TOC). Attributed to Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE 2), its exceptional productivity parallels that of the prolific Tethyan Zagros Basin to the south, while standing in sharp contrast to the organic-lean, Boreal-influenced Terek-Caspian Basin to the north, confirming that Tethyan oceanic events exerted limited influence on the Eurasian interior. Supported by the alternation of thick shale layers with tuff and bentonite interbeds within the Upper Albian-Coniacian succession of the accretionary prism, this OAE 2 signature correlates with the Late Albian-Late Turonian explosive volcanic phase documented in local reports and is biostratigraphically anchored by Tethyan radiolarian colonies. Furthermore, co-occurring cosmopolitan radiolarians, carbonate-shelled planktonic foraminifera, and benthic taxa north of the prism reveal that, despite dominant Tethyan control, the basin maintained biotic connectivity with the European epicontinental province.

How to cite: Abbasov, O. R., Khuduzade, A. I., Guliyev, I. S., J. Yolchuyeva, U., Baloglanov, E. E., Jafarova, R. A., Akhundov, R. R., Samadov, E. S., and Bashirov, O. Kh.: Mesozoic source rock systems at the junction between Eurasia and Gondwana: Tethyan vs Boreal controls in the Southeastern Caucasus, Northeastern Azerbaijan , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14353, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14353, 2026.

Slope failures and turbidity currents are the most common subaqueous processes and are ubiquitous on all continental margins. Their deposits mass-transport complexes (MTCs) and turbidites commonly co-occur and constitute key infilling elements of sedimentary basins. In this study, we use 3D seismic reflection data from the Taranaki Basin, northwest New Zealand, to investigate how a buried MTC influences the initiation, emplacement, and evolution of subsequent turbidity currents. We interpreted a buried MTC (MTC-1) that contains large transported blocks with well preserved internal reflections and adjacent debrites with chaotic to transparent seismic facies. We reveal that differential compaction driven by rheological contrasts between the blocks and debrites produced a rugose MTC top surface with local relief and asymmetrical depressions. This inherited relief locally enhances flow confinement and slope variability, promoting turbidity current acceleration and repeated hydraulic jumps across local depressions, thereby facilitating transitions to supercritical flow and the development of cyclic steps. Cyclic steps recur on successive stratigraphic surfaces above MTC-1 up to the modern seabed, indicating that inherited MTC relief continued to influence turbidity current over an extended geological timescale. Additionally, retrogressive failure associated with MTC emplacement generated fault-bounded, trough-like depressions in the headwall of MTC-1. These negative-relief features are interpreted to reorganize incoming turbidity currents through reflection and deflection, trapping flow within the trough and progressively focusing near bed transport along the trough axis, ultimately promoting channel incision and initiating a new channel pathway that is oriented approximately perpendicular to the original flow direction. Given that MTCs and turbidity currents are ubiquitous in subaqueous environments, and that differential compaction and retrogressive failure are common features of MTCs. We therefore indicate that combined effects of differential compaction and retrogressive failure exert a fundamental control on deep-water sediment distribution and stratigraphic architecture in deep-water systems.

How to cite: Li, W. and Wu, N.: Influence of Buried Mass-Transport Complexes on the Initiation and Evolution of Turbidity Currents, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15849, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15849, 2026.

East Asia, including the Korean Peninsula, has been located along an active continental margin since the Mesozoic, where magmatism and fault activity have been primarily controlled by changes in subduction dynamics. In this region, numerous Cretaceous sedimentary basins of various scales developed along the eastern margin of the Eurasian Plate. In particular, from the mid-Cretaceous to the early Paleogene, intensive magmatic activity occurred along the subduction-related margin, forming the Gyeongsang Volcanic Arc that extended across the present-day Korean Peninsula and proto-Japan. The development of such a volcanic arc is expected to have exerted first-order control on the reorganization of source-to-sink systems in adjacent sedimentary basins.

The Gyeongsang Basin, the largest Cretaceous basin in Korea, is located in the southeastern part of the peninsula. The Seongpori Formation on Geoje Island in the southeastern part of the basin, was deposited adjacent to rocks related to the Gyeongsang Volcanic Arc. To constrain the depositional age and sediment provenance of the Seongpori Formation, we conducted detrital zircon U–Pb dating using LA–ICP–MS on six samples (four from the northwestern island and two from the southeastern island).

Maximum depositional ages were estimated using the maximum likelihood age (MLA) method. The resulting MLAs range from 98 to 93 Ma for the northwestern samples and from 106 to 105 Ma for the southeastern samples. Provenance analysis indicates that the common major sediment sources of the Seongpori Formation were Paleoproterozoic and Mesozoic rocks exposed in the Yeongnam Massif, which borders the western and northern parts of the Gyeongsang Basin. In addition, some northwestern samples contain Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic zircons, which are interpreted to have been derived from more distal sources, such as the Okcheon Belt located in the northwestern part of the Yeongnam Massif, or possibly from the Gyeonggi Massif farther to the northwest.

The Cretaceous detrital zircon age spectra show clear spatial variations. Northwestern samples are dominated by 100–90 Ma zircons, whereas southeastern samples are characterized by an older and broader age range of 115–100 Ma. These differences are interpreted to reflect spatial variations in magmatic activity within the Korean Peninsula and proto-Japan areas of the Gyeongsang Volcanic Arc, as well as a change in sediment provenance. We infer that the sediment sources of the Seongpori Formation varied spatially and that a shift in the source-to-sink system occurred at ~100 Ma. This timing coincides with the development of an andesitic stratovolcano at ~99 Ma in central Geoje Island, suggesting a possible reorganization of the drainage system induced by volcanic arc construction.

How to cite: Park, Y. J., Chae, Y.-U., and Lim, H. S.: Maximum depositional age and sediment provenance of the Cretaceous Seongpori Formation (Geoje Island, Korea) constrained by detrital zircon U–Pb geochronology., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16706, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16706, 2026.

EGU26-17544 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.6

Multi-proxy Holocene paleoenvironmental reconstruction from Tha Kum Peat Swamp, Eastern Thailand 

Kannika Wangritthikraikul, S. Nemiah Ladd, Nathalie Dubois, and Sakonvan Chawchai

Coastal regions across Southeast Asia were drastically transformed during the post glacial period due to sea level rise, yet the paleoenvironmental development of eastern Thailand remains poorly understood compared to other regions. As peat swamp ecosystems are highly sensitive to climate variability and hydrological changes, they can serve as an important archive of past environmental shifts. This study presents a high-resolution 8,100-year multi-proxy record from three sediment sequences retrieved from the Tha Kum peat swamp located 15-km from the modern shoreline in eastern Thailand. We used elemental geochemistry (XRF), total organic carbon (TOC), stable isotopes (δ13C, δ15N, and C/N ratios), and n-alkane distributions to reconstruct the landscape development. 

The stratigraphic sequence of the oldest core (NU4) is divided into four distinct units. The basal Unit 4 (~8100-7600 cal yr BP) exhibits highly variable organic matter provenance, with δ13C and C/N ratios spanning freshwater, marine, and terrestrial sources, reflecting a lake that was indirectly influenced by early Holocene sea-level rise and tidal back water effects. A significant shift occurs in Unit 3 (7600–7350 cal yr BP), characterized by peaks in Sulfur (S) and TOC, alongside lower aquatic proxy (Paq​) values, representing the establishment of shallower lake or wetland system due to coastal progradation following the mid-Holocene sea-level highstand. Unit 2 (7350–2600 cal yr BP) exhibits prolonged geochemical stability following the highstand. High resolution radiocarbon dating indicates a hiatus between 2600 and 200 cal yr BP, which could be the result of relatively dry conditions. This hiatus is followed by the deposition of the most recent sediment (Unit 1), which is characterized by a sharp decrease in Ti and a maximum TOC, signaling a transition to a modern organic-dominated peat swamp system. This shift was likely driven by a stabilization of the local water table or sea level. 

While the study area is currently managed by the Forest Industry Organization to balance plantation, industry, and conservation, the stability of this ecosystem is threatened by future sea-level rise and fluctuating precipitation patterns. These could potentially lead to ecosystem degradation through the modification of local hydrological and geochemical conditions.

How to cite: Wangritthikraikul, K., Ladd, S. N., Dubois, N., and Chawchai, S.: Multi-proxy Holocene paleoenvironmental reconstruction from Tha Kum Peat Swamp, Eastern Thailand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17544, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17544, 2026.

EGU26-18732 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.6

Provenance of weathering-derived dissolved ions and CO2 balance in the upper Assam Brahmaputra Valley 

Iravati Ray, Reshmi Das, Hao Xie, Shaoneng He, and Xianfeng Wang

Rivers draining the Himalaya constitute major atmospheric CO2 sinks due to exceptionally high chemical weathering fluxes. However, the net CO2 drawdown depends on both the contribution of end members such as carbonate and silicate weathering, precipitation, and the extent of CO2 supersaturation and potential emission evasion. Here, we integrate a multi-endmember inverse mixing model with freshwater carbonate-system calculations (CO2SYS) for Brahmaputra main-channel river water samples, suspended particulate matter (SPM) and bed sediments from Assam, India. Size-fractionated silicate leaches (>63 µm, 63–10 µm, 10–2 µm, <2 µm) and SPM plotted on MIA–AF–CN–M ternary cluster toward Mg–Fe–Al–rich silicate fields, consistent with a notable freshly supplied mafic component in the sediment pool (Figure 1a). An inverse framework in charge-equivalent tracer space (χCa, χMg, χNa, χK, χCl,  χSO₄; normalized by Σ⁺ = Ca2++Mg2++Na++K+) is used to apportion contributions from precipitation, carbonate, and silicate weathering. Model results indicate carbonate-dominated dissolved ion generation (f_carb ≈ 0.52–0.69) with a smaller, yet consistent silicate contribution (f_sil ≈ 0.21–0.33). An independent forward mass-balance, constrained by regional rain chemistry and published silicate ratios for trans Himalayan and Himalayan rocks, produces comparable silicate and carbonate fractions, thereby corroborating the inverse apportionment. CO2SYS calculations based on measured alkalinity and pH yield pCO2 ≈ 680–2420 µatm (pH ≈ 7.6–8.2), which indicates persistent CO2 supersaturation. The ratios of total alkanility to dissolved inorganic carbon (TA/DIC) are consistently less than 1 (TA/DIC ≈ 0.955–0.995). In contrast, a theoretical weathering-only TA/DIC, calculated by balancing sulphuric acid, carbonate, and silicate weathering in charge equivalent space, ranges from 2.0 to 2.9. This DIC excess (theoretical DIC – observed DIC) implies the presence of additional CO2 along the reach beyond that supplied by weathering. Subansiri, a tributary of the Brahmaputra, shows the highest pCO2 and DIC excess coupled with the lowest SPM load (0.0075 g/L).  The theoretical weathering framework indicates these sediments as a net CO2 sink (Figure 1b). The persistently low TA/DIC ratios (<1) and excess DIC relative to theory suggest additional in-stream CO₂ sources, possibly from organic matter decomposition and sulphuric-acid–driven weathering.

How to cite: Ray, I., Das, R., Xie, H., He, S., and Wang, X.: Provenance of weathering-derived dissolved ions and CO2 balance in the upper Assam Brahmaputra Valley, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18732, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18732, 2026.

EGU26-19594 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.6

The impacts of clay minerals on the quantification of black carbon in marginal sediments 

Wenxiu Yu, Jiazong Du, Limin Hu, Yazhi Bai, Jialun Wang, and Xuefa Shi

Sedimentary black carbon (BC), formed during incomplete combustion of biomass and fossil fuels, represents a chemically refractory carbon pool and an important long-term sink in the global carbon cycle. Coastal margins are major repositories of terrestrial organic carbon (OC) including BC, yet estimates of BC sequestration in these regions remain highly uncertain. Most existing datasets rely on the CTO-375 method, which isolates BC based on thermal resistance following acid pretreatment. However, this approach does not fully account for mineral-associated OC, particularly OC stabilized by clay minerals, potentially leading to systematic overestimation of BC.

Here, we investigate the extent and controls of this methodological bias by comparing BC contents obtained using the conventional CTO-375 protocol (HCl pretreatment only) and a modified protocol that includes HF treatment to remove clay minerals along a transect of Eurasian marginal seas. BC contents measured without HF treatment were consistently higher, with proportional overestimations (ΔBC) ranging from 39% to 94% and showing pronounced regional variability. ΔBC correlated positively with smectite content, but not with grain size, indicating that clay mineral composition, rather than total clay abundance, governs BC overestimation.

These findings indicate that the measurement of BC content in sediments should take the mineral composition into consideration, otherwise the climatic negative feedback associated with sedimentary BC burial would be overestimated.

How to cite: Yu, W., Du, J., Hu, L., Bai, Y., Wang, J., and Shi, X.: The impacts of clay minerals on the quantification of black carbon in marginal sediments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19594, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19594, 2026.

The elemental (major, trace, and rare-earth elements - REEs) distribution in sedimentary rocks provides an essential tool for basin-scale investigations, enabling the interpretation of geochemical characteristics within stratigraphic successions and thereby providing regional provenance and insights into the tectonic evolution of the basin. Here, numerous discrimination diagrams based on the major, trace, and rare earth element (REE) geochemistry were used to infer the sediment provenance, degree of weathering, and tectonic setting of the Permian Pranhita-Godavari (PG) Basin in South-Eastern India. Permian extensional basins are widely documented across the Gondwana basin in India, and the Chintalpudi sub-basin of the PG preserves a thick (~3000 m) and complete Gondwana sequence, spanning from the Permian Talchir diamictites to the Cretaceous Gangapur Formation. This research presents new geochemical results from the Barakar and Kamthi Formations within the Chintalpudi sub-basin, aiming to understand the sediment provenance, tectonic evolution, and weathering phenomena during the Late Permian. The distributions of major, trace, and rare-earth elements indicate that the clastic sediments are compositionally mature and derived predominantly from intensely weathered continental sources. The Post-Archean Average-Australian-Shale (PASS) normalized REE data shows enrichment of light rare earth elements (LREE) with relatively flat heavy rare earth elements (HREE), and a negative Europium (Eu) anomaly implies that the majority of contributing source rocks were felsic, with minor input from rocks of andesitic composition. Furthermore, multi-parameter discrimination plots using major (K2O/Na2O vs. SiO2/Al2O3), log (K2O/Na2O)/SiO2, and trace elements (La/Y vs. Sc/Cr) compositions reveal that the majority of the samples in the Chintalpudi sub-basin are part of a passive continental geotectonic setting. The ratio of Zr/Sc and Th/Sc is higher, corroborating the felsic origin without sediment recycling. Major oxide ratios indicate that the samples are highly mature and have a high chemical index of alteration (CIA), with a low index of compositional variability (ICV), suggesting that they were deposited in warm and humid climatic conditions, with intensive weathering during deposition.

Keywords: Permian Shale, Provenance, Weathering, tectonic setting, Chintalpudi sub-basin

How to cite: Prusty, D., Mani, D., Bhattacharya, S., and Krishna, A. K.: Geochemistry of the Permian shales in the Chintalpudi sub-Basin, Pranhita-Godavari Basin, India: Implications for Provenance, weathering, and tectonic setting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21200, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21200, 2026.

EGU26-324 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.7

Recording crisis and recovery: carbonate concretions as potential archives of Permo–Triassic change in the Karoo Basin 

Tara Edwards, Claire Browning, Robyn Pickering, Aidan Wilton, and Pia Viglietti

The end-Permian mass extinction (~252 Ma) represents the most profound biotic turnover in Earth’s history. While marine successions are well dated and chemically characterised, the terrestrial record has only recently begun to achieve comparable chronological resolution. The Karoo Basin in South Africa preserves one of the most continuous continental records spanning the extinction and early Triassic recovery, yet few sequences have direct radiometric ages. Recent progress has come from U–Pb dating of detrital zircons, although differences in maximum depositional ages, uneven stratigraphic sampling (particularly across the Triassic), and the potential for the youngest grains to be undersampled in detrital populations limit the development of a fully resolved continental timescale.

Pedogenic carbonate concretions are widespread within Karoo successions and offer an alternative chronometer. Their ubiquity and potential to preserve primary geochemical signatures make them promising but still underutilised targets for both U–Pb dating and palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. Here we evaluate their suitability through an integrated petrographic, geochemical, and geochronological approach. More than 100 carbonate concretions were collected from known end-Permian localities, representing diverse concretion morphologies, facies settings, and stratigraphic positions. This dataset enables assessment of which concretion types and growth histories best retain datable U–Pb systematics and palaeoenvironmental signals.

LA–ICP–MS U–Pb dating was carried out using a Nu Instruments Attom coupled to a Resolution SE 193 nm laser ablation system. Trace-element mapping via Q–ICP–MS (e.g. Mg, Sr, Ba, U, Th, Pb) was used as a screening tool to identify zones with favourable chemistries (e.g. U > 1 ppm and U > Pb). Initial results show that several concretion types preserve coherent U–Pb systematics and yield resolvable ages, while trace element and calcite fabrics reveal a spectrum from primary preservation through early diagenesis to complete recrystallisation. These relationships allow us to establish criteria for selecting the most reliable microdomains and concretion types for dating and to inform future field work.

This study adds to a rapidly growing body of research using LA-ICP-MS-U-Pb geochronology on pedogenic carbonates globally, and provides the first systematic attempt to geochemically characterise and directly date carbonate concretions in the Karoo Basin. It demonstrates the potential for pedogenic carbonates to refine terrestrial timescales across the end-Permian transition and contributes a framework that can be applied to continental settings globally where conventional chronometers remain limited.

 

 

How to cite: Edwards, T., Browning, C., Pickering, R., Wilton, A., and Viglietti, P.: Recording crisis and recovery: carbonate concretions as potential archives of Permo–Triassic change in the Karoo Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-324, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-324, 2026.

EGU26-742 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.7

Coastal resilience and island habitability in coral reef islands: A case study of Lakshadweep Islands 

Shradha Menon, Saikat Kumar Misra, and Pankaj Khanna

Low-lying coral reef islands are increasingly threatened by sea-level rise and intensifying monsoon events, leading to heightened risks of coastal inundation, erosion, and consequent impacts on island habitability and human migration. Despite these challenges, such islands exhibit dynamic and non-uniform responses governed by local hydrodynamics and environmental conditions. The Western Indian Ocean is especially vulnerable, with models projecting anomalously higher rates of sea level rise and storm frequency compared to the global average. Within this context, the low-lying islands of the Lakshadweep Archipelago provide an essential case study for understanding island vulnerability and resilience.

This study presents a decadal-scale analysis (2003–2022) of ten islands in the Lakshadweep Archipelago, focusing on spatial variations in island area and their relationship with global and regional environmental factors. High-resolution satellite imagery (CNES Airbus, 0.3–0.7 m) was used to examine shoreline morphological changes on both inhabited (Bitra, Androth, Minicoy, Agatti, Kavaratti, Kalpeni) and uninhabited (Bangaram, Thinnakara, Suheli, Kalpetti) islands. Islands were categorized by size, distinguishing large (>1 km², Minicoy and Androth, Kavaratti, Agatti, Kalpeni) from small (<1 km²) islands, and by habitability to assess anthropogenic impacts. Results reveal that all islands, regardless of habitation, experienced specific changes in area: small islands showed up to 30% sediment migration, however, without losing area—especially pronounced from 2007 to 2017, coinciding with severe El Niño and low-amplitude Indian Ocean Dipole events. While the large islands lost up to 5% of their area, attributed to both natural and human influences.

These findings indicate that small islands face moderate risk due to sediment migration, while large islands are moderately to highly vulnerable, influenced by persistent erosion and anthropogenic factors. Spatial patterns of vulnerability, particularly in the southern zones, underline the need for targeted mitigation and adaptation strategies. Importantly, regional drivers such as monsoon intensity play a decisive role in shoreline resilience, differentiating these islands from their global counterparts. By identifying areas of risk and proposing conceptual models for adaptation, this study offers insights for assessing the habitability of coral reef islands in the context of ongoing climate change.

 

How to cite: Menon, S., Misra, S. K., and Khanna, P.: Coastal resilience and island habitability in coral reef islands: A case study of Lakshadweep Islands, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-742, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-742, 2026.

EGU26-1313 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.7

How far south did Cenozoic tropical carbonate platforms develop in the South Atlantic Ocean? 

Mateus Gama, Gabriel Tagliaro, Adolfo Britzke, Pedro Bauli, Otavio Neto, and Luigi Jovane

Tropical carbonate platforms accompanied the latitudinal shifts of the tropical belt throughout the Cenozoic. Their flat-topped geometries were influenced by a variety of processes, including climate and sea level changes, biofacies composition, tectonics and fluctuations in continental runoff. Within this scenario, tropical carbonate platforms grew across the global oceans between the Oligocene-Pliocene interval. Global evidence indicates that tropical platforms expanded toward higher latitudes in the early Miocene but underwent a collapse during the late Miocene and Pliocene. However, the occurrence of carbonate platforms in the South Atlantic during the Neogene is still poorly studied, creating a gap in the understanding of how warm periods influence the development of carbonate environments. Our study aims to characterize the sedimentological composition and depositional architecture of Neogene carbonates in the Santos Basin, to reconstruct the paleoenvironmental evolution and depositional history of South Atlantic tropical platforms across that interval. We use an extensive dataset of seismic data (2D and 3D) and wells to characterize the lithostratigraphy, the geometries (e.g. Isolated Carbonate Platform, rimmed shelf, homoclinal ramps and channels), and the build-up patterns (aggradation, progradation and backstepping) of carbonate platforms presented in the region. Lithostratigraphic results reveal the accumulation of a ~500 m thick calcarenite succession. Seismic interpretation shows that the shelf break was delineated by flat-topped platforms in the southern part of the Santos Basin (~28°S). Seismic analyses then indicate that middle Miocene smaller carbonate build-ups of up to 30 km in length coalesced via progradation into a 90 km long Quaternary carbonate platform. Within this interval, the transition from an aggradational to a progradational buildup is accompanied by a geometric transformation from isolated carbonate platforms to an extensive rimmed shelf. This change is supported by an isopach map which shows an intense sedimentary infilling of the inter-platform seaway and of the upper slope. In summary, the occurrence of Cenozoic carbonate platforms in the Santos Basin is divided into four stages: 1) onset of carbonate deposition occurred during the late Oligocene, driven by the late Oligocene Warming and the Oligocene-Miocene Transition which led to the establishment of a mixed siliciclastic-carbonate sedimentary environment; 2) carbonate buildups reached their aggradational peak during the middle Miocene Climate Optimum; 3) in the late Miocene, carbonate platforms evolved to a progradational stage in response to the long-term sea-level fall of the Miocene Climate Transition; 4) in the Quaternary, the development of mixed siliciclastic-carbonate homoclinal ramps buried the tropical carbonate platforms. This study reveals that the development and demise of tropical carbonate platforms in the Santos Basin were linked to global paleoclimate events, which also governed sea-level changes, the intensification of ocean currents, and sea-surface temperatures. Finally, the findings in this study demonstrate a 10° southward migration of tropical carbonate zones across the Santos Basin during the Neogene when compared to the modern, extending to 28°S latitudes whereas nowadays that environmental boundary is placed along the Abrolhos Shelf at 18°S.

How to cite: Gama, M., Tagliaro, G., Britzke, A., Bauli, P., Neto, O., and Jovane, L.: How far south did Cenozoic tropical carbonate platforms develop in the South Atlantic Ocean?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1313, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1313, 2026.

EGU26-2029 | Posters on site | SSP3.7

Carbonate sediment budgets under predicted future Ocean Acidification pathways 

Stephen Lokier and Eleanor Mineyko

Anthropogenically-driven climate change is an established fact. While significant efforts are being made to understand the effects of greenhouse gasses on the climate, the effects of the related process of Ocean Acidification, through the dissolution of CO2 in seawater, receives less attention. The vast majority of ocean acidification studies have focused on the ability of marine calcifiers to precipitate skeletal material under a scenario of falling pH. The lowering of marine pH is accompanied by a decrease in calcium carbonate (CaCO3) saturation, thus increasing the dissolution of carbonate skeletal material – particularly aragonite.

 

Predicted future ocean surface pH values, on the basis of IPCC SSP climate scenarios, range between 8.0 and 7.7 by the year 2100. While the potential effects on marine calcifiers are worrying, such extreme reductions in pH will also have significant consequences for future carbonate sediment budgets. This is particularly a concern for low-lying tropical island nations.

 

This study experimentally assesses the effects of ocean acidification, at a range of predicted future pH scenarios, on carbonate bioclasts in a simulated tropical shallow marine environment. During each experimental run, targeted carbonate materials were subjected to an extended period of exposure under predicted future pH conditions. Experiments were run in duplicate, under both passive and dynamic conditions, so as to assess the effects of dissolution on the mechanical competence of sediment grains in natural transport scenarios. Project outcomes enable the construction of a predictive matrix for the potential effects of future ocean acidification pathways on carbonate sediment budgets. Outcomes will directly support informed planning and decision making, particularly in resilience and vulnerability assessments.

How to cite: Lokier, S. and Mineyko, E.: Carbonate sediment budgets under predicted future Ocean Acidification pathways, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2029, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2029, 2026.

EGU26-3892 | Orals | SSP3.7

Response of sediment composition in Jamaican reef facies to changes in environmental factors 

Zdzislaw Belka, Jolanta Dopieralska, Michal Jakubowicz, Sylwia Królikowska, Weronika Orzechowska, Shanna-Lee Thomas, and Aleksandra Walczak

Modern sediments from reef facies at Discovery Bay, Jamaica, were analyzed to document changes in biotic sediment composition over the past four decades and to evaluate their relationship to the impacts of hurricanes, rising temperatures, and sea-level rise. Discovery Bay is a classical Caribbean reef research site, where reef community structure has been quantitatively and systematically documented since 1977, providing a robust long-term framework for interpreting sedimentary responses to environmental and climatic stressors. New data reveal that sediments from the backreef/lagoonal zone are dominated by plates of the green alga Halimeda (35.7–54.0%) and coral fragments (29.7–48.7%). Compared to the 1982–1999 period, Halimeda has nearly doubled in relative abundance, while coralline algae, echinoid fragments, and the encrusting foraminifer Homotrema rubrum have decreased by more than 50%. Despite the present scarcity of living corals in the backreef, coral fragments remain abundant in the sediments. They are derived mainly from the adjacent reef crest, where only old, dead coral skeletons are present today. Intensified wave action associated with sea-level rise promotes erosion of the old reef framework and transport of sand-sized material into the backreef. Additional coral skeletal material is supplied by storm-induced reworking of older backreef sediments. In the fore-reef zone (<30 m water depth), samples were collected along transects across a sand channel and a reef terrace. In the sand channel, sediments are dominated by coral grains (40.7–62.0%) and Halimeda fragments (21.7–41.7%), showing little change compared to 1999, except for a slight decline in coralline algae and Homotrema. On the fore-reef terrace, coral grains and Halimeda fragments contribute similar proportions (approximately 43% and 40%, respectively). With increasing depth, coral grains generally decrease, whereas Halimeda reaches its highest abundance at depths of 10–15 m. Compared to 1999, Halimeda fragments have increased by more than 10%, while coralline algae have decreased by approximately 10%.

Although living coral cover in the fore-reef zone has declined to less than 5% over the past three decades, the contribution of coral grains to sediments has remained nearly constant. This indicates that dead coral skeletons and older reef material present in the fore-reef zone have long residence times and continue to contribute to sand-sized sediment production. Consequently, fore-reef sandy sediments represent time-averaged assemblages and have limited capacity to record short-term changes in reef biotic composition.

This study was supported by the Polish National Science Centre, grant No. 2022/45/B/ST10/00599.

How to cite: Belka, Z., Dopieralska, J., Jakubowicz, M., Królikowska, S., Orzechowska, W., Thomas, S.-L., and Walczak, A.: Response of sediment composition in Jamaican reef facies to changes in environmental factors, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3892, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3892, 2026.

EGU26-6550 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.7

Carbonates as keys to the Messinian Salinity Crisis’s Puzzle: Insights into spatial variability and sedimentary processes on opposite Mediterranean margins 

Gustavo Kenji Lacerda Orita, Fernando Pérez-Valera, Marcello Natalicchio, Luca Pellegrino, Francesco Dela Pierre, Jesús M. Sória, Hugo Corbí, Andrea Schito, Cavit Atalar, Enrique Gomez-Rivas, and Luis Gibert

Late Miocene carbonate systems represent key archives of paleoenvironmental evolution related to the processes leading to the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC), culminating in Earth’s most recent saline giant. During the pre-MSC stage (7.1-5.97 Ma), the Mediterranean was affected by the superimposition of major global climatic and regional geodynamic forcing mechanisms, promoting overall restriction that disrupted marine circulation, amplified the effect of astronomically driven climatic oscillations on sedimentation, and impacted marine biodiversity. Within this framework, major structural and ecological changes occurred across the circum-Mediterranean region, including pronounced tectonic activity at gateway areas, shifts in terrestrial vegetation, and modifications in runoff regimes from African rivers. The spatial variability and interplay of these processes left a sedimentological expression in marine environments of different sectors of the Mediterranean. Carbonates and associated deposits represent excellent records of key parameters such as water column stratification, marine ecosystem evolution under rapid environmental change, the interaction between biotic and abiotic processes and tectonic activity.

We present two continuous bio- and magnetostratigraphically calibrated onshore pre-evaporitic successions, more than 100 m thick, from opposite Mediterranean margins (Tabernas Basin in Spain and Mesaoria Basin in northern Cyprus), focusing on exceptionally well-preserved carbonate deposits. Their integrated study through sedimentological, stratigraphic, petrological, quantitative micropaleontological, and geochemical analyses reveals the dynamic responses of these margins to progressive restriction, tectonic activity, climate forcing, and freshwater input. In the Tabernas Basin, pronounced tectonic activity in the Betic Cordillera, combined with increasing restriction, controlled the evolution of a mixed carbonate–siliciclastic platform and associated planktonic and benthic communities. Dysoxia-tolerant benthic foraminifera, deformed tests, and paragenetic relationships between pyrite and calcareous tests indicate stressed conditions and highlight the role of early diagenesis in preserving or biasing the micropaleontological record. Microbial mats developed in an inner-shelf setting, marking the climax of restriction before evaporite deposition.

In the Mesaoria Basin, early isolation and enhanced continental runoff promoted eutrophication in the upper water column, favoring algal blooms and water-column stratification, which in turn catalyzed microbial sulfate reduction at an anoxic seafloor of a bathyal setting. Ecological competition between bloom diatoms (Thalassionema nitzschioides) and opportunistic coccolithophore taxa (Reticulofenestra spp.) reveals the complex interaction between primary producers across different photic zones of a stratified basin. Precession-related cyclicity exerted a major control on pelagic sedimentation, driving the alternating deposition of carbonates and laminated marls with remarkably well-preserved calcareous nannofossils. These conditions favored the formation of “marine snow,” which is preserved in peloidal microbialites. In addition, the occurrence of Trichichnus, a trace fossil formed by giant sulfide-oxidizing bacteria, further reveals complex biotic–abiotic interactions in deep-water carbonate settings.

Our results improve the understanding of spatial and depositional variability of carbonate systems under rapidly changing paleoenvironmental conditions during a key interval of the Late Miocene. This study provides new insights for an integrated paleoceanographic reconstruction of the Mediterranean, emphasizing carbonate deposits as archives of forcing mechanisms and sedimentary processes prior to the onset of MSC.

How to cite: Lacerda Orita, G. K., Pérez-Valera, F., Natalicchio, M., Pellegrino, L., Dela Pierre, F., M. Sória, J., Corbí, H., Schito, A., Atalar, C., Gomez-Rivas, E., and Gibert, L.: Carbonates as keys to the Messinian Salinity Crisis’s Puzzle: Insights into spatial variability and sedimentary processes on opposite Mediterranean margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6550, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6550, 2026.

EGU26-8783 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.7

In-situ carbonate U-Pb dating and high-resolution stable-isotope analysis of fluvial stromatolites 

Nikhil Sharma and Chris Mark

Fluvial stromatolites are widespread in upper Paleocene–Eocene successions of the South Pyrenean Foreland Basin (SPFB, Spain) yet their geochronological and paleoenvironmental potential remains largely unexplored. Recently documented stromatolites from the Escanilla Formation provide a unique opportunity to investigate continental environmental change across the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO), a prolonged global warming event that is well constrained in marine archives but remains poorly dated and resolved in terrestrial records.

Although existing magnetostratigraphic frameworks provide broad temporal control, in-situ U–Pb dating of fluvial stromatolites using LA-MC-ICPMS yields absolute age constraints that refine the stratigraphic placement of the MECO within the Escanilla Formation and improve chronologic resolution across the SPFB. These age anchors allow direct integration of continental sedimentary records with global climate archives.

High-resolution stable-isotope analyses (δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O) performed using SIMS across individual stromatolite growth bands capture seasonal variability in hydrological and thermal conditions. Variations in δ¹⁸O are interpreted to reflect changes in water temperature and/or evaporative conditions, while δ¹³C variability records shift in dissolved inorganic carbon sources and microbial activity within fluvial systems. Together, these data provide insight into seasonality, hydrology, and climate sensitivity of continental environments during a major Eocene warming event.

This study demonstrates that fluvial stromatolites represent robust, datable continental archives capable of resolving both absolute timing and high-frequency environmental variability during past greenhouse climate perturbations.

How to cite: Sharma, N. and Mark, C.: In-situ carbonate U-Pb dating and high-resolution stable-isotope analysis of fluvial stromatolites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8783, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8783, 2026.

EGU26-9906 | Posters on site | SSP3.7

The depositional environment during Homerian in the Baltic Silurian Basin  

Gintarė Lukoševičiūtė, Simona Rinkevičiūtė, and Donatas Kaminskas

The late Wenlock (Silurian) period is characterised by biogeochemical perturbations expressed through two global regressive-transgressive eustatic cycles. These cycles are associated with a double-peaked positive carbon isotope excursion linked to the Mulde Event, also known as the “Big Crisis” (Radzevičius et al., 2014). While these features are widely recognised, the processes that explain the heterogeneity of geochemical and sedimentary responses on a basin scale remain poorly understood. Here, we present an integrated geochemical and sedimentary facies study of Homerian successions from the shelf zone of the Baltic Silurian Basin in Gotland, Sweden. For this study, we collected a total of 64 rock samples from outcrops on Gotland Island. The studied interval included the Slite, Fröjel, and Halla formations. We performed stable carbon isotope, trace element, and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses. Preliminary data revealed positive shifts in δ¹³C at the onset of the Mulde Event, demonstrating that these variations are systematically linked to changes in depositional facies, mineralogical composition and redox conditions. Ratios of trace elements such as U, Th, V, Cr, and Ce were used to determine the bottom-water oxygenation status. X-ray diffraction analysis was used to detect the presence of the dolomite mineral, which may indicate secondary alteration of the sediments. Results suggest that depositional environment might reflect the interaction of eustatic sea-level change, basin restriction, and water-column redox stratification rather than representing a simple, synchronous global signal. The newly obtained results can be used to gain a more detailed understanding of the mechanisms that explain Silurian climate-ocean coupling and highlight the importance of local depositional controls in modulating global biogeochemical signals.

Radzevičius, S., Spiridonov, A. & Brazauskas, A. 2014: Application of Wavelets to the Cyclostratigraphy of the Upper Homerian (Silurian) Gėluva Regional Stage in the Viduklė-61 Deep Well (Western Lithuania). In: Rocha, R., Pais, J., Kullberg, J., Finney, S. (eds): STRATI 2013. Springer Geology. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-04364-7_84

How to cite: Lukoševičiūtė, G., Rinkevičiūtė, S., and Kaminskas, D.: The depositional environment during Homerian in the Baltic Silurian Basin , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9906, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9906, 2026.

EGU26-10409 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.7

Seismic geomorphology and stratigraphic evolution of Eocene and Oligocene–Miocene carbonate systems, offshore western Libya 

Nabil Khalifa, Stefan Back, and Michael Drews

Carbonate systems represent a major component of the Paleogene–Neogene sedimentary record along the southern Mediterranean margin; however, their three-dimensional geometry, spatial distribution, and seismic expression offshore western Libya remain insufficiently constrained. This study uses 3D seismic-reflection data calibrated with borehole-geophysical information to identify, characterize, and map buried carbonate systems in the Gabes–Tripoli Basin.

The analysis is based on approximately 1200 km² of post-stack migrated 3D seismic-reflection data tied to five industrial wells from Block NC41. Integrated seismic interpretation and seismic-geomorphological analysis reveal two principal phases of carbonate development. The Eocene interval is characterized by laterally discontinuous ramp-type carbonate bodies expressed by low- to moderate-amplitude internal reflections bounded by strong top and base reflectors. Seven recurring seismic-reflection associations (EC1–EC7) are identified and interpreted to represent nummulitic ramp limestones and associated dolomitized facies.

A second phase of carbonate development occurred during the Oligocene–Miocene and is distinguished by more localized platform growth and isolated build-up geometries. These carbonates display higher seismic relief, mound-shaped external morphologies, and pronounced reflection terminations, allowing the identification of several distinct carbonate build-ups (MC1–MC3). Compared to the Eocene ramp systems, the Oligocene–Miocene carbonates reflect a shift toward platform-dominated carbonate production influenced by changes in accommodation, relative sea level, and tectonic framework.

Seismic-attribute analysis demonstrates that amplitude-, phase-, and continuity-based attributes are effective for detecting and delineating buried carbonate geobodies and for discriminating between different carbonate system types. The results provide new insights into (i) the evolution of Tertiary carbonate systems offshore Libya, (ii) the seismic expression and reservoir-scale architecture of Eocene ramp carbonates, and (iii) the transition to localized carbonate platform development during the Neogene. More broadly, this study highlights the value of 3D seismic geomorphology and attribute-based workflows for reconstructing carbonate-system evolution along tectonically influenced continental margins.

How to cite: Khalifa, N., Back, S., and Drews, M.: Seismic geomorphology and stratigraphic evolution of Eocene and Oligocene–Miocene carbonate systems, offshore western Libya, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10409, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10409, 2026.

 

The study area is situated in the central part of the Carpathian Foreland in Poland. The interpreted interval includes the uppermost part of the Upper Jurassic – Lower Cretaceous carbonate complex, as well as the mixed carbonate-clastic Upper Cretaceous series. The sedimentation of the studied formations during the Late Jurassic and Cretaceous took place in the shelf zone of the northern, passive margin of the Tethys Ocean, and the paleoenvironment of sedimentation was heterogeneous and evolving over time.

 

For the study, 3D seismic data and geophysical (well logs) and geological information obtained from wells were used. High resolution seismic data were great input for seismic sequence stratigraphy and analysis in the Wheeler domain and enabled us to obtain insightful attribute volumes (such as spectral decomposition, sweetness and relative acoustic impedance).

The seismostratigraphy interpretation of the Upper Cretaceous mixed carbonate-clastic formations was based on the sequence stratigraphy methodology, which enabled detailed identification of depositional systems tracts and depositional sequences within these formations. Based on the analysis of the chronostratigraphic image and the Wheeler diagram, the main directions of sedimentary material transport into the Upper Cretaceous sedimentary basin in the central part of the Carpathian Foreland in Poland were determined. Numerous discontinuities and hiatuses related to erosional events or periods of non-deposition were identified in the Wheeler diagram. Small local dislocations, in some cases not visible in the seismic image, were also interpreted based on the chronostratigraphic seismic image. The interpretation has greatly contributed to the reconstruction of the basin's depositional architecture.

Seismic attribute maps, calculated directly on the surface of the interpreted intra-Cretaceous chronostratigraphic seismic horizon, allowed for a detailed analysis of paleoenvironmental elements within Upper Cretaceous formations. This seismic horizon corresponds to the maximum flooding surface (mfs) and connects the sedimentary packages deposited in a transgressive systems tract within one of the identified depositional sequences, as interpreted from the chronostratigraphic image in the structural domain and the Wheeler diagram. Based on the interpretation of the maps obtained, several elements of depositional architecture were identified, i.e., barrier Island with washover, elongated tidal banks, crevasse splays, and bay-head deltas, which generally allow for the definition of two adjacent types of transgressive coast type, i.e. the barrier island coast dominated by waves and the open estuarine coast dominated by tides.

The work was funded by the National Science Center Poland (NCN); SONATA 17: Recognition of the depositional architecture of the Upper Cretaceous sedimentary basin in the central part of the Carpathian Foreland (2021/43/D/ST10/02728)

How to cite: Kwietniak, A., Łaba-Biel, A., and Urbaniec, A.: Recognition of the depositional architecture of the Upper Cretaceous sedimentary basin in the central part of the Carpathian Foreland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10597, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10597, 2026.

EGU26-11043 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.7

A Spatial-Temporal Reconstruction of a Huge Early Cambrian Carbonate Barrier Island System of Lagoa do Jacaré Formation, Bambuí Group, Brazil 

Samuel Amaral Moura Silva, Gabriel Jubé Uhlein, Alexandre Uhlein, Gabriela Veitenheimer, and Ying Zhou

Modern carbonate coastal barrier systems are rare compared to their siliciclastic counterparts. Furthermore, most existing modern carbonate barrier systems are R-type (shoals and emergent barriers that occur at the margins of rimmed platforms; eg., the Great Bahama Bank and the Great Pearl Bank), while C-type systems (barrier systems that form in shallow near-coast settings) remain poorly represented. As a result, C-type carbonate barrier facies models are still poorly defined. This study presents a high-resolution sedimentological and sequence-stratigraphic analysis of the Lagoa do Jacaré Formation (Bambuí Group, Brazil). A detailed facies analysis, conducted at a 1:20 scale across four vertical sections, identified twelve lithofacies grouped into six depositional associations: beach-barrier, back-barrier, lagoon, tidal channel, flood-tidal delta, and ebb-tidal delta. These associations illustrate the influence of wave, tidal, and storm surge processes on a barrier system. Sandy carbonates dominate the barrier and proximal deposits, while heterolithic facies are prevalent within the lagoon. Additionally, paleocurrent analysis enabled the identification of barrier orientation, as well as the directions of longshore currents (165°) and tidal channels that cross the barrier system (bidirectional at 70° and 240°). To reconstruct the spatial and temporal evolution of the depositional system, sequence-stratigraphic analysis at different hierarchical orders was essential. Regressive and transgressive cycles controlled changes in barrier morphology, with progradational patterns linked to barrier thickening and retrogradational patterns associated with barrier thinning. Two maximum regression surfaces were correlated with the GMD quarry, which increased the robustness of the depositional model and supported lateral facies migration of up to 10 km. Such migration is considered robust under the extreme greenhouse conditions of the period, when polar ice caps were absent and epicontinental seas, such as the subtropical Bambuí Sea, exhibited characteristics comparable to tropical marine systems. Barrier-island coastal configurations were more prevalent during greenhouse intervals. In the Early Cambrian, this setting was particularly important because persistent sediment reworking enhanced oxygenation at the sediment–water interface, creating localized pockets of favorable conditions for fauna to establish. Periods of increased oxygenation (the oceanic oxygenation events - OOEs) expanded available habitats, while returns to more anoxic conditions, when habitats became restricted again, likely promoted speciation processes. Consequently, the Lagoa do Jacaré Formation represents an exceptionally well-preserved example of a C-type carbonate barrier island system. It closely resembles siliciclastic barrier systems regardless of the sedimentary process and facies mobility. Its high preservation level makes it a valuable analog for improving carbonate shoreline facies models and for understanding how coastal configurations may have influenced the Cambrian radiation.

How to cite: Amaral Moura Silva, S., Jubé Uhlein, G., Uhlein, A., Veitenheimer, G., and Zhou, Y.: A Spatial-Temporal Reconstruction of a Huge Early Cambrian Carbonate Barrier Island System of Lagoa do Jacaré Formation, Bambuí Group, Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11043, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11043, 2026.

Miocene carbonate build-ups in southern Central Luconia exhibit strong lateral variability in geometry, internal facies organisation, and diagenetic overprint, despite forming within a broadly similar climatic and tectonic setting. Establishing reliable stratigraphic correlations among neighbouring build-ups therefore requires approaches that integrate internal facies successions with regional-scale stratigraphic markers, rather than relying solely on external morphology.

This contribution examines the correlation of Miocene carbonate build-ups across the southern Central Luconia province by integrating core-based facies analysis with seismic stratigraphy and geomorphology. Emphasis is placed on the identification and lateral tracing of flooding surfaces and sequence boundaries associated with Miocene depositional cycles, and on evaluating how diagenetic modification influences stratigraphic expression. Cycles II to V are shown to provide regionally consistent stratigraphic frameworks that can be recognised across multiple build-ups, despite differences in platform thickness and margin geometry.

Results indicate that flooding-related tight carbonate intervals form laterally persistent markers that enable correlation between build-ups developed on different structural highs. Facies stacking patterns reveal systematic transitions from aggradational platform growth to backstepping and pinnacle development during relative sea-level rise. Superimposed on these depositional trends, dolomitization has a significant control on facies preservation and log response, locally enhancing or masking original depositional textures. Dolomitized intervals commonly coincide with exposure-related surfaces and restricted lagoonal facies, suggesting a strong link between relative sea-level change, fluid circulation, and diagenetic alteration during the Miocene.

The integration of stratigraphic architecture and diagenetic patterns provides a more robust basis for correlating Miocene carbonate build-ups in southern Central Luconia.

How to cite: Jimenez Soto, G., Abdul Latiff, H., and Poppelreiter, M.: Controls of Facies Architecture and Dolomitization on the Stratigraphic Correlation of Miocene Carbonate Build-Ups in Southern Central Luconia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11186, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11186, 2026.

EGU26-11268 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.7

Late Quaternary Continental Carbonates of the Chobe Enclave (Botswana): A Multi‑Proxy Study Using Stable, Clumped, and Radiocarbon Isotopes 

Sébastien König, Torsten Vennemann, Edson Ramudzuli, and Laszlo Kocsis

Continental carbonates in semi-arid regions represent valuable archives of past hydrological and climatic variability. In northern Botswana, the Chobe Enclave hosts widespread carbonates occurring in two major facies: (1) “islands” carbonates and (2) surface calcretes. The exact origin, formation mechanisms, and paleoenvironmental significance of these carbonates remain debated.

This study investigates the genesis of these two facies using an integrated sedimentological, mineralogical, and geochemical approach. Field observations, petrography, cathodoluminescence, and X-ray diffraction are combined with stable and clumped isotope geochemistry (Δ47) and radiocarbon dating. These data are further contextualized using modern surface and groundwater isotopic compositions.

Carbonate island facies samples that generally occur at similar altitudes throughout the area, give Late Pleistocene ages (~50–10 ka) and recorded precipitation from persistent, moderately evaporated waters at relatively low temperatures (17.1 ± 3.6 °C), consistent with palustrine to lacustrine environments linked to highstands of paleo-Lake Makgadikgadi. In contrast, the younger surface calcretes (<15 ka) have greater isotopic and textural heterogeneity and higher formation temperatures (24.1 ± 3.6 °C), reflecting surface precipitation driven by seasonal precipitation and evaporation under more arid conditions at temperatures broadly comparable to modern mean annual temperatures of this region. In addition, intermediate samples with mixed isotope compositions and fabrics are interpreted as having formed during hydrological/climatic shifts and/or by partial diagenetic reworking of older carbonate islands into calcrete-like deposits.

The results of this study highlight persistent hydrological controls on carbonate formation in the Chobe Enclave throughout the Late Quaternary and demonstrate the potential of multi-proxy carbonate archives for reconstructing paleoenvironmental changes in semi-arid continental settings.

How to cite: König, S., Vennemann, T., Ramudzuli, E., and Kocsis, L.: Late Quaternary Continental Carbonates of the Chobe Enclave (Botswana): A Multi‑Proxy Study Using Stable, Clumped, and Radiocarbon Isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11268, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11268, 2026.

EGU26-18657 | Posters on site | SSP3.7

Can halite form progradational lowstand wedges? New insights into basin margin evaporites from the Permian Zechstein 

Thomas Houghton, Joyce Neilson, Elena Manzo, Rachel Brackenridge, Martin de Keijzer, Kees de Leeuw, Christoph Strauss, and John Underhill

Zechstein platforms in the Southern North Sea were thought to be fringed by kilometre-scale high-energy progradational carbonates with lowstand wedge geometries. Instead, a new well encountered a halite-rich evaporitic wedge that replicates the coveted progradational carbonates. This study integrates sedimentological observations with geochemistry, petrophysics and 3D seismic data to characterise the evaporitic replicas and then distinguish them from the genuine carbonate platform geometries. The evaporitic wedges generate laterally symmetrical rims around the platforms which are approximately 150m thick and 2000m wide. Wedge precipitation predated the well-characterised basin-wide Z2 drawdown event, and therefore the localised evaporitic progradational system was onlapped by basin-fill halite. The evaporitic wedges often feature domino slumping along weak progradational bedding planes, resulting in blocks that collapsed into the basin. The earliest progradational beds contained the highest concentration of microbialites which assisted stabilisation of the evaporitic wedges on the rims of carbonate platforms, whilst also indicating that the wedges were part of an environmental transition from marine highstand into basin desiccation. Microbial fragments were reworked downslope into brecciated debris flow deposits, demonstrating the relationship between wedge construction and syndepositional collapse on the outer slopes. Petrophysical and geochemical data show that the evaporitic wedges were closely associated with the early stages of drawdown, and a lack of post-anhydrite marine recharge resulted in the depletion of Ca2+ from the brine and accordingly limited anhydrite (CaSO4) precipitation within the wedges. This depletion in brine Ca2+ led to dolomitic microbialites (CaMg(CO3)2) in the lower wedge; however, the upper wedge features Kutnohorite (Ca(Mn,Mg)(CO3)2) showing that Mg2+ also eventually became depleted and was replaced by Mn2+. This analysis characterises a rare evaporitic phenomenon which can hide in plain sight in seismic data and act as a depositional intermediary between platform construction and basin-fill halite precipitation.

How to cite: Houghton, T., Neilson, J., Manzo, E., Brackenridge, R., de Keijzer, M., de Leeuw, K., Strauss, C., and Underhill, J.: Can halite form progradational lowstand wedges? New insights into basin margin evaporites from the Permian Zechstein, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18657, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18657, 2026.

Modern mixed siliciclastic-carbonate benthic environments in the Egyptian northern Red Sea are shaped by continuous carbonate production and episodic siliciclastic delivery, yet their spatial patterns remain difficult to resolve where high-resolution bathymetry is lacking. To address these challenges and improve habitat classification, this study used a Satellite-Derived Bathymetry (SDB) model and explored its implications for understanding sedimentary processes in North Safaga Bay.

We compiled legacy ground truth datasets from previous studies and supplemented them with new in situ sampling, granulometric, and petrographic analyses. While SDB is limited by turbidity and substrate reflectance ambiguity, we mitigated these uncertainties using a physics-based workflow to isolate ICESat-2 (Ice, Cloud, and Land Elevation Satellite-2) signal photons to extract depth points and a Random Forest regressor (RFR) trained on Sentinel-2 imagery. The RFR model achieved high predictive accuracy (coefficient of determination; R^2 = 0.95) at a 10 m spatial resolution, with internal cross-validation and an 80:20 training-to-test ratio. The reliability of this model was further validated against a fully independent set of in situ samples (R^2 = 0.85).

Our results reveal that high-energy bathymetric highs are dominated by compound-grain and coralgal facies, while the more sheltered back reef lagoons favor widespread foraminiferal sands, including soritid-bearing assemblages. In contrast, bathymetric depressions at the outlets of major wadi systems act as sediment traps for terrigenous siliciclastic facies. The delivery of these clastics is driven by a spectrum of episodic gravity-driven flows, including hyperpycnal events during flash floods, aeolian input, and wave-induced reworking.

The integration of remote sensing and sedimentological analyses provides a significant advancement over existing datasets by allowing quantifiable spatial correlation between geomorphology and facies distribution across the bay, rather than relying on interpolated point data. By resolving these fine-scale bathymetric controls, our results revealed a mosaic setting in which seafloor bathymetry and energy, directly dictated by the underlying inherited rift topography, act as the primary control on sediment partitioning, providing a localized model for mixed deposits in active settings.

How to cite: Altyeb, W., Rendall, B., and Mutti, M.: High-resolution mapping of a mixed siliciclastic-carbonate benthic environment using a hybrid Satellite-Derived Bathymetry (SDB) approach integrated with sedimentological data: North Safaga Bay, Egyptian Red Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19266, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19266, 2026.

The carbon isotope signature of carbonates across the Lower-Middle Triassic transition was investigated to reconstruct environmental change and carbon cycle dynamics in the Holy Cross Mountains (HCM, Poland). This area was located in the southeastern part of the semi-enclosed Germanic Basin, intermittently connected to the western Tethys Ocean through tectonically controlled marine gateways.

The dataset is derived from the uppermost Olenekian to upper Anisian interval of the Piekoszów IG-1 borehole. This approximately 240 m thick succession comprises mudstones, marly limestones, dolostones and limestones, locally nodular, classified as wackestones to packstones and subordinate grainstones. These deposits document the carbonate ramp setting ranging from restricted marginal to open-marine conditions. A distinctive red mudstone horizon in the lower Anisian records short-lived emersion within the ramp. The biostratigraphic framework of this succession is constrained by conodonts, bivalves, echinoderms, brachiopods and miospores.

The δ¹³C curve across the Olenekian-Anisian transition ranges from -3.16‰ to +0.70‰ VPDB. A positive shift recorded close to the Olenekian-Anisian boundary broadly corresponds to the Spathian-Anisian carbon isotope event and represents a potential regional chemostratigraphic marker. A pronounced negative excursion (down to -3.82‰) is observed within a lower Anisian dolostone interval. Miospores identified above this interval indicate the Perotrilites minor palynozone of the Lower Muschelkalk, allowing precise stratigraphic calibration of the isotope record. A second significant positive shift (+3.06‰) occurs near the Bithynian-Pelsonian boundary and correlates with coeval carbon isotope excursions documented elsewhere in the Germanic Basin and the western Tethys. This is followed by a gradual decline culminating in a negative excursion in the upper Anisian.

The δ¹³C fluctuations observed in the late Olenekian and early Anisian are interpreted to reflect local palaeoenvironmental conditions within a shallow, partly restricted epicontinental sea. Restricted circulation and episodic freshwater input likely modified the dissolved inorganic carbon pool through mixing with isotopically light terrestrial carbon and reduced exchange with open-marine reservoirs. In contrast, more positive δ¹³C values during the middle and late Anisian coincide with the development of open-marine carbonate ramp conditions, enhanced carbonate production and improved basin connectivity.

The δ¹⁸O values display a wide scatter consistent with variable early diagenetic conditions and facies-controlled overprint in a restricted to shallow-marine setting. The absence of systematic δ¹³C-δ¹⁸O covariance suggests that the main carbon isotope trends are not dominated by late-stage diagenetic alteration.

Overall, the isotope record from the HCM reflects regional palaeoenvironmental dynamics in the Polish segment of the Germanic Basin related to tectonically driven changes in basin connectivity, water circulation and third-order transgressive-regressive cycles, supporting the use of δ¹³C trends as tools for regional chemostratigraphic correlation across the Lower-Middle Triassic transition.

How to cite: Bieńko, K., Trela, W., and Fijałkowska-Mader, A.: Carbon isotope record across the Lower-Middle Triassic transition in the Holy Cross Mountains (Poland): chemostratigraphic and palaeoenvironmental significance, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19481, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19481, 2026.

EGU26-20383 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.7

Facies characteristics of the Lefika la Noka tufa, Cradle of Humankind, South Africa 

Tariye Onyeogu, Tebogo Makhubela, Zubair Jinnah, and Lee Berger

The Lefika la Noka (LLN) tufa is the only documented tufa deposit from the hominin fossil-rich Cradle of Humankind (Cradle) in South Africa. It is situated north of the Malapa and Gladysvale fossil sites, within the Grootvlei catchment area of the Cradle. LLN tufa presents an excellent opportunity for paleoclimate reconstruction in the Cradle, particularly for the late Pleistocene – Holocene period, when Homo naledi and archaic Homo sapiens emerge in the Southern African fossil record. To reconstruct the paleoclimate of the Cradle using the tufa deposit, it is necessary to first understand the sedimentological characteristics of the tufa. Therefore, this study aims to describe the LLN tufa facies, depositional environments, and stratigraphy by using field and petrographic techniques. The tufa has a maximum thickness of about 12.5 m. Seven distinct tufa facies were identified from five drilled cores and seven outcrops. These are phytoherm framestones of calcified vertical stems and bryophytes, phytoherm boundstones of stromatolites and thrombolite-like tufa, oncoidal tufa, micritic tufa, and lithoclastic tufa.  These tufa facies were deposited in a fluvial environment, with phytoherm framestones and boundstones precipitated in situ in high-energy environments, such as barrages, cascades, and waterfalls. The oncoids formed within turbulent pools. The micritic tufa precipitated slowly in the calm water pools, whereas the lithoclast tufa accumulated along the river channel during periods of flooding. The lateral and vertical facies distribution indicates the role of hydrodynamics and CO2 degassing during deposition.

How to cite: Onyeogu, T., Makhubela, T., Jinnah, Z., and Berger, L.: Facies characteristics of the Lefika la Noka tufa, Cradle of Humankind, South Africa, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20383, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20383, 2026.

It is important to accurately classify shale lithofacies and identify their origin and hydrocarbon content for both shale oil and gas reservoirs. Oil-bearing lacustrine shales (average TOC content=3.12 wt%, average Ro=0.81%) of the lower third member (Es3L) of the Eocene Shahejie formation in the Zhanhua Sag, Bohai Bay Basin contain eight lithofacies that are differentiated based on mineralogy, total organic carbon content (TOC), grayscale, elemental composition and Rock-Eval pyrolysis data. The results show that four lithofacies are most common: moderately organic-rich laminated calcareous shale, organic-rich laminated calcareous shale, and organic-rich calcareous/massive mixed shale. Paleoenvironment controls lithofacies evolution. Unit 1 (arid): Limited detrital/nutrient inflow and low water energy, coupled with transgression-induced high salinity suppressed freshwater bioproductivity, favoring moderately-enriched laminated calcareous shale. Unit 2 (transition): Increased productivity promoted organic-rich laminated calcareous shale. Unit 3 (humid): Nutrient and detrital input (TOC undiluted) in the lake increases; however, the destruction of the quiet water environment leads to the gradual disappearance of laminae, shifting lithofacies to organic-rich massive calcareous and organic-rich massive mixed shales, moderately-enriched laminated calcareous shale, organic-rich massive calcareous shale, and organic-rich massive mixed shale that have high shale oil potential. Two high-brittleness and high-oil sweet-spot intervals were identified (2988 m~3012 m and 3108 m~3124 m in well A): interval 2 is enriched in situ hydrocarbon via high TOC and large storage; interval 1, despite lower TOC, accumulated migrated hydrocarbons via micromigration and large reservoir space.

How to cite: Wang, Y., Xu, S., and Hao, F.: Sedimentary evolution and shale oil potential of Shahejie Formation in Zhanhua Sag, Bohai Bay Basin, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1789, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1789, 2026.

The Yan'an Formation in the Ordos Basin and the Xintiangou Formation in the Sichuan Basin are typical lake facies sedimentary formations developed in the Alinian period. They contain a large amount of organic-rich fine-grained sedimentary rocks and are the main sites for shale oil and gas enrichment. In this study, geochemical tests, including major, trace, and rare earth elements and TOC tests, were carried out on the fine-grained sedimentary rocks of the shallow lake Yan'an Formation and deep lake Xintiangou Formation to reconstruct their depositional palaeoenvironments, and to explore their organic matter enrichment mechanisms in different depositional environments under lithological differences. The conclusions of this study are as follows: 1) The total organic carbon (TOC) of fine-grained sedimentary rocks increases with increasing mud content and decreasing grain size; 2) The palaeoenvironments of the fine-grained sedimentary rocks in the shallow and deep lake facies are generally consistent, but the redox conditions and deposition rate of the water column in the deep lake facies are stronger than those in the shallow lake facies, while the input of terrigenous detrital, palaeosalinity, and stagnant environment are relatively weaker; 3) The organic matter enrichment mode of lake facies fine-grained sedimentary rocks is a typical palaeoclimatic and palaeoproductivity-dominated “Production mode”; 4) The difference in depositional environments under lithological differences is mainly related to productivity factors, such as palaeoclimate (CIA) and palaeoproductivity (P/Ti). The results of this study help to understand the formation mechanism of lake facies fine-grained sedimentary rocks, distinguish the hydrocarbon generation potential of different lithologies, and provide a basic geological theoretical basis for the exploration of shale oil and gas in the study area.

How to cite: He, Q. and Xu, S.: Organic matter enrichment and palaeoenvironmental comparison of Alinian fine-grained sedimentary rocks in lake facies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1988, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1988, 2026.

EGU26-2343 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.8

Iron–phosphorus–carbon coupled cycling in lacustrine system of Ordos Basin during the Middle Triassic 

Bo Wang, Rukai Zhu, Xinping Liang, Pengcheng Ju, and Quanyou Liu

Widespread organic-rich shales are associated with perturbations in productivity or preservation conditions; however, the major controlling factor especially the phosphorus (P), iron (Fe) interactions and their impacts on organic carbon burial in the paleolake ecosystem remain poorly understood. Here, we report iron and phosphorus speciation data from the Chang 7 Member of Ordos Basin to elucidate iron–phosphorus–carbon cycling (Fe–P–C) in the freshwater lacustrine system during the Middle Triassic. Our results show that the redox conditions and phosphorus cycling exhibit strong spatiotemporal heterogeneity. During Interval I (0–140 kyr), oxic–ferruginous conditions were dominant in the water column, abundant Fe (oxyhydr)oxides promoted sedimentary P retention and sustained oligotrophic conditions. During Interval II (140–405 kyr), the widespread development of euxinic water bodies expanded to the slope belt of the lake basin, leading to extensive P recycling back to photic zone, thereby increasing primary productivity and organic matter production. This transition is probably attributed to enhanced volcanic activity and a significant shift in redox conditions, which play an important role in regulating the concentration of bioavailable P in the water column. This study sheds new light on Fe–P–C cycling in the ancient freshwater lake under volcanic perturbations, providing guidance on the link between biogeochemical feedbacks and carbon burial.

How to cite: Wang, B., Zhu, R., Liang, X., Ju, P., and Liu, Q.: Iron–phosphorus–carbon coupled cycling in lacustrine system of Ordos Basin during the Middle Triassic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2343, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2343, 2026.

EGU26-4136 | Orals | SSP3.8

Lake Poso as a ‘rain gauge’ in the tropical western Pacific: insights into ENSO variability from laminated sediments 

Adrianus Damanik, Max Shore, Sri Yudawati Cahyarini, and Hendrik Vogel

Enhanced seasonal to interannual climate variability associated with changes in El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) can intensify wet and dry seasons extremes in the tropical western Pacific. Characterizing long-term and high-resolution changes in ENSO is crucial for our understanding of the tropical Pacific hydroclimate and its associated global-scale teleconnections. In this study, we anlayze sedimentary records from Lake Poso, a large (up to 400 m deep) tectonic lake on Sulawesi Island at the western edge of the Pacific warm pool. Stratification of Lake Poso’s water column below ~90 m depth is documented by anoxia, elevated concentrations of redox-sensitive metals and nutrients at depth in the water column, and the presence of finely laminated sediments. The reduction of rainfall and regional humidity during the dry season is increased during El Niño-liked events. Water column temperature monitoring data collected between the end of 2022 and early 2024 exhibit surface temperature cooling and deeper vertical water column mixing down to depths below the ~90 m oxycline during the dry season. This effect was particularly exacerbated during the 2023 El Niño event, suggesting a direct relationship between climate variability and water column structure.

To assess how such climate-induced mixing variability is recorded in the sediments, we examine three short sediment cores retrieved along a depth transect spanning oxic, transitional, and anoxic depositional environments in Lake Poso. Sedimentary structures change systematically with water depth, with massive sediments above the oxycline, to massive sediments with intermittent lamination in the transition zone, to continuously laminated sediments below the oxycline. The spatial and temporal variability in sedimentary structures suggests past changes in mixing depth and lake level linked to variations in dry-season intensity. Furthermore, longer sediment piston cores from three locations were recovered from sites above the oxycline at paleoshoreline locations identified by seismic surveys. These records show repeated transition from sandy, structureless nearshore deposits to laminated fine-grained sediments, indicating multiple substantial decimeter-scale changes in lake level on longer time scales. Changes in sediment structure and composition in Lake Poso are therefore prime indicators of past changes in West Pacific Warm Pool hydroclimate.

How to cite: Damanik, A., Shore, M., Cahyarini, S. Y., and Vogel, H.: Lake Poso as a ‘rain gauge’ in the tropical western Pacific: insights into ENSO variability from laminated sediments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4136, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4136, 2026.

EGU26-4182 | Posters on site | SSP3.8

An annually resolved 1800-year earthquake record of the Dead Sea Fault 

Yin Lu, Nadav Wetzler, Pauline Cornard, Nicolas Waldmann, G. Ian Alsop, Amotz Agnon, Shmuel Marco, and Shimon Wdowinski

Strong earthquakes (6<Mw (moment magnitude) <7) on fault zones usually with decadal recurrence intervals are supposed to pose a greater hazard to human society than large earthquakes (Mw >7), which occur much less frequently in century scale. Deciphering the recurrence pattern of strong earthquakes is crucial for seismic hazard assessment, and calls for a precise bracketing of the age of paleoearthquakes. However, the typical age precision of paleoearthquakes that are derived from radiogenic dating of terrestrial and subaqueous stratigraphic signatures is multiple decades to centuries long, much longer than recurrence intervals of strong earthquakes, making the precise constraining of earthquake recurrence patterns difficult.

Here, we present an annually resolved 1800-year paleoearthquake record that encompasses 19 strong earthquakes along the central Dead Sea Fault in the Middle East to reveal the variability of seismic shaking. The record reveals six full supercycles of strong shake with each lasting for ~300 years. The supercycle reappeared in the last millennium and was controlled by the spatiotemporal clustering of strong earthquakes that occurred on the fault. This newly deciphered recurrence pattern indicates the 1927 Mw 6.3 Jericho earthquake represents the last in a sequence of strong shake of the Dead Sea Basin, and the densely populated northern Dead Sea Fault zone is likely to have a higher seismic potential in the following decades to centuries.

How to cite: Lu, Y., Wetzler, N., Cornard, P., Waldmann, N., Alsop, G. I., Agnon, A., Marco, S., and Wdowinski, S.: An annually resolved 1800-year earthquake record of the Dead Sea Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4182, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4182, 2026.

The Tibetan Plateau (TP) contains the largest amount of snow and glacial ice outside the polar regions. Recent global warming poses an existential threat to the TP region, which has led to remarkable changes in regional hydrological conditions, e.g. lake expansions, accelerated glacier melting, thereby causing higher-frequency hydrological hazard events, including floods and debris flows. Knowledge of long-term climate changes and hydrological responses is essential for managing water resources going forward and assessing the potential impacts of future climate changes on the TP. In this study, we conducted high-resolution X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analyses and measured major and trace elements, total organic carbon (TOC) and magnetic susceptibility (MS) in a 20.47-m sediment core, dated 7.00 kaBP, from Lake Basongcuo, southeastern TP, to infer hydroclimate changes and identify extreme flooding events over the past 7ka years. The results suggest that the interval 7.00–6.05 cal ka BP was marked by warm and wet conditions. The following period, 6.05–3.80 cal ka BP, was characterized by lake deepening under moderately warm and wet conditions. Rapid changes in multiple climate proxy variables 3.8 cal ka BP indicated the termination of the warm/wet period at the onset of the Late Holocene. A cooling and drying trend occurred after 3.8 cal ka BP and persisted until an increase in temperature and precipitation began about 0.1 cal ka BP. The Basongcuo record displays similarities to other paleoclimate records from the southern and central TP, suggesting coherent millennial-scale hydroclimate changes across the region that were controlled mainly by the variations in the intensity of the Indian Summer Monsoon and the position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone. Moreover, 14 extreme flood events were identified, which can be divided into two types: rainstorm flood events triggered by monsoon precipitation and rain-on-snow (ROS) floods triggered by rainfall combined with snowmelt.

How to cite: Wu, J. and Zhou, J.: Sedimentary record of Holocene hydroclimatic changes from a mountainous lake on the southeastern Tibet Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4326, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4326, 2026.

Abstract: Based on integrated analyses of source rock characteristics, sedimentary system evolution, reservoir properties of both conventional and unconventional units, and dynamic source-reservoir relationships, this study conducts a detailed investigation of the Permian petroleum system in the Chaiwopu Sag.

The principal findings are as follows: (1) The study area features a lacustrine depositional system within a sag setting. Large-scale, high-quality source rocks are present in the Lucaogou Formation. Both conventional and unconventional clastic reservoirs are distributed adjacent to stratigraphically above and below these source rocks, forming multiple sets of reservoir assemblages with diverse characteristics. (2) The Permian succession in the Chaiwopu Sag exhibits favorable geological conditions for a full oil and gas system. Laterally, shale oil, tight oil, and conventional glutenite reservoirs are distributed sequentially from the sag center to its margins. Vertically, surrounding the high-quality source rocks of the Lucaogou Formation, tight oil, shale oil, and conventional glutenite reservoirs occur in an ascending progression. This spatial configuration illustrates the characteristic hydrocarbon accumulation pattern of a “full oil and gas system.”

(3) Guided by this model, exploration breakthroughs have been achieved in all three reservoir types, establishing an essentially sag-wide hydrocarbon-bearing pattern. This pattern is characterized by the orderly coexistence and coupled stacking of multi-layered, multi-type reservoirs in close association with their source rocks. The establishment of this accumulation model contributes to the theory of full oil and gas systems and provides significant guidance for the exploration and development of analogous hydrocarbon-rich sags.

Keywords: full oil and gas system; orderly coexistence; accumulation model; Middle-Upper Permian; Chaiwopu Sag

How to cite: Luan, S. and Chen, S.: Study on the Hydrocarbon Accumulation Model of Conventional and Unconventional Reservoirs in the Middle-Upper Permian Full Oil and Gas System, Chaiwopu Sag, Southern Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5131, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5131, 2026.

EGU26-5385 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.8

A sedimentological characterisation of a 510 m lacustrine sequence recovered from the ICDP Nam Co Drilling Project (NamCore), Tibet 

Marie-Luise Adolph, Junbo Wang, Liping Zhu, Leon J. Clarke, Andrew C. G. Henderson, Hendrik Vogel, Gerhard Daut, Jianting Ju, Volkhard Spiess, Arne Ulfers, Cidan Zhaxi, Christian Zeeden, and Torsten Haberzettl

The Indian and East Asian Summer Monsoons are key atmospheric controls on hydrological variability across the Tibetan Plateau. This region, often referred to as the Asian Water Tower, provides freshwater resources for approximately two billion people via the major river systems that originate there. Consequently, reliable hydrological projections require improved constraints on the timing, duration, and magnitude of climate variability, and an understanding of the environmental responses to this change, in this climatically sensitive high-altitude region, particularly over long geological timescales.

Nam Co is one of the largest and deepest lakes on the Tibetan Plateau (4,718 m a.s.l.; 2,020 km2 surface area; 98.9 m max. water depth; 10,680 km2 catchment area) and is an exceptional archive for investigating long-term climatic and environmental variability. To reconstruct past long-term climate variability and to examine its impacts, the lake was chosen as a target for ICDP drilling (NamCore) to recover a long, continuous record, with the aim of examining paleoenvironmental evolution, geomicrobiology, tectonics, and paleomagnetism. During the field operations conducted between May and July 2024, a total of 1415.45 m was drilled and 1175.99 m cored with 950.77 m of sediment recovered (core recovery of 80.8 %). Comparisons between magnetic susceptibility from (i) borehole logging, (ii) whole-round sediment cores, and (iii) core catcher material show widely similar trends across the depth dimension, suggesting a highly accurate depth control of the drilling depths recorded.

Here, we present an overview of the project and sedimentological perspectives on the recovered sequence based on an integrated dataset comprising (i) core catcher material, (ii) sediment core samples and (iii) spectrophotometer and magnetic susceptibility measurements supported by (iv) detailed lithostratigraphic descriptions. The NamCore sedimentary succession is subdivided into five lithological units, defined by variations in (i) carbonate content and carbonate mineralogy, (ii) grain-size distributions, (iii) colour (likely related to iron speciation), and (iv) frequency-dependent magnetic susceptibility. The succession is characterised by recurring transitions among four lithofacies: (i) calcareous mud, (ii) ferric-stained calcareous mud, (iii) fine- to medium-grained sand, and (iv) non-calcareous mud. These alternations are interpreted to reflect major climatic and/or environmental changes, including variations in water-column, redox conditions, sediment accumulation rates, fluctuations in the extent of surrounding mountain glaciers, and broader-scale shifts in atmospheric circulation over the Tibetan Plateau associated with glacial–interglacial climate variability, changes in Pleistocene climate boundary conditions and related changes in catchment processes. In particular, colour shifts (green/red, a*) may represent shifts between warmer and wetter to colder and drier climatic conditions, whereas variations in frequency-dependent magnetic susceptibility likely reflect changes in pedogenesis, both of which might be linked to large-scale hydroclimatic forcing.

How to cite: Adolph, M.-L., Wang, J., Zhu, L., Clarke, L. J., Henderson, A. C. G., Vogel, H., Daut, G., Ju, J., Spiess, V., Ulfers, A., Zhaxi, C., Zeeden, C., and Haberzettl, T.: A sedimentological characterisation of a 510 m lacustrine sequence recovered from the ICDP Nam Co Drilling Project (NamCore), Tibet, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5385, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5385, 2026.

EGU26-8044 | Orals | SSP3.8

Recurrent droughts over the Holocene compared to the wetter deglaciation at eastern and northeastern Mexico and decoupling of the forcing mechanisms 

Priyadarsi D. Roy, Agesandro Garcia-Arriola, Haydar B. Martinez-Dyrzo, Jose Luis Sanchez-Zavala, and Ma. Patricia Giron-Garcia

Global climate change of last two millennium and associated hydroclimatic variations in central and southern Mexico have been linked to the socio-cultural transitions at several Mesoamerican urban centers. The increase in well-mixed greenhouse gases since the industrial revolution, however, has led to an ascent in mean temperature, and the projections for later part of this century include further depletion in precipitation and soil moisture, affecting the crop yield and immigration both from the rural and urban regions of Mexico. New multi-proxy paleoclimate data about the droughts since the LGM were inferred from the sedimentary archives of Lake Totolcingo (19°N) and paleo-lake Cieneguilla (22°N), located at the east and northeast of Mexico with similar precipitation regimes (summer-autumn) and moisture sources, i.e. the Atlantic Ocean. Both the basins are present-day agriculture hubs and situated close to important Classic and Postclassic archeological sites. The lake area mapping and stable isotope compositions of surface water reflected the annual precipitation and its seasonality. Paleoclimate records obtained from the stable isotopes (C, H and N), grain size, magnetic property and elemental concentrations in organic and inorganic components of the lacustrine archives suggested homogeneity in the organic productivity during the latest Pleistocene deglaciation with the millennial-scale fluctuations in catchment erosion and lake water salinity coupling with the oxygen isotope fractions of Greenland ice core and dynamics of ITCZ position during the stadial and interstadial. Recurrent droughts over the Holocene were reflected in enhanced aeolian activity in lake catchments, reduced runoff and more carbonate deposition. Enhanced aridity was also reflected in organic productivity dominanted by C4 plants. This arid interval in orbital-scale was coupled with phases of low spring insolation and high autumn insolation and decoupled from the Greenland ice core and ITCZ dynamics. The first-order similarity with Golf of Mexico SST suggested autumn insolation modulated warmer Atlantic surface water was the principal driver of droughts. This multiproxy dataset addresses challenges from the interbedded tephra layers and possible hiatus for accurate regional climate reconstructions and furture uncertainities from the global warming.

How to cite: Roy, P. D., Garcia-Arriola, A., Martinez-Dyrzo, H. B., Sanchez-Zavala, J. L., and Giron-Garcia, Ma. P.: Recurrent droughts over the Holocene compared to the wetter deglaciation at eastern and northeastern Mexico and decoupling of the forcing mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8044, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8044, 2026.

EGU26-8412 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.8

Late Holocene climate variability and associated paleoenvironmental changes in northern South America, Colombia 

Edward Duarte, Juan Felipe Franco-Gaviria, Jaime Escobar, Alex Correa-Metrio, Jason H. Curtis, Philipp Hoelzmann, and Moritz Nykamp

Sediment records have been widely used to reconstruct Holocene environmental and climate conditions around the world. Despite the climatic sensitivity of northern South America, paleoenvironmental studies remain limited, particularly regarding ecosystem responses to Late Holocene climate fluctuations. Here we present a multiproxy reconstruction based on a radiocarbon-dated sediment core retrieved from the Nechí wetland, located in the Lower Cauca region of the Antioquia Department (LCA), Colombia, documenting environmental changes over the past ~2,500 years. We combined sedimentological, XRF, and palynological analyses to reconstruct the vegetation changes and their response to climate events. The results indicate that the region experienced a general wetter trend and massive floods over the last 2,500 years, with a pronounced climate anomaly dominated by droughts and a reduction in flood pulses occurring between 1,000 and 1,300 CE. A peak of ecological change took place ca. 1,100 CE, characterized by a clear turnover in pollen assemblages toward herbaceous (e.g., Asteraceae) and disturbance taxa (e.g., Cecropia), indicating a change in climate conditions and instability of forest cover over an interval of ~250 years, spanning roughly from ca. 950 to 1,200 CE. After ca. 1,300 CE, an increase of Symmeria and pollen taxa associated with flooded areas suggests the return of wetter conditions and a reduced ecological change. We suggest that this transition was strongly influenced by the Late Holocene Climate Anomaly, a period of increased climate instability documented across tropical South America. Vegetation trends over the last 500 years demonstrate substantial losses of forest cover associated with human activities in the region and an increase in open areas and disturbance-associated vegetation. This study highlights the sensitivity of lowland wetland ecosystems in the LCA region to Late Holocene climate variability. It provides new insights into the interaction and timing between climate, hydrology, and vegetation in northern South America.

How to cite: Duarte, E., Franco-Gaviria, J. F., Escobar, J., Correa-Metrio, A., Curtis, J. H., Hoelzmann, P., and Nykamp, M.: Late Holocene climate variability and associated paleoenvironmental changes in northern South America, Colombia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8412, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8412, 2026.

EGU26-8580 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.8

Decoding Molecular Controls on Carbon Sequestration in Lake Sediments Using Machine Learning 

Jinglin Hou, Michael Meadows, and Ke Zhang

Lake sediments are critical archives of past environmental changes, yet interpreting the complex biogeochemical processes governing carbon sequestration remains a significant challenge. Our previous work in Lake Liangzi (Hou et al., 2026, Water Research) highlighted a paradox: eutrophication-driven ecological regime shifts increased organic matter inputs but ultimately weakened long-term carbon burial. This motivates the need for integrative approaches that can resolve the molecular-level controls governing the fate of sedimentary organic matter.
Here, we propose a machine-learning-assisted framework that integrates ultra-high-resolution mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) with data-driven analysis to explore these controls. We analyze a sediment core spanning nearly two centuries to construct a comprehensive matrix of thousands of unique organic molecules and their intrinsic chemical properties (e.g., O/C, H/C, AI_mod). Based on operational persistence criteria, molecules are classified into distinct fate categories reflecting their stability.
Using these fate classifications, our primary goal is to train and interpret an XGBoost model to test the hypothesis that molecular fate can be inferred from chemical properties alone, and to identify candidate molecular characteristics that may govern carbon persistence. In parallel, molecular transformations between adjacent sediment layers are examined to reveal potential shifts in dominant biogeochemical reaction pathways associated with historical ecosystem changes.
Finally, we explore the use of model performance itself as a diagnostic proxy for ecosystem stability. This approach is designed to assess the hypothesis that periods of ecological transition are associated with reduced predictability of biogeochemical processes. Overall, this study presents a transferable analytical strategy aimed at extracting process-oriented insights from lake sediment archives, highlighting the potential of machine-learning-guided approaches to advance limnogeology beyond descriptive reconstruction.

How to cite: Hou, J., Meadows, M., and Zhang, K.: Decoding Molecular Controls on Carbon Sequestration in Lake Sediments Using Machine Learning, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8580, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8580, 2026.

Beyond being emerging contaminants, microplastics (MPs) may serve as novel environmental proxies for the Anthropocene; yet the links between their accumulation in sediments and the evolution of shallow lakes under human-nature interactions remain unclear.  In this study we reconstruct MP sedimentary sequences of three sediment spanning the past 80 years in Baiyangdian Lake, North China. Evidence derived from Analyses using Rate of Change (RoC), coupling models, and Partial Least Squares Path Modeling (PLS-PM) indicate that MP sedimentary patterns during this period underwent two critical transitions, viz. an initial increase triggered by weakened hydrological connectivity due to dam construction in 1963, and a subsequent accelerated accumulation phase driven by intensified human activities in the the catchment from around 2000. Spatially, MP abundance in cores DC-1 (mean 37,229.7 items kg-1) and CPT-1 core (8,493.0 items kg-1), was significantly greater than in core SCD-1 (3,648.6 items kg-1), located within the nature reserve.  Random Forest modeling further reveals that nutrient accumulation and hydrodynamic intensity jointly drive spatial heterogeneity in MP abundance. Together, these findings suggest that MPs can serve as effective indicators of anthropogenic intensity and provide important insights into the mechanisms shaping the environmental evolution of shallow lakes during the Anthropocene.

How to cite: Zuo, Y., Ge, Y., Meadows, M., Zhang, K., and Li, Y.: Tracing the Anthropocene through microplastic sedimentary records: Drivers and spatiotemporal heterogeneity in Baiyangdian Lake, North China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8688, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8688, 2026.

EGU26-8691 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.8

A 2,500-year sedimentary record reveals cryptic ecological degradation in a macrophyte-dominated Yangtze floodplain lake 

Junming Ren, Michael Meadows, Ke Zhang, Qi Lin, and Yuan Jin

Lake Liangzi, a shallow floodplain lake in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River, is listed in the Asian Wetland Protection Directory for its critical ecosystem services. However, the loss of ecological resilience in macrophyte-dominated lakes subjected to long-term eutrophication pressure is often underestimated when dense vegetation cover persists. Using a continuous 2,500-year sedimentary sequence, we reconstruct the long-term ecological evolution of Lake Liangzi through the integration of sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA), plant functional traits (life form and canopy height), and multi-proxy geochemical indicators. The sediment record reveals three distinct ecosystem phases. During an early stable state (2610–1550 cal yr BP), oligotrophic conditions supported diverse submerged and floating-leaved macrophyte communities within a modular ecological network. This was followed by an adaptive transition phase (1550–344 cal yr BP), during which early anthropogenic disturbance increased nutrient inputs and promoted opportunistic taxa, while overall community evenness and resilience were maintained. In the most recent phase (344 cal yr BP–present), intensified catchment erosion and eutrophication progressively degraded underwater light conditions. Rather than collapsing, the ecosystem persisted through trait-mediated adjustment: the canopy-forming species Potamogeton maackianus achieved monodominance by increasing community-weighted plant height, competitively excluding floating-leaved and benthic taxa. Sedimentary network reconstructions indicate that this persistence masked a fundamental structural shift from a diverse, modular system to a highly connected and fragile regime. Our results demonstrate how long-term sedimentary archives can reveal “cryptic degradation” processes that are not evident from present-day vegetation cover alone. This study highlights the value of multi-proxy lake sediment records for quantifying long-term ecosystem trajectories, resilience loss, and the delayed risks of regime shifts in human-impacted freshwater systems.

How to cite: Ren, J., Meadows, M., Zhang, K., Lin, Q., and Jin, Y.: A 2,500-year sedimentary record reveals cryptic ecological degradation in a macrophyte-dominated Yangtze floodplain lake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8691, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8691, 2026.

EGU26-8702 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.8

Historical reconstruction of microplastic accumulation in shallow lake sediments and its anthropogenic drivers: A case study in Lake Liangzi 

Jiasheng Zhang, Michael E. Meadows, Ke Zhang, Qi Lin, Jinglin Hou, and Yuan Jin

Microplastics (MPs) are persistent contaminants in freshwater systems, yet their long-term accumulation patterns and dominant drivers in inland lakes remain poorly constrained. Here, we reconstruct microplastic deposition over the past ~200 years using a sediment core from Lake Liangzi, located in the middle–lower reaches of the Yangtze River, China. A robust 210Pb–137Cs chronology was established for the upper 66 cm of the core (ca. 1823–2019). Microplastics were extracted at 1 cm resolution, and their abundance, size, shape, and colour were quantified by optical microscopy, with polymer composition identified using micro-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (μ-FTIR). The results show a pronounced increase in MP abundance through time, with clear phase shifts. CONISS cluster analysis distinguishes three stages: a low-background period prior to 1957, a phase of moderate increase between 1958 and 1984, and a period of rapid accumulation since 1984. Microplastic abundance is positively correlated with total organic carbon (TOC) and total nitrogen (TN), indicating close coupling with sedimentary organic matter enrichment. Redundancy analysis demonstrates that anthropogenic factors, particularly plastic production, population growth, fisheries activity, economic development, and land-use change, explain most of the variance in MP accumulation, whereas climatic variables play a comparatively minor role. Analysis of land-use change between 1980 and 2020 reveals expanding built-up areas and declining cropland, consistent with intensified urbanization and increased microplastic inputs. Together, these results provide clear sedimentary evidence that human activities are the dominant drivers of long-term microplastic accumulation in inland lake sediments, highlighting the growing legacy of plastic pollution in freshwater ecosystems.

How to cite: Zhang, J., Meadows, M. E., Zhang, K., Lin, Q., Hou, J., and Jin, Y.: Historical reconstruction of microplastic accumulation in shallow lake sediments and its anthropogenic drivers: A case study in Lake Liangzi, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8702, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8702, 2026.

EGU26-9076 | Orals | SSP3.8

Diagenetic formation pathways of pyrite in Nam Co, a high-altitude Tibetan lake   

Aliisa Laakkonen, Camille Thomas, Paul Moser Roeggla, Marie-Luise Adolph, Giulia Ceriotti, Jasmine Berg, Rolf Kipfer, Torsten Haberzettl, Jianting Ju, Andrew Henderson, Leon Clarke, Liping Zhu, Junbo Wang, Anneleen Foubert, and Hendrik Vogel

The Tibetan Plateau, with an average elevation of 4000 m above sea level, is the highest plateau on Earth. It is the third largest store of ice after the Arctic and Antarctic and is often referred to as the ‘Third Pole’. It is an area sensitive to climate shifts and is expected to go through significant warming in the future. Nam Co in central Tibet is located in the modern monsoon regime and was recently drilled as part of the ICDP NamCore drilling project, which aims to reconstruct the Quaternary climate history of the region. 

Lake sediments act as paleoenvironmental archives; with minerals forming in the water column reflecting the prevailing environmental conditions, which then become part of the sediment package after deposition. However, post-depositional processes, such as early diagenesis, can cause alteration in mineralogy, structure and/or chemistry of deposited sediments. This can happen through sediment compaction, fluid circulation and physico-chemical changes, often mediated by microbial activity in situ 

We report results about authigenic minerals and mineral evolution in Nam Co. The aim is to target different diagenetic formation pathways of pyrite by combining detailed structural and compositional data, such as high-resolution X-ray computed micro-tomography (μCT), X-ray fluorescence scanning, and sulphur isotope analyses. We hypothesise the formation of pyrite in Nam Co happens because of diagenetic processes and pathways driven by changes in hydrology and limnology, tectonically induced fluid flow, and microbial activity. The overarching aim is to disentangle these different formation processes, and to assess whether we can use the sulphur isotope composition of pyrite to discriminate between environmental and tectonic controls. 

How to cite: Laakkonen, A., Thomas, C., Moser Roeggla, P., Adolph, M.-L., Ceriotti, G., Berg, J., Kipfer, R., Haberzettl, T., Ju, J., Henderson, A., Clarke, L., Zhu, L., Wang, J., Foubert, A., and Vogel, H.: Diagenetic formation pathways of pyrite in Nam Co, a high-altitude Tibetan lake  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9076, 2026.

EGU26-9279 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.8

Orbital-scale temperature and hydroclimate variability on the central Tibetan Plateau inferred from lipid biomarkers in the ICDP Nam Co drilling record 

Qiangqiang Kou, Liping Zhu, Thorsten Bauersachs, Junbo Wang, Torsten Haberzettl, Hendrik Vogel, Leon Clarke, Andrew Henderson, Marie-Luise Adolph, Jianting Ju, and Qingfeng Ma

Quantifying long-term temperature and hydroclimate variability on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) is essential for understanding the evolution of the Asian monsoon-westerly system and its response to orbital forcing. Large, deep, closed-basin lakes on the TP are highly sensitive to changes in effective moisture, seasonality, and glacial meltwater input. Continuous continental archives spanning multiple glacial-interglacial cycles, however, remain rare. Lake Nam Co (4,718 m a.s.l.), located in central Tibet, contains a thick succession of medium-bedded to finely laminated lacustrine fines interspersed with coarser grained intervals and represents a key site for resolving long-term climate dynamics on the Plateau. We present preliminary lipid biomarker-based results from a new 510-m long sedimentary drill core record recovered by the ICDP NamCore project to investigate Tibetan paleoclimate. Lipid were extracted from 143 core-catcher samples. Our initial analyses are focused on using glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs) and long-chain alkenones (LCAs) to quantitatively reconstruct temperature, as well as assess water balance. In addition, n-alkanes were investigated to study vegetation variability and hydroclimate. Our hydroclimate reconstructions are based on the distribution of n-alkanes, which show coherent variations between the ratio of ACL27-35 and the Paq index, indicating consistent regional hydroclimatic changes and shifts in aquatic versus terrestrial organic matter input. Variations in lake-level-sensitive GDGT parameters (e.g., %OH-GDGTs and %Cren) indicate pronounced changes in lake level, reflecting substantial variability in the lake water balance. Air temperature reconstructions derived from multiple independent proxies (MBT′5ME, RI-OH, and UK37) show broadly consistent long-term trends but differ in absolute values and variability. These differences likely reflect that the proxies record air temperature signals from different seasons or ecological contexts, with RI-OH and UK’37 representing mean annual air temperature, whereas MBT′5ME are biased toward air temperatures during specific growth seasons. Such divergences point to enhanced climatic seasonality on the central TP. UK’37-derived temperature estimates indicate a sustained warming trend in the upper part of the sedimentary sequence, although LCAs were detected only in a limited number of samples within the upper ~100 m.

These preliminary results demonstrate excellent preservation of lipid biomarkers in the Lake Nam Co sediments and confirm their strong potential for long-term, high-resolution reconstructions of paleotemperature, hydroclimate, and seasonality. The Nam Co record thus provides a unique opportunity to investigate orbital-scale climate variability, monsoon–westerly interactions, and their impacts on lake systems and ecosystems on the Tibetan Plateau.

How to cite: Kou, Q., Zhu, L., Bauersachs, T., Wang, J., Haberzettl, T., Vogel, H., Clarke, L., Henderson, A., Adolph, M.-L., Ju, J., and Ma, Q.: Orbital-scale temperature and hydroclimate variability on the central Tibetan Plateau inferred from lipid biomarkers in the ICDP Nam Co drilling record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9279, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9279, 2026.

EGU26-9987 | Posters on site | SSP3.8

Long-term evolution of vegetation and climate variability on the central Tibetan Plateau inferred from the palynological record of lake sediments recovered by the ICDP Nam Core drilling project 

Qingfeng Ma, Liping Zhu, Junbo Wang, Torsten Haberzettl, Hendrik Vogel, Leon Clarke, Andrew Henderson, Marie-Luise Adolph, Jianting Ju, and Qiangqiang Kou

Nam Co (4,718 m a.s.l.), located in the ecotone of meadows and steppe on the central Tibetan Plateau, is an ideal site for studying past vegetation and climate changes due to its thick lacustrine sediments and climate-sensitive geographic location. In 2024, we successfully conducted an ICDP drilling campaign that recovered high-quality sediment cores, reaching a maximum drilling depth of 510 m. Using the pollen record, we will investigate vegetation and climate variability in central Tibet over glacial-interglacial timescales, and elucidate the associated dynamic mechanisms. We present preliminary pollen results from core catcher samples. The pollen content of the vast majority of samples satisfies the statistical requirements, even in sand layers. The pollen assemblages are dominated by Cyperaceae, Artemisia, Amaranthaceae, Poaceae, Thalictrum, Ranunculaceae, Hippophae, Ephedra, with other tree pollen types including Pinus, Picea, Abies, etc. The composition of the major pollen types shows several distinct changes throughout the entire sequence, indicating significant variations in vegetation and climate. Furthermore, the Pediastrum concentration, arboreal pollen, and Cyperaceae percentages show a periodicity with depth. Future work will focus on pollen-based quantitative reconstructions of paleovegetation and paleoclimate, which are expected to provide more robust evidence for regional paleoenvironmental evolution.

How to cite: Ma, Q., Zhu, L., Wang, J., Haberzettl, T., Vogel, H., Clarke, L., Henderson, A., Adolph, M.-L., Ju, J., and Kou, Q.: Long-term evolution of vegetation and climate variability on the central Tibetan Plateau inferred from the palynological record of lake sediments recovered by the ICDP Nam Core drilling project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9987, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9987, 2026.

EGU26-10615 | Orals | SSP3.8

Last Glacial to Holocene lacustrine Environment of a large Impact Lake in the Subarctic of northeastern Canada: Implications for former Meltwater Events 

Bernhard Diekmann, Hanno Meyer, Boris K. Biskaborn, Paula Allertseder, Stefanie Freundt, Andrej Andreev, Denis Sarrazin, Claudia Zimmermann, and Reinhard Pienitz

Two joint Canadian-German expeditions at Lake Wiyâshâkimî (56.2°N, 74.4°W) were devoted to limnogeological research of the deglacial history of the Laurentide Ice Sheet in northeastern Canada. The lake is located on the Canadian Shield, roughly 150 km east of the southern Hudson Bay coast. It was formed by two meteorite impacts in the late Ordovician and early Permian. The intersected double crater structure of the 60 x 30 km large and up to 178 m deep lake is preserved until today. During the Quaternary, it was repeatedly covered by the Laurentide Ice Sheet. A hydrolological survey in summer 2023 confirmed the oligotrophic nature and well mixed water column of the freshwater lake. Geophysical subbottom profiling exhibited an ice-scoured bottom of the lake floor with only a thin veneer of postglacial mud. An 8 m-long sediment core was taken in spring 2024 at 110 m water depth within a depression including a pocket of preserved older sediments. Sediment analytics comprised radiocarbon dating, smear-slide studies, elemental x-ray scanning, determination of total organic carbon and nitrogen, pollen analysis as well as stable-isotope analysis of organic carbon (δ13C) and oxygen of diatom frustules (δ18O). The lower 6.5 m of the sediment core sequence comprises meltwater sands partly varve-like laminated. Radiocarbon ages of this interval scatter around 30 cal ka BP and are difficult to ascertain, because of reworked older organic matter. The sand is overlain by a 0.65 m thick grayish clay layer with a basal age of 22 cal ka BP. It provides evidence for stagnant glaciolacustrine conditions below or in front of the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet. The deposition of brownish diatom-bearing organic muds started at 6.5 cal ka BP. Pollen data indicate Holocene reforestation in the catchment since that time. This timing is well consistent with geomorphological evidence of regional glacial decay. Based on geochemical indicators, there is no evidence for a marine incursion related to the 8.2-ka event.

How to cite: Diekmann, B., Meyer, H., Biskaborn, B. K., Allertseder, P., Freundt, S., Andreev, A., Sarrazin, D., Zimmermann, C., and Pienitz, R.: Last Glacial to Holocene lacustrine Environment of a large Impact Lake in the Subarctic of northeastern Canada: Implications for former Meltwater Events, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10615, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10615, 2026.

EGU26-11100 | Orals | SSP3.8

Reconstructing subaqueous mass movements in Lake Grundlsee (Styria, Austria), a key record for understanding geohazards in a complex Alpine setting 

Erwin Heine, Marcel Ortler, Clemens Schmalfuss, Leonie Leitgeb, Benjamin Taeubling-Fruleux, and Jasper Moernaut

Lake Grundlsee, located in the Northern Calcareous Alps, is one of three large, deep, elongate lakes in the southern Salzkammergut region in Austria. The lake is situated in a geologically complex setting characterized by widespread evaporites of the Haselgebirge Formation to its south, which are known to promote a wide range of mass movement processes in the region. Recent research from the adjacent Bad Aussee Basin, which hosts an at least 880-m-thick Pleistocene sedimentary succession, indicates that Quaternary salt-tectonic activity is an important but still underexplored influencing factor on regional landscape evolution. Understanding these dynamics requires long-term records that extend beyond historical documentation. Bathymetric data and lacustrine sediment archives from neighboring Lake Hallstatt and Lake Altaussee have demonstrated the potential of such records for reconstructing Alpine landscape evolution and mass movement activities. However, neither subsurface geology nor in-depth sedimentological studies were performed on the adjacent Lake Grundlsee so far.

In this study, we present a comprehensive geologic and hydrographic survey of Lake Grundlsee. It consists of a high-resolution bathymetric survey of the lake basin and a seismic reflection profile survey supplemented by sediment core extraction from the lake bottom.  

The bathymetric data was collected in July 2025 using a Teledyne T50 multibeam echosounder (MBES), operated at 400 kHz with lakebed backscatter registration for lake floor classification purposes. The resulting 3D bathymetric model of Lake Grundlsee shows a maximum water depth of approximately 63 m and a complex lake floor morphology.

The bathymetric data reveals numerous previously unknown subaqueous landslides distributed throughout the basin, with particular concentrations in the eastern sub-basin and along the northern slope. Multiple generations of mass movements are evident, including older, partially overprinted deposits. The largest landslides show runout lengths exceeding 600 m and scar widths of over 250 m.

Reflection seismic profiles of a total length of ~40 km were obtained in November 2025 using an Innomar parametric sub-bottom profiler operating at 12 kHz. The narrow low-frequency sound beam images the subsurface geometry of these deposits with high resolution and with penetration depths of up to 10m providing insight into deposit thickness, failure planes, and stratigraphic context. Associated turbidite deposits are traceable across the basin floor.

In order to investigate the lithological characteristics of the uppermost sedimentary sequences a total of 18 sediment cores were retrieved in November 2025 using a gravity corer with hammer system.

Hydrogeological and geomorphological mapping of the surrounding catchment, documenting the distribution of evaporites and mass movement deposits around Lake Grundlsee, contextualizes the subaqueous findings and helps identify potential source areas and predisposing geological conditions.

The causes of slope failure remain under investigation. Possible triggering mechanisms include spontaneous gravitational instability on steep subaqueous slopes, seismic shaking — as suggested by studies in neighboring lakes such as Lake Altaussee — and salt-related subsurface processes associated with the underlying Haselgebirge Formation as well as human-induced failures.

This study provides a baseline for future hazard assessment and demonstrates the value of integrating subaqueous and terrestrial geomorphological approaches in Alpine lake research.

How to cite: Heine, E., Ortler, M., Schmalfuss, C., Leitgeb, L., Taeubling-Fruleux, B., and Moernaut, J.: Reconstructing subaqueous mass movements in Lake Grundlsee (Styria, Austria), a key record for understanding geohazards in a complex Alpine setting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11100, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11100, 2026.

EGU26-11289 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.8

Two millennia of anthropogenic influence and environmental change in Lake San Pablo, Ecuador 

Lisa Feist, Liseth Pérez, Karen Portilla, Elizabeth Velarde-Cruz, Hermann Behling, Agnieszka Halaś, Michal Słowiński, Ann-Kathrin Volmer, and Elisabeth Dietze

Located in the northern Ecuadorian Andes and surrounded by the city of Otavalo, numerous smaller settlements, and intensively used agricultural land, Lake San Pablo experiences declining water quality and increasing eutrophication. The lake and its water quality are of great importance to the local population, including indigenous communities. Last year, a community-driven effort led to legal recognition of the lake under the Rights of Nature, committing public resources to restoration. Under this legal framework, community-driven initiatives such as the “Tejiendo Agua en el Territorio” network that includes local indigenous worldviews, have been started to improve links between the lake and livelihoods in its catchment. These actions are guided by repeated, but non-continuous, limnological surveys since the 1970s, but lack a long-term baseline.

The lake’s longer-term environmental history, including natural variability and human-driven eutrophication, remains poorly constrained. To address this gap, we adopt a paleolimnological approach based on multi-proxy analyses of lake sediments. We analyzed a 1.18 m long sediment core retrieved from 21 m water depth in September 2024, which spans approximately the last two millennia based on a radiocarbon age-depth model using pollen concentrates. A multi-proxy approach integrates biological indicators (pollen, microcrustaceans, chironomids, and testate amoebae) with geochemistry (LOI, TC, TN, C/N, δ13C, δ15N, XRF). Biological indicators are used to track biodiversity change and to infer trophic state, habitat structure, oxygenation, littoral/macrophyte development, and water chemistry. Geochemical analyses aim to quantify internal and external sediment sources from in-lake productivity, nitrogen cycling, soil erosion and volcanic ash input, and include loss-on-ignition to estimate organic matter, carbonate, and other detrital mass fractions, C/N to partition autochthonous versus allochthonous organic matter, and stable isotopes of bulk sediment. For an assessment of trace-metal enrichment indicative of anthropogenic inputs, we combine XRF core scanning and pXRF data. Throughout the core, the sediment is homogeneous, organic-rich, and comprises macrophyte remains. Despite sedimentological uniformity, biological and geochemical proxies vary throughout the sequence and especially in the upper part of the core (representing the last century). In this upper part, preliminary results indicate increased terrestrial organic-matter input to the lake and higher sedimentation rates consistent with intensified land use in the catchment as reconstructed from pollen data.

This long-term perspective aims to constrain the timing, sources, and drivers of eutrophication and contaminant loading to inform evidence-based lake and catchment management. Our findings will ultimately support locally grounded actions by defining realistic reference conditions.

How to cite: Feist, L., Pérez, L., Portilla, K., Velarde-Cruz, E., Behling, H., Halaś, A., Słowiński, M., Volmer, A.-K., and Dietze, E.: Two millennia of anthropogenic influence and environmental change in Lake San Pablo, Ecuador, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11289, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11289, 2026.

EGU26-12623 | Orals | SSP3.8

Observations of modern processes in Nam Co, Tibetan Plateau, China 

Jianting Ju, Liping Zhu, Junbo Wang, Jinlei Kai, and Xinghuan Zhu
The lakes of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau form China’s largest lake cluster, whose sediments are pivotal for reconstructing paleoenvironmental changes. Studying modern lake dynamics is key to improving the reliability of sediment-based paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Recent research indicates that these lakes act as atmospheric carbon sinks with a capacity comparable to grasslands, yet interpretations remain tentative due to insufficient modern process observations.
 
Buoy-based monitoring, especially time-series sediment trap moorings, is an effective tool for tracking contemporary lacustrine sedimentary processes, but such observations are scarce on the plateau, with only Qinghai Lake having successful implementations. We conducted multi-year observations using a self-developed trap moored buoy at Ranwu Lake in southeastern Tibet, identifying a consistent correlation between sediment flux and varve thickness. At central Tibet’s Nam Co, we deployed time-series trap moorings alongside thermometer chains in 2018; since 2019, we have added buoys fitted with multi-parameter water quality sensors, ADCPs and meteorological stations.
 
Key findings include: 1) High-precision temperature profiling detected a thermal inversion layer in Nam Co during the Win1 phase. 2) Sedimentation mainly takes place during autumn and spring water turnover periods. 3) Resuspension during turnover at Nam Co appears to be insignificant. 4) The biogenic carbon pump alone cannot fully explain Nam Co’s carbon sequestration, as lake water absorbs more carbon, with sedimentation and carbon sequestration occurring synchronously. 5) Elevated autumn chlorophyll concentrations in the plateau’s deep oligotrophic lakes may stem from the upwelling of stratified-period deep chlorophyll maxima (DCM) to the surface, supported by modern observations and remote sensing data. 6) Carbon sequestration in these deep, oligotrophic, hard-water lakes is primarily driven by enhanced atmospheric CO₂ absorption during the upwelling of high-pH water in turnover periods.

How to cite: Ju, J., Zhu, L., Wang, J., Kai, J., and Zhu, X.: Observations of modern processes in Nam Co, Tibetan Plateau, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12623, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12623, 2026.

Understanding past variability of the Asian monsoon system is essential for constraining its sensitivity to ongoing and future climate change. High Asia, encompassing the Tibetan Plateau and surrounding regions of China, Nepal, and Mongolia, represents a key area where the Indian Summer Monsoon, East Asian Summer Monsoon, and mid-latitude westerlies interact. This contribution synthesizes paleoclimate reconstructions from this region with a primary focus on lacustrine ostracod records, complemented by a wide range of established climate proxies reported in the literature, including pollen, diatoms, sedimentological indicators, geochemical proxies, loess sequences, and ice-core records. Central Asia is selected to provide a broader atmospheric and hydrological context, though the emphasis remains on monsoon-influenced regions to the south and east.

Ostracods are particularly valuable paleoclimate indicators due to their sensitivity to changes in temperature, salinity and generally lake-water chemistry. Variations in ostracod assemblage composition, species diversity, and stable isotope and elemental geochemistry (δ¹⁸O, δ¹³C, Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca) are used to infer past effective moisture and monsoon intensity. These records are evaluated alongside pollen-based vegetation reconstructions and sedimentary evidence for lake-level fluctuations, allowing for a robust, multiproxy assessment of regional climate evolution from the late Pleistocene through the Holocene.

The compiled records reveal strong spatial and temporal heterogeneity in monsoon behavior across High Asia. Periods of enhanced monsoon activity are generally associated with expanded lakes, lower salinity, increased ostracod diversity, and forest or grassland pollen taxa, whereas weakened monsoon phases correspond to salinity-tolerant ostracod assemblages, steppe-dominated vegetation, and increased aridity, particularly in Mongolia and northern Tibet.

How to cite: Schmitz, O.: Reading the Record of Lakes: What Ostracods Tell Us About Central Asian Changing Environments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13576, 2026.

EGU26-14133 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.8

A new Late Holocene sediment record from Lake Grundlsee (Austria): Regional hazard signals and land use history in the Salzkammergut lake district 

Marcel Ortler, Leonie Leitgeb, Clemens Schmalfuss, Benjamin Täubling, Jasper Moernaut, and Erwin Heine

The lakes of the Salzkammergut region in the Northern Calcareous Alps (Austria) preserve valuable archives of natural hazards and human-environment interactions. Event records from Lake Hallstatt and Lake Altaussee have documented floods, mass movements, and phases of intensified land use over the past millennia – the latter linked to increased catchment erosion and, at Lake Altaussee, to medieval river diversions. However, questions remain regarding the regional coherence of these signals and the causes of pronounced sediment hiatuses observed in some basin sequences. Here, we present the first sediment core analysis from Grundlsee (4.22 km²), contributing a new record to this regional framework.

A total of 18 sediment cores (up to 1.5 m length) were retrieved in November 2025 using a hammer-driven gravity corer. Computed tomography (CT) reveals distinct density variations and event layers throughout the cores. Elevated density values in the upper core sections, estimated to span several centuries, suggest increased catchment erosion potentially linked to medieval land use intensification – a signal also recognized in the neighboring lakes during the 12th to 17th centuries. Several discrete high-density layers likely represent flood or mass movement deposits. Radiocarbon dating and subsequent BACON age-depth modelling, complemented by XRF core scanning, will establish a chronological framework and enable correlation with historically documented events.

Sub-bottom profiler data reveal a complex basin architecture. On a western plateau (~9 m water depth) near the lake outlet, Holocene sediment cover is thin (locally <0.5 m), and is separated by an erosional unconformity from an underlying thick sequence of Late Glacial deposits – indicating a significant hiatus. A comparable stratigraphic gap is observed on a shallow platform (~20 m water depth) in Altausseer See, where early to mid-Holocene sediments are absent – a thick debris flow unit directly overlies Late Glacial deposits, with only ~1200 years of Late Holocene sediments preserved above. These hiatuses suggest a regional phenomenon, possibly reflecting periods of lower lake levels relative to both present-day and Late Glacial conditions. Additionally, the sub-bottom profiler data image numerous subaqueous landslides and associated turbidite deposits traceable across the basin floor, indicating recurrent mass movement activity.

By integrating the Grundlsee sediment record into the existing network of studied Salzkammergut lake records, this work aims to improve regional hazard reconstructions and identify common drivers of environmental change in the Late Holocene.

How to cite: Ortler, M., Leitgeb, L., Schmalfuss, C., Täubling, B., Moernaut, J., and Heine, E.: A new Late Holocene sediment record from Lake Grundlsee (Austria): Regional hazard signals and land use history in the Salzkammergut lake district, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14133, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14133, 2026.

EGU26-15964 | Orals | SSP3.8

Paleoseismic Investigations of Organic-rich Lake Sediments in New England – a Multiproxy Approach 

Katrin Monecke, John Ebel, Brad Hubeny, Francine McCarthy, Lindsay Theis, and Alderson Aaron

Sedimentary records retrieved from Walden Pond, Concord, MA and Sluice Pond, Lynn MA show evidence of mass wasting likely triggered by strong historic and prehistoric groundshaking. The two lakes of glacial origin form steep-sided basins of 30 m and 20 m maximum water depth with Walden Pond being divided into three distinct subbasins. Because of the visually homogeneous nature of the organic-rich lacustrine muds we employed a combination of sedimentological, geophysical, geochemical, and palynological proxies to characterize background sediments and the fingerprint of the M=5.9 1755 Cape Ann earthquake, the largest historic earthquake in New England. We then used a similar multiproxy approach to investigate the longer record of Sluice Pond as well as the individual records of the three basins of Walden Pond extending the paleoseismic record about 800 years back in time. Robust age models using a combination of radioisotopes, industrial contaminants, and pollen stratigraphy allow for dating of event horizons as well as correlation between different lake basins. Deposited before the arrival of Europeans settlers, sediments in both lakes are composed of organic-rich mud reflecting a forested landscape. The rise of non-arboreal pollen including Ambrosia record the widespread logging practices of European settlers in New England starting in the mid-17th century. Subsequent erosion of soils is marked by grain size decrease, lower organic matter content, and elemental compositions characteristic of local soils. Separate from these long-term trends we identified sediment horizons that mark sudden-onset events. These are typically characterized by larger grain size, influx of nearshore palynomorphs, higher bulk densities, and/ or lower organic matter content. We interpret these horizons as underwater mass wasting events. For Sluice Pond, we were able to identify two event horizons, one associated with the M=5.9 1755 Cape Ann earthquake, and another one dated to between 1390 -1510 CE. For Walden Pond, sediments show synchronous mass wasting in at least two subbasins potentially related to the historic 1755 earthquake, as well as two older events dated to between 1380-1520 CE and 1050-1320 CE. Interestingly, a cluster of landslides in southern Maine within geotechnically sensitive clays dates to 1220-1450 CE and could correlate with the disturbed lake sediments. We analyzed the spatial distribution of event horizons in the two lakes in Massachusetts and landslides in Maine and identified possible source areas and magnitudes of prehistoric earthquakes with one possible source area within the Littleton, MA seismic zone. Our analysis suggests that the seismic hazard in the Boston area might be higher than previously appreciated.

How to cite: Monecke, K., Ebel, J., Hubeny, B., McCarthy, F., Theis, L., and Aaron, A.: Paleoseismic Investigations of Organic-rich Lake Sediments in New England – a Multiproxy Approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15964, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15964, 2026.

EGU26-17144 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.8

Debris-laden flows as indicators of Holocene natural hazard variability in alpine regions: First results from Lake Heiterwang (Northern Calcareous Alps, Austria) 

Leonie Leitgeb, Lena Holler, Patrick Oswald, and Jasper Moernaut and the ALPHA Lakes Team

Natural hazards in alpine regions show an increase in frequency over recent decades, often linked to climate change. In particular, debris-laden flows (such as hyperconcentrated flows and debris flows) have become more frequent in response to intensified precipitation events. However, such observations are largely limited to short instrumental or historical records. To understand long-term hazard behavior and improve assessments of future impacts on infrastructure and human safety, hazard activity must be investigated over extended timescales. Lake sediments offer continuous, high-resolution archives that reveal debris-laden flow activity over millennia, providing insight into long-term hazard dynamics.

Here, we present preliminary results from a 13 m long sediment core retrieved from Lake Heiterwang, an alpine lake located in the Northern Calcareous Alps of Tyrol, Austria. The lake has a surface area of approximately 1.37 km2 and a maximum depth of 61 m and is surrounded by steep slopes composed of intensely jointed dolomite rock, providing abundant sediment supply and making the catchment highly susceptible to debris-laden flow activity during intense rainstorms. This setting is therefore well suited for reconstructing the frequency and magnitude of these processes throughout the Holocene. The sediment core was analyzed using a multi-method approach, including X-ray fluorescence (XRF) scanning, multisensor core logging (MSCL), computed tomography (CT) scanning, grain-size measurements, sedimentological descriptions, and dated by 14C and 210Pb/137Cs.

Background sedimentation consists of dark, laminated, fine-grained sediments. Correlated Fe and S enrichments within the background sediments suggests in situ precipitation of Fe-sulphides under anoxic conditions. Event layers are typically light brown to brown with higher density and locally contain coarser grain sizes. Some deposits show fining-upward grading from fine sand to silt with occasionally bright clay caps. A total of 57 event deposits thicker than 2 cm were identified macroscopically, most of which are 2–5 cm thick. High resolution scanning data reveals numerous mm-scale event deposits. Multivariate analysis (e.g., PCA, cluster analysis) will be used to identify the event deposits. With only five paleo-earthquake-related deposits identified at nearby Lake Plansee, most event layers reflect non-seismic, climate driven processes.

Comparisons with sediment cores from nearby Lake Plansee and Lake Achensee will further refine the regional context of debris-laden flow activity during the Holocene. These preliminary results show the potential of lacustrine sediment archives to create links between debris-laden flow activity and Holocene climate variability.

Funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – Project number 558963977 and the Austrian Science Fund (FWF, grant https://doi.org/10.55776/PIN7180424).

How to cite: Leitgeb, L., Holler, L., Oswald, P., and Moernaut, J. and the ALPHA Lakes Team: Debris-laden flows as indicators of Holocene natural hazard variability in alpine regions: First results from Lake Heiterwang (Northern Calcareous Alps, Austria), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17144, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17144, 2026.

EGU26-22374 | Orals | SSP3.8

Limnological seismites as a record of past earthquakes in the Dead Sea Rift 

Eyal Heifetz, Anne Le Blanc, Shmuel Marco, Shalev Siman Tov, and Jonathan Levy

Limnological seismites are sedimentary layers within lacustrine deposits that have been deformed by earthquake-induced shaking. They are critical indicators of paleoseismic activity, providing a record of past earthquakes. The longest continuous earthquake record on Earth, 220-kyr-long, recovered from the 460-m-long drill core at the depocenter of the Dead Sea, is interpreted based on recognition of such seismites. The identification of seismites in the Dead Sea deep drill core relies on comparison with detailed structural analyses of seismites exposed along extensive outcrops around the Dead Sea. Many of these seismites are juxtaposed as well with syn-depositional faults, and those that were formed in historical times are tightly correlated with historical records and damaged archaeological sites. The key to characterizing earthquakes is understanding the physics of the seismite's deformation mechanisms. Here we focus on one of the robust mechanisms by which shear instability, of the type of Kelvin-Helmholtz instability, deforms stably stratified fluids. We performed state of the art direct numerical simulations of viscoplastic rheology, with nonlinear relations between the stress and the deformation rate tensors, to study the deformation response of the lacustrine sediments to earthquake-imposed shear. First, we measured the viscoplastic rheological characteristics of samples of Dead Sea sediments (aragonite, detritus and their mixture), by using rotary shear. We found substantial expected differences between the ductile detritus and the brittle aragonite. These data were implemented in the numerical simulations to solve the full Navier-Stokes fluid equation. The comparison between the simulations and the in-situ exposed deformations allows us to constrain the intensity and the peak ground acceleration of their generating paleo-earthquakes.

How to cite: Heifetz, E., Le Blanc, A., Marco, S., Siman Tov, S., and Levy, J.: Limnological seismites as a record of past earthquakes in the Dead Sea Rift, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22374, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22374, 2026.

The Cradle of Humankind (locally referred to as the Cradle) is associated with the recovery of almost a third of the world’s early pre-human (hominin) fossils from a series of now heavily eroded cave sites.  Dating of these hominin and associated faunal fossils has been conducted through U-Pb based chronology of speleothems bounding fossiliferous clastic cave sediments. The dolomitic bedrock of the Cradle prompts the precipitation of aragonite within speleothems. Through varying levels of diagenesis, these aragonite crystals are observed as remnants within calcite. These layers within the speleothems are also rich in U, up to two orders of magnitude more concentrated than surrounding layers, even on a cm scale, and as such  have been specifically targeted for U-Pb dating (). However, the suitability of these diagenetic layers and quality of resulting age data has been questioned. Using 44 speleothem samples (flowstone and stalagmite) from 3 caves  across the Cradle, we investigate the integrity of the U-Pb chronometer  and applicability for future dating and palaeoclimatic and palaeoenvironmental reconstructions. Through petrography and trace element profiles, we identify conservative diagenesis and elevated uranium concentrations in most diagenetic layers with aragonite remnants. This petrographic-geochemical method acts as a screening and selecting tool for speleothems undergoing further analysis. Retention of anti-phase, step-like patterns of trace elements such as Sr and Mg, and high (>1 ug/g) U concentrations  support early conservative diagenesis for the majority of the these speleothems  and further enables identifying unsuitable samples based on their petrographic fabrics and noisy trace element profiles. Overall, our results suggest that these speleothems have remained geochemically ‘closed systems’, within minimal, likely early, diagenesis, which does not compromise the validity of the U-Pb ages.

How to cite: Luti, G., Edwards, T., Weij, R., and Pickering, R.: Aragonite remnants in calcite speleothems - to date or not to date?: a case study of speleothems from the Cradle of Humankind, South Africa, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-410, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-410, 2026.

EGU26-1513 | Posters on site | SSP3.9

Reformation of hydrothermal fluid activity on the Lower Paleozoic carbonate rock reservoirs in the Dongying Depression 

Xuemei Zhang, Qing Li, Zhonghong Chen, Lang Wen, and Jiaqi Li

Recent petroleum exploration and development in the Dongying Depression of eastern China have focused on Paleozoic carbonate buried-hill reservoirs, which are typical fault-block reservoirs strongly influenced by hydrothermal activity. To clarify the impact of hydrothermal processes on reservoir quality, petrographic observations, stable and radioactive Sr isotope analyses, trace and rare earth element geochemistry, and fluid inclusion studies were carried out on hydrothermally precipitated minerals in the Lower Paleozoic carbonates. Extensive hydrothermal brecciation and thermal fading, together with a variety of hydrothermal minerals, are observed in the carbonate rocks. These hydrothermal minerals are characterized by high Mn and Fe contents, negative δ18O values, high 87Sr/86Sr ratios, and positive Eu anomalies. Hydrothermal dissolution during the early diagenetic stage generates secondary pores and preferentially improves the physical properties of high-permeability dolomite and granular limestone reservoirs. The development of the final porosity depends on late-stage hydrothermal mineral precipitation, because excessive crystal growth clogs previously formed pores and adversely affects reservoir physical properties. In granular limestone reservoirs, ferroan dolomite with high surface porosity can be regarded as a primary target for petroleum exploration.

How to cite: Zhang, X., Li, Q., Chen, Z., Wen, L., and Li, J.: Reformation of hydrothermal fluid activity on the Lower Paleozoic carbonate rock reservoirs in the Dongying Depression, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1513, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1513, 2026.

EGU26-3029 | Orals | SSP3.9

The Dolomite Problem: Facts, Myths and Marketing  

Adrian Immenhauser

The mineral dolomite (CaMg(CO3)2) and the uncertainties surrounding its origin have captivated geoscientists for over two centuries. Déodat de Dolomieu published his seminal paper on the subject in 1791, and today, the Web of Science lists 1,029 papers under the term "dolomite problem" and 27,469 under "dolomite". The essence of the “dolomite problem” lies in the paradox of this mineral's relative scarcity in modern near-surface diagenetic environments compared to its abundance in Earth’s rock record. Each year, numerous new studies are submitted that claim to have resolved the dolomite problem or, at least, to have made significant contributions toward its resolution. I disagree and argue that this controversy arises from an oversimplified understanding of calcium/magnesium carbonates, particularly regarding their formation and subsequent diagenetic pathway. Dolomite and related magnesian carbonates, including their amorphous and unordered precursors, belong to a surprisingly complex group of minerals. These minerals may be secreted from bodily fluids, induced by microbial activity, replace pre-existing carbonate minerals, or precipitate (cement) from different aqueous solutions with varying hydrogeochemical properties and temperatures, ranging from Earth's surface to low-grade metamorphic conditions at 300 °C. This diversity leads to confusion. Ancient dolomite minerals, such as those that form the regionally extensive, stratigraphically thick dolostone bodies of the Precambrian and Phanerozoic eras, often have complex petrographic histories. Consequently, the dolomite that builds these rock bodies should not be compared with the much rarer calcium/magnesium carbonates, whether they represent direct precipitates or replacement phases, collectively referred to as “dolomite” in contemporary marine diagenetic environments. Arguably, one of the most important domains for the formation and stabilisation of (replacement) dolomites is the marine pore-water realm, which can extend to burial depths of several hundred meters. Dolomite formation and stabilisation, however, continue through prograde diagenetic and metamorphic pathways over geological timescales. This raises a critical question: Is the fabric-retentive dolostone that builds ancient carbonate platforms genuinely formed nearly synchronously with sediment deposition, or is it rather a product of the (shallow to deep) burial domain, the most prolonged and arguably the least well-understood diagenetic environment? To understand the discrepancy between the scarcity of early marine diagenetic Mg/Ca carbonates and the vast dolostone rock bodies of the geological past, we must approach this question using empirical data, petrographic and crystallographic analysis, geochemical evidence, and theoretical frameworks. It is essential to avoid distorting these findings into a simplified model that creates the illusion of a problem, which might be nothing more than a myth or a marketing construct that never truly existed.

How to cite: Immenhauser, A.: The Dolomite Problem: Facts, Myths and Marketing , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3029, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3029, 2026.

EGU26-4214 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.9

Environmental influences and timing constraints on early marine dolomitisation of a giant carbonate platform (Dolomia Principale, Northern Italy) 

Vivien Folliot, Giovanna Della Porta, Mathias Mueller, Fabrizio Berra, Benjamin Walter, Aratz Beranoaguirre, Sylvia Riechelmann, Oskar Schramm, and Adrian Immenhauser

Although early marine (replacement) diagenetic dolomitisation is a well-documented process in ancient carbonate rocks, the factors driving its occurrence and timing remain less clearly understood. In the Lombardy Basin (Northern Italy), the Norian Dolomia Principale platform underwent pervasive, mimetic dolomitisation soon after sediment deposition, making it an exemplary case study of early marine dolomitisation. To identify the environmental parameters influencing the occurrence and intensity of early dolomitisation in Triassic shallow marine settings, a comprehensive multi-proxy analysis was conducted. Samples were collected from various depositional environments, including restricted lagoon, inner platform, outer platform/margin, slope, and intraplatform basin. To unravel the diagenetic history and distinguish early diagenetic features from later alterations, a paragenetic sequence was established based on petrographic observations, cathodoluminescence, fluid inclusion microthermometry, U-Pb dating, and stable isotope measurements (δ13C, δ18O, and 87Sr/86Sr). Although the intensity of these events varied according to depositional environment, four main diagenetic events were identified: (i) early marine dolomitisation, replacing precursor sediment and marine cement; (ii) a succession of late dolomite cement precipitations due to burial or local hydrothermalism; (iii) burial calcite cement precipitation; and (iv) late meteoric calcite precipitation. Radiometric dating of the now-stoichiometric "early marine-diagenetic dolomite" indicates that replacement occurred within the first few million years after deposition, likely followed by a prolonged period of "ripening." Fluid inclusion analysis reveals that the dolomitising fluid was a modified seawater mixed with a halite-dissolution brine, supporting a reflux-type dolomitisation model. Geochemical data reveal a progressive depletion in δ13C and δ18O throughout diagenetic evolution, while also highlighting discrepancies among "early dolomites" from different depositional environments. Bulk isotope data of Dolomia Principale dolostones are dominated by the fabric-retentive replacement dolomite phase and have, within limitations, value as archives of past seawater and altered marine porewater data.

How to cite: Folliot, V., Della Porta, G., Mueller, M., Berra, F., Walter, B., Beranoaguirre, A., Riechelmann, S., Schramm, O., and Immenhauser, A.: Environmental influences and timing constraints on early marine dolomitisation of a giant carbonate platform (Dolomia Principale, Northern Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4214, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4214, 2026.

The origin and evolution of ancient, deeply buried dolostone reservoirs remain elusive, largely due to their complex diagenetic overprinting. This study presents a multidisciplinary investigation using clumped isotope thermometry (Δ47), in-situ U-Pb geochronology, and isotopic and elemental geochemistry to quantitatively reconstruct the diagenetic history of the Guadalupian dolostones, which are important reservoir rocks for hydrocarbon exploration in the Sichuan Basin (southwest China). Initial replacive dolomitization event (Rd1/Rd2) occurred during mid‑late Permian (U-Pb ages = 265–257 Ma) at relatively low temperatures (restored Δ47 temperatures = 7–41 °C), with dolomitizingc fluids being dominantly sourced from Guadalupian and/or slightly younger seawater. During burial, these early-formed, marine dolostones have experienced diagenetic alteration from at least two episodes of hydrothermal fluid flow that are documented in the void‑filling saddle dolomite (SD; Δ47 temperatures = 67–135 °C) and blocky calcite (BC; Δ47 temperatures = 182–189 °C) cements. U‑Pb dating further constrains the timing of the hydrothermal events to 264–234 Ma (SD) and 239–235 Ma (BC), which we interprete to be closely related to two regional tectono-hydrothermal events, i.e., the Emeishan Large Igneous Province and the Indo‑Sinian orogeny. The δ18O values of parent fluids evolved progressively from near‑marine signatures (Rd1/Rd2) to strongly 18O‑enriched compositions (up to +17‰ VSMOW for BC), suggesting that the hydrothermal fluids were largely sourced from the deep basin and have been experienced intensive water‑rock interaction with the surrounding rocks. Overall, tectono‑hydrothermal processes, changing these dolostones structurally and geochemically, have improved reservoir quality through: 1) recrystllization of the early marine, tightly-packed dolomites into high-temperature Rd3 dolomites that host considerable intercrystalline porosity, 2) generation of open fractures, and 3) formation of dissolution‑enlarged vugs . This study highlights the critical role of tectonically driven hydrothermal fluid flows in the development of deep-burial dolostone reservoirs. Furthermore, by integrating a robust thermochronological diagenetic framework with well‑defined sedimentary facies and fracture characterization, this approach offers an applicable strategy for predicting reservoir quality in deeply buried carbonate successions within tectonically active sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Pan, L., Hao, Y., Li, W., and Liang, F.: From cold seawater to hydrothermal fluid flow: thermochronological and geochemical elucidation on the diagenesis of a Guadalupian dolostone reservoir from Sichuan Basin (China), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4819, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4819, 2026.

 Laser ablation U-Pb dating technology for carbonate rocks has matured and plays a significant role in studies of carbonate reservoirs, tectonic activities, and related research. However, the lack of effective dating methods for siliceous rocks, which are extremely abundant in the Earth's crust, has constrained research into the diagenetic processes associated with them. Consequently, building upon the foundation of carbonate laser U-Pb dating, a laser U-Pb dating technique for siliceous rocks was successfully developed through a series of methodological improvements. Both carbonate and siliceous rock laser U-Pb dating were applied to the recently explored but less-studied reservoirs of the Upper Cambrian Lower Qiulitage Formation in the Tabei area of the Tarim Basin. Integrated with analyses including petrology, sedimentology, cathodoluminescence, trace and rare earth elements, in-situ carbon and oxygen isotopes, and elemental mapping, the following conclusions were reached: ① The dolomites of the Lower Qiulitage Formation in the Tabei area underwent multiple diagenetic stages. The first stage was a widely developed penecontemporaneous to shallow burial dolomitization. The second stage was a burial dolomitization, locally distributed along faults and induced by tectonic compression during the Early-Middle Devonian. The third stage was a hydrothermal dolomitization, also localized along faults, caused by Permian volcanic activity. Both the second and third stages accompanied by recrystallization, silicification, and mineral precipitation. ② The dolomite reservoirs of the Lower Qiulitage Formation are primarily developed within grain shoal sedimentary facies. Reservoir space primarily originated from meteoric water dissolution. Multiple episodes of burial fluids increased reservoir heterogeneity and partially destroyed pore spaces. Therefore, sedimentary facies of paleo-highland grain shoals, located away from fault activity zones of the Devonian and Permian periods, are favorable areas for reservoir development. The research outcomes provide effective theoretical support for the exploration of dolomite reservoirs in the Lower Qiulitage Formation. Furthermore, the successful application of laser dating techniques to both carbonate and siliceous rocks in this dolomite reservoir study offers new perspectives and methodologies for related research.

Keywords: Laser U-Pb dating of siliceous rocks; Laser U-Pb dating of carbonate rocks; Diagenesis; Reservoir genesis; Tabei area

How to cite: Junmao, D.: Geochronology, Geochemical Characteristics, and Main Controlling Factors of Reservoirs in Dolomite and Siliceous Rocks of the Upper Cambrian Lower Qiulitage Formation, Tarim Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4832, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4832, 2026.

EGU26-5312 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.9

The role of anaerobic microbes in carbonate sediment diagenesis 

Theresa Nohl, David Fischer, and Marc Mußmann

In carbonate sediments the early diagenetic dissolution of aragonite and the reprecipitation of the dissolved CaCO3 as calcite cement potentially alter sedimentological, geochemical, palaeoecological and palaeoclimatic information. The differential diagenesis of both carbonate minerals results from different thermodynamic stabilities in the redox zones within the sediment created by microbial decay of organic matter. This process can form CaCO3-rich (limestone) and CaCO3-depleted (marl) beds (diagenetic beds or diabeds), severely impacting access to original environmental information and the temporal resolution of the geologic record. To date, this diagenetic process has not been documented in situ due to drilling and sampling method limitations. Therefore, it is yet unknown in which zone the main dissolution and cementation take place. In this laboratory experiment, sulphate reducing bacteria (Desulfosarcina variabilis) and methanogenic archaea (Methanococcus maripaludis) were separately cultivated in aragonite, calcite, and an aragonite-calcite mixed sediment in marine medium for (a) 4 or (b) 10 weeks to evaluate which microorganisms are responsible CaCO3 dissolution. The 36 samples, including reference samples without microbes and the pure original carbonate material, were analysed with light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) on sediment and on the precipitates of the pore water. While the visual examination of preservation was not conclusive, EDX analysis of the pore water precipitates yielded higher Ca contents in the 10-week samples with Desulfosarcina variabilis in aragonite and aragonite-calcite mixed sediments. This indicates that aragonite likely  primarily dissolves in the sulphate reduction zone. Combined with petrographic evidence from the geologic record we can establish a chronological order of dissolution and precipitation processes.

How to cite: Nohl, T., Fischer, D., and Mußmann, M.: The role of anaerobic microbes in carbonate sediment diagenesis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5312, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5312, 2026.

EGU26-7487 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.9

Oligocene karstification of the Dammam Formation in Qatar 

Alexandre Ortiz, Cécile Allanic, Renaud Couëffé, Jérôme Perrin, Gildas Noury, Maria Dezes, Thierry Vilmus, Julien Daranlot, Bastien Lemaire, Oliver Higgins, Boris Matti, Clément Lerevenu, Andreas Schönrock, Richesh Pillai, Salem Al-Yafei, Elalim Ahmed, Umi Samad, and Sayed Bukhari

Karst features develop due to dissolution of carbonate and evaporitic rocks, producing geomorphologically complex and hydrologically sensitive landscapes. While karst development in humid and temperate regions is well documented, its occurrence in arid environments is less documented and understood. In Qatar, major unconformity occurs between Dammam (Eocene) and Dam formations (Miocene). Karsts occurs primarily within the Dammam Formation (Eocene) and are manifested as depressions and caves generated by dissolution, subsidence, and collapse processes. Field observations along with petrographic, cathodoluminescence, strontium isotope, and X-ray diffraction analyses were performed to determine the origin and timing of karstification affecting the Dammam Formation. Textural, geochemical and isotopic affinities between karstic infills and sediments of the overlying Dam Formation - particularly the Al-Kharrara and Al-Nakash members - indicate that material from the Dam Formation was trapped within Dammam cavities. Thus, Dam age sediment fills are found in karst features where the Dam is now absent by erosion suggesting a broader areal extent of the Dam Formation during the Miocene. Diagenetic and lithological relationships suggest that karst sediment infilling—and thus karst formation—postdates Oligocene dolomitization and silicification, with major speleogenesis occurring during the Oligocene. This event coincides with regional eustatic regression and tectonic uplift associated with the reactivation of the Qatar–South Fars Arch during the Zagros Orogeny. This study identifies a previously unrecognized karstification phase predating Pleistocene features, refining current models of Qatar’s landscape evolution and related geohazards. This suggests that geohazards associated with karsts are relatively stable due to the age of the major karst event.

How to cite: Ortiz, A., Allanic, C., Couëffé, R., Perrin, J., Noury, G., Dezes, M., Vilmus, T., Daranlot, J., Lemaire, B., Higgins, O., Matti, B., Lerevenu, C., Schönrock, A., Pillai, R., Al-Yafei, S., Ahmed, E., Samad, U., and Bukhari, S.: Oligocene karstification of the Dammam Formation in Qatar, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7487, 2026.

Trace elements are widely used in tracing diagenetic fluids and reconstructing diagenetic environments. The wet method is a mature and commonly used measurement method, but the method encounters difficulties: high demand for powder samples, complex chemical processing procedures, and lower accuracy, which restrict the promotion and application of this technology.

We developed new technologies for testing trace elements in carbonate minerals and achieved three results. (1) The upgrade of wet method of trace element testing technology for carbonate mineral and optimization of chemical treatment process have reduced the demand for powder samples from 50mg to 10mg, meeting the requirements of microstructure sampling and testing. The acid consumption reduced from 10mL to 2mL, and the relative error of data has been reduced from 5% -10% to 2% -5%; (2) A new technology for trace element laser ablation imaging has been developed based on the RESOlution laser ablation system, iCAP TQ triple quadrupole inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer, and QuadLock device. The detection limit has been reduced from 5-10 ppb to sub-ppb, the spatial resolution of the image has been increased from ≥ 5µm to ≤ 1µm, and the processing time has been improved by 10 times; (3) The new technology of trace element laser ablation imaging has expanded its application fields. In addition to micro-area fluid tracing and diagenetic environment reconstruction, it can also be used for laser U-Pb isotope age determination to improve the success rate and accuracy of dating. It is used for the study of the coupling relationship between trace element concentration (or ratio) and mineral cathodoluminescence characteristics, clarifying new cathodoluminescence control elements other than Fe and Mn.

The development of new testing technologies for trace element provides a powerful tool for the study of carbonate reservoir formation.

How to cite: Liang, F. and Luo, X.: Development and Application of New Technologies of Trace Element Testing for Carbonate Minerals, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8857, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8857, 2026.

EGU26-13127 * | Posters on site | SSP3.9 | Highlight

Global carbonate production and accumulation – Updated present-day estimates and future projections 

Gerald Auer, Chelsea Pederson, Zvi Steiner, Kim de Mutsert, Joachim Schoelkopf, Florian Gallien, and Or M Bialik

There are two primary mechanisms for carbon transfer into the geological record within the ocean: the organic sink and the inorganic carbon sink. The inorganic carbon sink (i.e., the long-term preservation of carbonate minerals in the geologic record), in particular, is not well constrained. Over the past several years, theoretical and experimental work has significantly improved our understanding of the inorganic carbon cycle, particularly in the context of carbonate minerals. This work reviews the state-of-the-art of marine calcium carbonate production, dissolution, and accumulation, representing a comprehensive update on the works of Milliman (1993) and Smith and Mackenzie (2016). We combine updated estimates with recent advances in understanding the carbonic acid system and the global ocean carbon cycle. These processes are supplemented by organismal to ecosystem-level responses of calcifying organisms to future climate change, enabling estimates of future global marine carbonate budget development. Our synthesis offers a comprehensive perspective on the long-term balance of carbonate preservation under current boundary conditions and projected future climate scenarios.

Present-day net global annual gross production of CaCO3 throughout all carbonate-producing ecosystems is estimated between 176.1*1012 mol yr-1 (= 17.61 Gt yr-1) and 437.1*1012 mol yr-1 (= 437.1 Gt yr-1). However, only 8 to 20% of CaCO3 sediment is preserved each year, according to literature data. This leads to ~35*1012 mol yr-1 (= 3.5 Gt yr-1) of CaCO3 accumulation per year. Today, nearly all CaCO3 production is estimated to be biologically mediated or biologically controlled, while contributions from abiogenic carbonates are assumed to be minor. Dissolution of CaCO3 in the marine realm buffers excess CO2 from organic matter oxidation in the water column and sediment. The carbonate buffer effect within the carbonic acid system is expected to decline in future climate change scenarios, likely leading to more intense carbonate dissolution.

Anthropogenic climate change, including excess CO2 in surface oceans, is further proposed to impact the CaCO3 production capabilities of all CaCO3-producing ecosystems in the ocean by affecting the diversity, abundance, and calcification potential of organisms. Predicting the future development of CaCO3 accumulation in the oceans is an evolving process. With the currently available data, estimating future CaCO3 accumulation is challenging due to multiple unknowns regarding disruptions and adaptations of the producers. The herein-reviewed data suggest that the global net CaCO3 accumulation will decrease by over 50 % to 19*1012 mol yr-1 (= 1.90 Gt yr-1) by 2050 AD, and further to 10.3*1012 mol yr-1 (= 1.03 Gt yr-1) by 2100 AD based on a “business as usual” CO2 emission model.

 

References

Milliman, J. D.: Production and accumulation of calcium carbonate in the ocean: Budget of a nonsteady state, Global Biogeochem Cy, 7, 927–957, https://doi.org/10.1029/93gb02524, 1993.

Smith, S. V. and Mackenzie, F. T.: The Role of CaCO3 Reactions in the Contemporary Oceanic CO2 Cycle, Aquat Geochem, 22, 153–175, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10498-015-9282-y, 2016.

How to cite: Auer, G., Pederson, C., Steiner, Z., de Mutsert, K., Schoelkopf, J., Gallien, F., and Bialik, O. M.: Global carbonate production and accumulation – Updated present-day estimates and future projections, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13127, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13127, 2026.

EGU26-13548 | Orals | SSP3.9

Effects of disintegration on the incompleteness of the Holocene fossil record 

Adam Tomašových, Susan M. Kidwell, Matthew Kosnik, Michal Kowalewski, Rafal Nawrot, Daniele Scarponi, and Martin Zuschin

The mechanisms controlling incompleteness and time averaging of fossil assemblages include (1) sediment accumulation, (2) mixing, and (3) skeletal disintegration. Although sediment accumulation is a major factor controlling these attributes of the fossil record, predicting the effects of mixing and disintegration depends on their interaction and can be counterintuitive. Stochastic models of fossil preservation show that even when disintegration is fast in the taphonomically-active zone (surface well-mixed layer, SML), its effect on time averaging and incompleteness in the historical layer can be minimized when shells can be sequestered by burrowers into the lower parts of the incompletely-mixed layer. To assess the prevalence of this sequestration effect, we estimate the covariation between incompleteness on one hand and disintegration, burial and exhumation on the other hand, fitting age-frequency distributions from 18 Holocene sediment cores to stochastic transition-rate matrices. The model has five parameters, including burial below the SML (a function of both sediment accumulation and downward mixing), exhumation into the SML, disintegration in the SML and below it, and disintegration of diagenetically-stabilized shells that were exhumed to the SML. We find that the majority of cores show a major decline in disintegration within the upper decimeters and exhibit the persistence of very old shells in the surface seabed, indicating some role of their diagenetic stabilization below the SML. Both burial and exhumation positively covary with disintegration in the SML. However, the incompleteness is negatively related to burial (varying between 90-99% at sites with slow sediment accumulation and between 50-90% at sites with fast sediment accumulation) but does not correlate with disintegration in the SML. These results indicate that although bioturbation positively covaries with disintegration in the SML, it can also increase preservation potential of some shells by transferring them below the SML.

How to cite: Tomašových, A., Kidwell, S. M., Kosnik, M., Kowalewski, M., Nawrot, R., Scarponi, D., and Zuschin, M.: Effects of disintegration on the incompleteness of the Holocene fossil record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13548, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13548, 2026.

The Blue Anchor Formation represents a time period immediately prior to the earliest phase of the End-Triassic Mass Extinction (ETME). It therefore offers a unique opportunity to yield more information on the timings and causes of the ETME, which still pose many unanswered questions. The formation records a step transition from terrestrial ephemeral-lake sediments in the underlying Branscombe Mudstone Formation to deep marine shales in the succeeding Westbury Formation (e.g. Hesselbo et al., 2023). Millimetre-scale sedimentological analysis of the Prees 2C core, UK, alongside X-ray fluorescence analysis has allowed lithofacies and facies associations to be defined and the depositional history of the formation to be determined. Seven major lithofacies are recognised: 1) massive calcareous siltstone, 2) laminated calcareous siltstone, 3) silty sandstone, 4) microbial limestone (previously regarded as dolostone), 5) brecciated calcareous siltstone, 6) small cracked siltstone, and 7) large cracked siltstone. A sabkha setting is interpreted in an overall transgressive regime; at the base of the formation a continental sabkha system surrounding perennial lakes gradually transitions to a coastal sabkha system with lagoons. Stacked sequences record repeated cycles of subtidal-lacustrine to supratidal environments throughout the formation. Facies 1 and 2 represent low energy subtidal-lacustrine and lagoonal environments respectively, passing upward into facies 3 and 4, representing intertidal to near-shore supratidal environments including algal mats. The sabkhas themselves are not preserved but represented through facies 5, which indicates collapse breccia after dissolution of evaporites. The syneresis and desiccation cracks contained in facies 6 and 7 respectively represent hiatuses in both subaqueous and subaerial conditions. Appearances of facies 6 and 7, alongside teepee structures and nodular evaporites indicate increasing evaporative and hypersaline conditions upwards through the formation. Milankovitch forcing is suggested as the controlling factor in sabkha cyclicity, based on consistency and uniformity of parasequences. This will provide a framework for a cyclostratigraphic age model in further research, with palaeoclimate implications for the ETME.

How to cite: Frost, E., Hesselbo, S., Porter, R., and Ullman, C.: The mixed siliciclastic-carbonate sabkhas of the Late Triassic Blue Anchor Formation (Prees 2 borehole, Cheshire Basin, UK): the prelude to the End-Triassic Mass Extinction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13721, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13721, 2026.

EGU26-18601 | Orals | SSP3.9

Diagenetic carbonates as a tool for reconstructing water temperatures in fossil-poor sections 

Madeleine L. Vickers, Stefano M. Bernasconi, Jens Fiebig, David Bajnai, Nathan Looser, David Evans, Rosalind E. Rickaby, Jack Longman, Joost Frieling, Dustin T. Harper, and Morgan T. Jones

Reconstructions of ocean temperature through deep time frequently rely on isotopic or elemental compositions biotic carbonates (e.g. foraminifera, coccolithophores, molluscs, brachiopods). But what can be done when fossil carbonate is absent? Several high-latitude early Cenozoic and Mesozoic sites (e.g. Svalbard, Denmark) are characterized by an early dissolution of such biotic carbonates, with rapid reprecipitation of the CaCO3 as diagenetic carbonates, such as ikaite, calcite concretions, and interstitial calcite. Can these be of use in reconstructing palaeotemperature or paleoenvironmental conditions? What exactly do these carbonates represent? We investigate their age relative to their host sediment, and whether the pore waters they formed in could be considered to reflect ocean bottom-waters. We also look at possible kinetic biases and elemental fractionation during their formation, and if we can apply temperature proxies such as Mg/Ca ratios, stable oxygen isotopes, and/or clumped isotope thermometry.

How to cite: Vickers, M. L., Bernasconi, S. M., Fiebig, J., Bajnai, D., Looser, N., Evans, D., Rickaby, R. E., Longman, J., Frieling, J., Harper, D. T., and Jones, M. T.: Diagenetic carbonates as a tool for reconstructing water temperatures in fossil-poor sections, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18601, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18601, 2026.

EGU26-18910 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.9

The Great Oolite Formation (Middle Jurassic) from the Upper Rhine Graben: sedimentological and mineralogical characterization from the Chalampé Well, and implications for geothermal reservoir 

Jalileh Nasseri, Mathieu Schuster, Patrick Baud, Marc Ulrich, and Laurent Gindre–Chanu

The Great Oolite Formation is a Middle Jurassic (upper Bajocian-lower Bathonian) carbonate Formation widespread across northern Europe, deposited in a shallow-marine epicontinental sea. This Formation is of great economic importance as a geo-resource, for example as a hydrocarbon reservoir in the UK and as a low-temperature geothermal reservoir in the Paris Basin. Comparable Jurassic oolitic carbonate Formations are also economically important worldwide (e.g.  the Arab Formation in the Persian Gulf as a hydrocarbon reservoir, and the Smackover Formation in the US as an aquifer reservoir).

In the Upper Rhine Graben (URG), the Great Oolite Formation has recently attracted new attention as a potential intermediate-depth geothermal reservoir. Despite its significance, geological knowledge of the Great Oolite Formation in the URG remains limited and is largely based on outdated mid-20th-century studies. Indeed, subsurface reservoir quality is poorly constrained from scattered data.

 An integrated analytical approach combining petrographic and facies analyses, with non-destructive micro–X-ray fluorescence (µ-XRF) mapping, were conducted on 64 core samples from the Chalampé well. This unique well represents a key reference well for the Great Oolite Formation in the URG, as it fully penetrates this Formation. The Great Oolite is only know at the surface from some limited outcrops, exposing incomplete sections of the Formation.

Petrographic analysis identified the diverse skeletal and non-skeletal components, from which five distinct carbonate textures (Mudstone, Wackestone, Packstone, Grainstone, and Rudstone) have been identified. Various post-depositional features, including micritization, pyritization, bioturbation, fracture, and stylolite, are documented. While the Great Oolite Formation from the URG was formerly presented as a monolithic unit, these preliminary results reveal a much heterogeneous Formation (i.e. lithology, textural fabrics, allochems content; vertical variations), implying lateral variability within the Formation. A first detailed sedimentological log of the Great Oolite Formation is now proposed for the URG. Comparison with surrounding Formations equivalent to the Great Oolite shows comparable vertical stratigraphic organisation and diversity of textures, suggesting a common regional depositional story.

Mineralogical composition maps derived from µ-XRF analysis are used to investigate the diagenetic story, related to the post-depositional processes and the geodynamic evolution of the URG.

So far, this ongoing work allows to list some main characteristics of the Great Oolite in the URG:

- a diversity of textures that reflects fluctuating depositional energy conditions, and controls variable primary porosity and permeability properties;

- fine grained intervals (mudstone texture) suggest the presence of potential intra-formational seals, which need to be investigated (thickness, continuity);

- a newly identified heterogeneity of the Formation, that suggests a possible layer cake model, and thus a more complex reservoir;

- a clear diagenetic impact on the primary porosity and permeability;

- the presence of fractures and stylolites which may modify fluid flow.

How to cite: Nasseri, J., Schuster, M., Baud, P., Ulrich, M., and Gindre–Chanu, L.: The Great Oolite Formation (Middle Jurassic) from the Upper Rhine Graben: sedimentological and mineralogical characterization from the Chalampé Well, and implications for geothermal reservoir, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18910, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18910, 2026.

EGU26-20873 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.9

From formation to burial: experimental reconstruction of earthworm calcite granule modification 

Lucy Kerr, Alex Brasier, Mike Rogerson, and Paul Hallet

Earthworm-produced calcite granules are a distinct component of pedogenic carbonate that can be preserved in palaeosols, yet the processes that generate their carbonate chemistry and microstructure, as well as the extent to which these attributes are modified after excretion and during early diagenesis, remain poorly constrained. This limits confident identification in the rock record and interpretation of granule-derived carbonate signals within palaeosols and mixed siliciclastic–carbonate successions.

This project uses a staged experimental design to reconstruct the early diagenetic changes of Lumbricus terrestris calcite granules under controlled conditions. In Phase 1, granules are generated in replicated soil microcosms under independently varied organic carbon inputs (C₃ versus C₄ litter) and hydrological regimes (constant moisture versus dry–rewet cycling), producing material with known formation histories. In Phase 2, harvested granules are transferred to continuous-flow reactors supplied with defined Ca–HCO₃ solutions, with and without soil, to isolate post-excretion pedogenic modification processes including carbonate overgrowth, dissolution–reprecipitation, and trace-element redistribution. In Phase 3, granules are heated at 25–60 °C in controlled pore-fluid compositions to simulate shallow burial and low-grade early diagenetic conditions.

A consistent, multi-scale analytical framework is applied to granules recovered from each experimental stage, integrating isotopic, elemental, and microstructural information to assess equilibrium versus disequilibrium precipitation and progressive signal modification. Results obtained to date will be presented and evaluated alongside fossil granules from Miocene palaeosols, providing process-based constraints on the biogenic, pedogenic, and diagenetic contributions to soil-derived carbonates and their implications for carbonate-based paleoenvironmental proxies.

How to cite: Kerr, L., Brasier, A., Rogerson, M., and Hallet, P.: From formation to burial: experimental reconstruction of earthworm calcite granule modification, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20873, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20873, 2026.

EGU26-21454 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.9

Post-Depositional Fluids as a Primary Control on Carbonate Isotopic Variability in the Tamengo Formation (Ediacaran, Brazil) 

Renan dos Santos, Pierre Sansjofre, Marly Babinski, Juliana Leme, and Ricardo Trindade
The emergence of complex life in the Ediacaran underscores the need to constrain paleoceanographic conditions, which have traditionally been inferred from apparently consistent global δ¹³C and ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr curves. However, in carbonate successions with complex diagenetic histories, separating primary marine signatures from regional and post-depositional overprints remains problematic. Exposed in west-central Brazil, the Tamengo Formation records the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition. It provides an opportunity to evaluate how diagenetic processes influence carbonate records associated with early skeletal metazoans, including Cloudina. This study is based on the analysis of 330 thin sections from seven key outcrops and two drill cores. The main petrographic constituents: a predominantly calcitic matrix composed of well-preserved and neomorphosed micrite, bioclasts, and ooids. Diagenetic phases include calcite, dolomite, and silica cement, as well as pyrite, iron and manganese oxides, and gypsum pseudomorphs. Additional features comprise primary and secondary porosity and pressure-solution structures such as stylolites and dissolution seams. Petrographic, cathodoluminescence, and SEM–EDS analyses indicate that carbonate factories were modified through multiple diagenetic stages, beginning during sedimentation and intensifying during burial. Syndepositional micrite precipitation dominated low-energy settings, whereas ooid formation reflects more agitated sectors of the carbonate ramp. Local gypsum precipitation indicates episodic evaporitic conditions and transient hydrodynamic constraints. Early diagenesis involved shallow-burial calcite cementation, locally accompanied by brecciation and calcitization of evaporitic phases, preserving gypsum pseudomorphs, and indicating fluid circulation still closely linked to seawater chemistry. With progressive burial, mesodiagenesis became the dominant driver of mineralogical and textural reorganization. This stage is marked by neomorphism, micrite-to-microspar recrystallization, modification of ooids and bioclasts, and the development of vuggy porosity associated with selective dissolution and pressure-solution features. Cathodoluminescence reveals heterogeneous cement generations, while SEM–EDS maps document partial dolomitization and localized Fe- and S-enrichment along seams and fractures. Bulk carbonate δ¹³C values (40 samples) show a wide positive range ( +2.8 to +5.7‰ ), whereas δ¹⁸O values are consistently depleted (- 4.2 to -11.1‰), resulting in weak C–O covariance. The coexistence of strongly negative δ¹⁸O values (< 9‰) with still positive δ¹³C indicates decoupled isotopic behavior, consistent with burial-related fluid–rock interaction and mesodiagenetic recrystallization rather. The isotopic variability reflects polyphase diagenetic overprinting controlled by depositional setting and burial-related fluid flow, emphasizing the limitations of bulk geochemical proxies and the need for petrographically constrained approaches.

How to cite: dos Santos, R., Sansjofre, P., Babinski, M., Leme, J., and Trindade, R.: Post-Depositional Fluids as a Primary Control on Carbonate Isotopic Variability in the Tamengo Formation (Ediacaran, Brazil), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21454, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21454, 2026.

EGU26-21877 | Orals | SSP3.9

Dolomite recrystallization associated with thermally activated cation-ordering  

Shlomit Cooper-Frumkin, Hagit P. Affek, Netta Shalev, Tomaso R.R. Bontognali, Shikma Zaarur, and Uri Ryb

Despite prolonged research, the formation environments of dolomite remain debated. Previous studies have associated the apparent decrease in dolomite abundance in the geological record with a major transition in marine depositional environments from warm, saline shallow platforms, to deeper and cooler environments in which dolomite formation was largely inhibited. Others suggested that large volumes of pre-Cenozoic dolomites reflect dolomitization at elevated burial temperatures of these rocks, whereas Cenozoic carbonate platforms mostly never reached sufficient thermal maturity. A third, hybrid possibility is that Mg-rich dolomite precursor precipitated in shallow environments and later underwent cation ordering during burial diagenesis.

To test these models, we measured cation ordering, oxygen, and clumped isotopes (δ18O and TΔ47, respectively) in Triassic dolomite from the Mohila Formation in Makhtesh Ramon. This dolomite is thought to have formed in evaporative settings. It was compared to a modern analogue of dolomite from Dohat Faishakh Sabkha, Qatar. We incorporate these data into a global compilation of dolomite records. δ18O and TΔ47 data from Qatar indicate formation at Earth surface temperature and evaporated (2.5-4.8 ‰ VSMOW) seawater. In contrast, δ18O and TΔ47 of dolomites from the Mohila Fm. are consistent with cation ordering in deep burial environments flushed with normal seawater (0 to -1‰ VSMOW). Together, these data support a two-step dolomite formation process, in which carbonates were initially enriched in Mg2+ in the lagoon and later recrystallized in burial-diagenetic environments. For most dolomite in our dataset, cation ordering is positively correlated with TΔ47, suggesting that a burial recrystallization step is coupled with and possibly driven by ordering of proto-dolomite. However, dolomites from one study in the data set diverge from this trend and show a high degree of ordering despite low clumped isotope temperatures, suggesting a secondary – early dolomite formation pathway. Dolomites associated by stratigraphy with surface environments show a negative correlation between δ18O and TΔ47 values, similar to massive dolomites that lack such context. Considered together, our results suggest that burial recrystallization is a common process in the formation of dolomite records that are typically interpreted as forming under surface conditions.

How to cite: Cooper-Frumkin, S., Affek, H. P., Shalev, N., Bontognali, T. R. R., Zaarur, S., and Ryb, U.: Dolomite recrystallization associated with thermally activated cation-ordering , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21877, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21877, 2026.

EGU26-679 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.11

Effect of Biochemical Parameters on Biomineral Formation and Soil Strength Development in Microbially Induced Calcite Precipitation 

Renu Joshi, Thapasimuthu Rajakumar Nikitha, and Dali Naidu Arnepalli

Microbially induced calcite precipitation (MICP) provides a low-carbon alternative to traditional soil stabilization methods. However, the coupled impact of key input biochemical parameters, namely biomass concentration, chemical reagent dosage, and initial pH, on this biocementation process remains largely unexplored, which in turn influences the precipitation pathway and crystal characteristics, such as quantity, size, and mineralogy, ultimately affecting the overall strength gain. The study conducts laboratory experiments using the Sporosarcina pasteurii bacterium with varying biomass concentrations, ranging from an optical density of 0.25 to 1.00, cementation reagent concentrations varying from 0.25 M to 1.00 M, and initial pH values changing from 7 to 9. This is followed by an optimization scheme aimed at achieving maximum strength gain. Urea hydrolysis and calcite precipitation were monitored through the release of ammonium amount and the concentration of dissolved calcium ions in the cementation solution, respectively. The precipitated biomineral was analyzed for microstructural and mineralogical attributes. Following this, soil biocementation experiments were conducted to arrive at optimized biochemical parameters using statistical regression analysis. Results show that higher biomass accelerates ureolysis, while final calcite quantity mainly depends on reagent availability. Yet, soil strength is not primarily dependent on biomineral quantity; instead, crystal size and morphology are decisive, which are strongly influenced by the coupled interaction of biochemical parameters. A lower biomass concentration, combined with an increased reagent amount, promotes crystal growth. However, an increase in the amount of cementation reagent becomes detrimental to crystal size at higher biomass levels. Moreover, lower pH provides some lag time to the reaction but can also accelerate bacterial growth, thereby altering the crystal size. Furthermore, stable calcite mineral is found to precipitate at lower biomass cementation due to the inhibition of bacterial enzymatic activity. Soil biocementation results revealed that larger crystals bridging the soil pores significantly increase strength, up to 10 MPa from 0.17 MPa, compared to abundant but small-sized crystals. Thus, reaction conditions that favour rapid precipitation can be mechanically ineffective without effective pore bridging, emphasizing that biocementation should focus not only on producing large amounts of biominerals but also on the size of the precipitated crystals. By identifying biochemical thresholds that promote stronger, more interlocked crystals, this work offers guidelines for achieving maximum strength gain with optimised biochemical parameters.

How to cite: Joshi, R., Nikitha, T. R., and Arnepalli, D. N.: Effect of Biochemical Parameters on Biomineral Formation and Soil Strength Development in Microbially Induced Calcite Precipitation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-679, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-679, 2026.

EGU26-1442 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.11

Siliceous deposition and hydrothermal contributions in the Lower Cambrian Yurtus Formation, Tarim Basin 

Jiaqi Li, Zhihong Kang, and Xuemei Zhang

The Lower Cambrian Yurtus Formation in the Tarim Basin preserves important evidence of hydrothermal activity, microbial processes, and seawater chemistry that affected silica deposition and organic matter enrichment during the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition. Using field observations, petrography, redox-sensitive geochemical data, and biomarkers, this study examines how silica formed and what environmental conditions controlled the accumulation of black shales. The Yurtus Formation was deposited on a passive continental margin that was affected by extensional tectonism and occasional hydrothermal discharge. Geochemical data indicate that bottom waters were saline, acidic, and mainly anoxic, and that reducing conditions increased at times when hydrothermal H₂S and other reduced fluids entered the basin.

The siliceous layers show several ways through which silica was added or precipitated. Hydrothermal fluids supplied dissolved silica, while upwelling brought silica-rich deep water and nutrients into the basin. Microbial activity also contributed to silica precipitation. The presence of amorphous silica, barite nodules, and chert–mud alternations, together with microbial mats, radiolarians, and sponge spicules, shows strong interactions between microbes and minerals and the influence of early diagenesis. Acidification caused by hydrothermal gases and microbial metabolism played an important role in forming SiO₂ quickly. Differences between the siliceous units relate to changes in the balance between hydrothermal input and upwelling. Layers rich in phosphate and barite suggest increased nutrient supply and fluid mixing. Continuous barite beds and chert–mud layers also indicate silica delivery from distant volcanic and hydrothermal sources.

Organic-rich shales in the upper Yurtus Formation contain Type I–II kerogen from plankton, algae, and bacteria. Their biomarker features match those of Bashituo oils, showing that the Yurtus Formation is an important regional source rock. These results show that hydrothermal fluids were the main source of silica, and that microbial processes and upwelling influenced how silica and organic matter were preserved.

How to cite: Li, J., Kang, Z., and Zhang, X.: Siliceous deposition and hydrothermal contributions in the Lower Cambrian Yurtus Formation, Tarim Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1442, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1442, 2026.

Ancient stromatolites have experienced substantial alterations in their structure over time due to diagenesis, creating challenges in interpreting these formations and understanding their role in the evolution of life on Earth. To shed some lights on this issue, we examined exceptionally preserved stromatolites from the early Miaolingian-aged (510⁓506 Ma) at Jinzhou Bay section of the Liaoning province, North China Platform. The uppermost part of the early Miaolingian Maozhuang Formation comprises small column-like stromatolites of open tidal-flat sedimentary facies with highstand limestone, distinguishing it from the Maozhuang Formation in the rest of the North China sections, where it predominantly comprises restricted tidal-flat facies i.e., highstand dolostone. The stromatolite matrix primarily comprises dark micrite laminae, along with occasional micrite clumps that indicate the presence of calcified sheaths of filamentous cyanobacteria (Girvanella). The abundance of filamentous cyanobacteria along with pyrite grains indicate the direct microbial evidence in the growth of columnar stromatolites. Furthermore, the matrix of stromatolites represents potential resurgence of stromatolites in a normal marine environment during Miaolingian, which was previously thought as the time interval with relatively low abundance of stromatolites. Further, Girvanella within matrix of columnar stromatolites provide new insights concerning the complex and diverse biological traits of cyanobacteria, including large cell diameters, motility, filamentous growth, sheath evolution, nitrogen fixation, and exact calcification known as a hard life, particularly during the Cambrian period. As a result, the studied stromatolites not only highlight the resurgence and cyanobacterial calcification event associated with the formation of stromatolite, but also distinctive from the lithified discrete stromatolite buildups in Shark Bay's Hamelin Pool, which is dominated by coccoid cyanobacteria and evolved in a low-energy environment.

How to cite: Riaz, M., Mei, M., and Liu, Z.: Girvanella Clumps in Columnar Stromatolites from the Cambrian (Early Miaolingian) of North China: Evidence for Microbial Calcification and a Marine Resurgence, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1525, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1525, 2026.

EGU26-1894 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.11

Molybdenum-dependent nitrogen metabolism drives magnetite formation in magnetotactic bacterium AMB-1. 

Mélissa Garry, Emmanuelle Albalat, Mathieu Touboul, Agnès Dumont, Ramon Egli, Christophe Thomazo, Vincent Balter, Laurent Modolo, Gael Yvert, and Matthieu Amor

Magnetotactic bacteria have the ability to biomineralize intracellular magnetite (Fe3O4) nanoparticles. Resulting biomagnetite can be efficiently preserved in sedimentary rocks and represents past traces of biological activity that can be searched for paleontological and paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Recent work on trace-element incorporation into magnetite has shown that molybdenum exhibits a strong affinity for biomagnetite, with enrichments up to four orders of magnitude higher than in abiotic magnetite. This enrichment likely reflects molybdenum-dependent metabolic processes, such as nitrate reduction during denitrification, which support cellular energy production and contribute directly to magnetite biomineralization.

            Using a combination of molecular, chemical and magnetic approaches, we show that Mo availability directly stimulates growth and magnetite precipitation in the model microorganism Paramagnetospirillum (formerly Magnetospirillum) magneticum AMB-1 under environmental conditions favoring nitrate reduction. These findings demonstrate a functional link between molybdenum, nitrogen metabolism and biomineralization.

            Altogether, our results clarify the central metabolic role of molybdenum in magnetotactic bacteria and propose a mechanistic framework for interpreting the geochemical signatures of biomagnetite in ancient environments where nitrate-bearing oxidized species were present.

How to cite: Garry, M., Albalat, E., Touboul, M., Dumont, A., Egli, R., Thomazo, C., Balter, V., Modolo, L., Yvert, G., and Amor, M.: Molybdenum-dependent nitrogen metabolism drives magnetite formation in magnetotactic bacterium AMB-1., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1894, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1894, 2026.

Gas chimneys within marine sediments function as preferential conduits for focused methane migration, significantly altering early diagenetic stratification and subsequent porewater geochemistry. A critical locus for these biogeochemical transformations is the sulfate–methane transition zone (SMTZ), where the anaerobic oxidation of methane is stoichiometrically coupled with sulfate reduction, regulating sedimentary carbon cycling. This study investigates the regulatory role of chimney-enhanced methane flux and gas hydrate dynamics on SMTZ depth and microbial community architecture within deep-sea sediments (water depths >2,000 m). We combined detailed porewater chemistry measurements, including hydrogen and oxygen isotope ratios of water, with DNA-based community profiling, and compared two chimney cores with a distal non-chimney core. The non-chimney core did not show a clearly defined SMTZ within the recovered interval. In contrast, the chimney cores showed a shallower and narrower SMTZ, consistent with stronger upward methane transport and tighter coupling between methane consumption and sulfate use. At one chimney site, a strong decrease in chlorinity together with shifts in water isotope ratios suggested gas-hydrate dissociation within the sediment. Microbial communities in hydrate-affected sediments were dominated by groups often associated with methane-rich and low-oxygen conditions, and additional increases in taxa linked to diverse carbon use suggest that high methane flow can broaden available energy and carbon pathways. Overall, these results support a feedback pattern in which focused methane transport and hydrate instability change the SMTZ and redox structure, which then shapes microbial community composition and, in turn, the chemical signals preserved in deep-sea sediment records.

How to cite: Han, D., Jang, K., and Kim, J.-H.: Chimney-associated methane migration and hydrate dynamics influence SMTZ structure and microbial communities in deep-sea sediments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2270, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2270, 2026.

EGU26-3977 | Orals | SSP3.11

DOM-Mn redox interactions promote metastable kutnahorite-dolomite carbonate frameworks  

Daniel Petrash, Astolfo Valero, Or Bialik, Yihang Fang, Maartje Hamers, Travis Meador, Oliver Plümper, Tomaso Bontognali, and Michael Ernst Böttcher

The intersection of organic geochemistry and mineralogy offers a critical research niche for understanding the preservation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in marine depositional systems. While reactive metal oxides are recognized for stabilizing organic carbon against remineralization, the mechanisms by which ligands template the conversion of this organic matter into carbonate minerals remain elusive. While pH and redox coupling govern metal speciation and ligand availability, the specific role of carboxyl-rich polysaccharides in catalyzing manganese-mediated carbonate mineralization remains under-constrained. Here, we isolate the role of alginate—a model for carboxylated EPS. To simulate diagenetic redox oscillations, cyclic voltammetry was employed to target the Mn(III)/Mn(II) couple within alginate-bearing Mn-Mg-Ca electrolytes. This electrochemical framework evaluated manganese-driven proton exchange as a mechanism to lower kinetic barriers via stereochemical templating. Rather than functioning as a passive substrate, alginate actively directs a heterogeneous mineralization pathway: it promotes the crystallization of metastable magnesian kutnahorite, bypassing the high kinetic barriers of direct dolomite precipitation. Microstructural analysis (STEM-HAADF/EDS, SAED) reveals that organic-mediated Mn-rich cores template the subsequent epitaxial growth of disordered Mg-Ca carbonate (protodolomite) cortices within just 20 minutes. This "electrochemical Mn-pump" mechanism relies heavily on the specific coordination chemistry of the alginate’s carboxyl groups, which effectively shed the rigid hydration shell of metal cations (specifically Mg2+) via ligand-mineral surface proton exchange. These findings delineate a critical mechanism of organic-mineral interaction, showing that specific (carboxylated) DOM fractions can dictate mineralogical outcomes in low-temperature systems. This work specifically highlights how organic templates may serve as archives of paleo-environmental conditions by locking biogeochemical signatures into fabric-preserving carbonate mineral phases. By establishing a reproducible protocol for generating synthetic organic-carbonate frameworks, this study provides a baseline for future investigations into the stable isotope fractionation that occurs during ligand-mineral interactions in Mn-enriched precipitation environments supersaturated with respect to dolomite and metastable Mn-Ca carbonates, akin to the episodic precipitation events in the Baltic Sea deeps. 

How to cite: Petrash, D., Valero, A., Bialik, O., Fang, Y., Hamers, M., Meador, T., Plümper, O., Bontognali, T., and Böttcher, M. E.: DOM-Mn redox interactions promote metastable kutnahorite-dolomite carbonate frameworks , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3977, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3977, 2026.

EGU26-4853 | Posters on site | SSP3.11

How life affects mineral formation: a reappraisal of concepts and terminology 

Patrick H. Meister and Nereo Preto

Numerous biological factors have been proposed to influence the formation of minerals under Earth-surface conditions, but the underlying concepts are often confused due to inconsistent terminology. The current systematics has largely developed historically, yet remains unclear because several terms have contrasting definitions or are not self-explanatory. Over time, the variety of processes proposed to explain biological effects on mineral formation has expanded, but the mechanisms often remain far from fully resolved and sometimes lack a proof of concept.

Here, a systematic framework of terms is proposed, requiring only slight modifications of the established terminology, primarily by removing some of the non-self-explanatory connotations. For example, the term ‘biologically influenced’ mineral formation better should represent a general ‘influence’ rather than a specific mechanism. In turn, ‘biologically induced’ should be used in its original meaning as ‘driven by supersaturation’. New terms such as ‘biologically nucleated’ and ‘biologically mediated’ precipitation would more precisely describe the specific mechanisms where organisms or biogenic organic substances act as a nucleation substrate or as a catalyst facilitating mineral growth from already supersaturated solution.

The proposed scheme would necessitate minimal intervention into existing terminology and at the same time become more user friendly for broad application in sedimentology and biogeosciences. Establishing a coherent and canonical terminology will not only improve clarity but also provide a common ground for future research on how biological and abiotic factors influence mineral formation under Earth-surface conditions.

How to cite: Meister, P. H. and Preto, N.: How life affects mineral formation: a reappraisal of concepts and terminology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4853, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4853, 2026.

EGU26-9549 | Orals | SSP3.11

Post-glacial development of marine conditions on the Scotian Shelf inferred from pore water profiles and reaction-transport modeling 

Mark Zindorf, Andrew Dale, Henriette Kolling, Sophie Paul, Paula Luiza Fraga Ferreira, and Florian Scholz

The Scotian Shelf on the northwest Atlantic Margin is located at the confluence of two important components of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). The southward flowing Labrador Current supplies cold, oxygen rich waters and the northward flowing Gulf Stream delivers warm, nutrient rich waters low in O2. Their mixing allows the establishment of a productive marine ecosystem. The relative influence of the current systems is governed by northern hemispheric climate patterns, such as the overall AMOC strength and the North Atlantic Oscillation mode. However, the exact atmospheric and oceanographic mechanisms are still under debate. Due to this knowledge gap regarding the climate-bioproductivity feedback, a deeper insight into the biogeochemical evolution of the region since the Holocene is an important aspect for understanding North Atlantic climate and circulation.

On the Scotian Shelf, glacially eroded basins are separated from the open ocean by shallower sills on the outer shelf. Using solid phase and pore water geochemical data from three eight- to twelve-metre-long sediment cores, in combination with reaction-transport modelling, we reconstructed carbon and sulfur cycling at the seafloor along the Scotian Shelf since the last deglaciation. Chloride profiles imply that the basins were filled with freshwater during the earliest phase of the deglaciation. Due to the absence of sulfate reduction in freshwater sediments, reactive Fe oxides escaped pyritization during deposition of the deepest sediment layers. Between 14 and 8 ka BP, a combination of eustatic sea-level rise and isostatic adjustment led to marine transgression and the establishment of fully marine conditions on the shelf, accompanied by increased organic matter deposition and burial. Modelled anaerobic oxidation of methane coupled to reduction of iron oxide minerals in deeper sediment layers in the present day alludes to a geochemical fingerprint of the formerly prevailing freshwater conditions in the shelf basins.  

Our data and model outcomes allow us to pinpoint the timing of marine transgression for three individual basins along the Scotian Shelf and reconstruct the corresponding evolution of contemporary biogeochemical conditions. We conclude that the diagenetic conditions in Scotia Shelf sediments evolved in a similar manner to those described previously for marginal seas with restricted exchange with the open ocean, such as the Baltic Sea.

How to cite: Zindorf, M., Dale, A., Kolling, H., Paul, S., Fraga Ferreira, P. L., and Scholz, F.: Post-glacial development of marine conditions on the Scotian Shelf inferred from pore water profiles and reaction-transport modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9549, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9549, 2026.

EGU26-9849 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP3.11

Diagenetic processes in fjord sediments of Southern Iceland – A complex interplay of organic matter respiration and submarine silicate weathering 

Katrin Wagner, Christian März, Sebastiaan J. van de Velde, Astrid Hylén, Sandra Arndt, Per O. J. Hall, Silvia Hidalgo-Martinez, Mikhail Kononets, Filip J. R. Meysman, Piet Reyniers, Lotte Verweirder, and Katharine R. Hendry

The chemical weathering of mafic magmatic rocks (e.g., basalt) is known to remove CO2 from the atmosphere, transforming it into dissolved or solid inorganic carbon phases. Natural marine sediments contain a wide variety of organic and inorganic phases as well as microbial communities impacting the “submarine weathering engine”, e.g., increasing weathering potential by lowering ambient pH, or decreasing the CO2 removal potential by forming authigenic clay minerals. Environments rich in reactive organic matter, mafic silicate minerals, and amorphous silica (e.g., ash, biogenic opal) reflect this natural complexity, and can serve as natural laboratories for understanding what controls submarine silicate weathering. Icelandic fjords with their high primary productivity and their mafic hinterland can serve as examples for these complex conditions. We present geochemical sediment and pore water data down to 5 m sediment depth from Hvalfjörður (SW Iceland) and Reyðarfjörður (SE Iceland) taken during the 2023 DEHEAT research cruise onboard RV Belgica. Our data show intense diagenesis that is both related to organic matter degradation and to submarine silicate weathering. The relatively uniform sedimentary material is fine-grained and particularly rich in iron, titanium and magnesium compared to average shale. Tentative sedimentation rates of about 0.5 cm/yr and organic carbon ranging between ~0.5 and 2.5 wt% with a dominantly marine origin based on TOC/TN ratios indicate an accumulation environment providing large amounts of highly reactive organic matter. Sulphate-methane transition zones are established at 75-100 cm sediment depth, but pore water alkalinity and DIC linearly increase to, and probably beyond, the deepest samples. Below the SMTZ, Ikaite crystals are found at various depths throughout the sediments of both fjords. Pore water profiles e.g. of dissolved silica and lithium show undulating downcore structures hinting both at silicate dissolution, but also at clay mineral formation. The data altogether provides insight into a complex interplay of dissolution and precipitation processes tied to the geology of the area, accumulation characteristics and the availability and respiration of organic matter.

How to cite: Wagner, K., März, C., van de Velde, S. J., Hylén, A., Arndt, S., Hall, P. O. J., Hidalgo-Martinez, S., Kononets, M., Meysman, F. J. R., Reyniers, P., Verweirder, L., and Hendry, K. R.: Diagenetic processes in fjord sediments of Southern Iceland – A complex interplay of organic matter respiration and submarine silicate weathering, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9849, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9849, 2026.

EGU26-10930 | Posters on site | SSP3.11

Barite precipitation in freshwater limnic sediments: a proxy for salinization 

Patricia Roeser, Michael E. Böttcher, Laura Lapham, Stan Halas, Chloé Pretet, Thomas F. Nägler, Manolo Prieto, Ulrich Struck, and Hermann Huckriede

The diagenetic precipitation of barite (BaSO4) in sediments requires the mobilisation and sources of dissolved barium and sulfate, the latter often limited in the sulfur cycling of lacustrine systems. In this study, we investigate the origin and proxy potential of barite that has crystallised in freshwater sediments of the Baltic Sea. Barite nodules with up to millimetre-scale grain sizes are found in the glacial varved clays of the limnic Baltic Ice Lake phase (>16 to 11.7 ka BP), underlying brackish Holocene muds. We have comprehensively analysed the solid phase of the host sediments and the barite, and the porewaters in the respective sediments, both, geochemically and isotopically for the signatures of sulphur, barium, oxygen, and also the related carbon cycling. The sulphur isotope signatures preserved in the barites display a remarkable downward gradient from the lithological boundary between the brackish Holocene sediments and the preceding limnic varved clay deposits. The sulphur isotope signature of different mineral components (marcasite, pyrite and barite) shows that the porewater sulphur reservoir was initially affected by microbial sulphate reduction. Aside from the smaller importance of bacterial activity in the glacial clays, the observed trend sustains an isotope discrimination upon solid phase formation, or minor fractions of isotopically light sulphur that may have been incorporated upon crystallisation at depth. It had been hypothesised that sulphate for barite precipitation originated from the postglacial connection of the Baltic Sea with the Atlantic Sea, that has led to brackish waters flowing into the different Baltic Sea basins and downward diffusion of sulphate and other dissolved constituents through the sediment column. Taken together, the observed changes in barite surface texture and Sr composition, as well as isotope signatures (Ba, S, O isotopes), indicate changes in the supersaturation and composition of the paleo-porewater fluids and the crystal growth rate, supporting the concept of a paleo-salinisation gradient that is geochemically imprinted in the barites up to date. Moreover, we explore the oxygen isotope signature in the barite as a proxy for the parent porewater fluids, and show that the pore waters at this site with low sedimentation rates have been completely modified to date by diffusional processes, in contrast to sites with higher sedimentation rates (IODP cores) that still retain the original porewater signature.

This investigation outlines that diagenetic barites in limnic sediments can evidence past salinization events, and furthermore, how the isotope signature of individual barite constituents can be used infer the parental fluid composition. This abstract summarises a detailed investigation recently published in a Special Publication (Roeser et al., 2025).

Roeser P., Böttcher M.E., Lapham L.L., Halas S., Pretet C., Nägler T., Prieto M., Struck U., Huckriede H. (2025) Barite in Baltic freshwater sediments crystallises in a diffusive salinisation gradient, 370-395; In: Nucleation and Growth of Sedimentary Minerals (Eds P.H. Meister, C. Fischer and N. Preto), International Association of Sedimentology, Special Publication, 50

How to cite: Roeser, P., Böttcher, M. E., Lapham, L., Halas, S., Pretet, C., Nägler, T. F., Prieto, M., Struck, U., and Huckriede, H.: Barite precipitation in freshwater limnic sediments: a proxy for salinization, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10930, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10930, 2026.

Soft, unlithified sediments recovered from modern lakes rarely offer clear evidence of diagenetic alterations. Recent work has documented products of early diagenesis in the deep lacustrine setting of Lake Van. Lake Van, cored in 2010 in the frame of the ICDP PALEOVAN project, is a terminal, alkaline lake in Eastern Anatolia, Turkey (McCormack & Kwiecien, 2021). The lake carbonate inventory consists of (1) primary phases: inorganic calcite and aragonite precipitating in surface water, and low-Mg calcite ostracod valves formed at the sediment-water interface; and (2) secondary phases: early diagenetic dolomite forming in the sediment pores and aragonite encrustation of ostracod valves and organic remains.  Here we focus on aragonite encrustations.

Encrusted grains appear episodically in Lake Van sediments younger than 270 ka, and their occurrence is restricted to two lithologies; homogenous and banded muds, representing lake low-stands, reduced primary productivity/preservation and a well-ventilated water column. Although lake level changes occurred in the past, the water depth of the coring site – today at 350 m – unlikely fell below 200 m.

SEM and thin section analyses of the as yet enigmatic encrustations show two generations of aragonite crystals; larger (10 – 20 μm), columnar to blocky ones (inside the closed valves) and a magnitude smaller (1 – 2 μm), columnar ones (outside the valves) intercalated with clay minerals and probably organic matter. The isotopic composition of encrusted valves contrasts with that of inorganic carbonates precipitating in the water column; higher δ18O values support a formation in cold bottom water, higher δ13C values are likely related to microbial activity, however, the nature of this relation is yet unclear. Encrusted valves are often articulated but display different stages of opening. As ostracod valves usually disarticulate within hours to days after the animal’s demise, semi-open valves suggest that the early diagenetic process was – in geological terms – extremely rapid.

Our finding calls for care and attention analyzing even sub-recent biogenic carbonates. The episodic and facies-bound occurrence suggests that encrustation is ultimately controlled by environmental factors, yet so far, we were unable to pinpoint these factors or a mechanism responsible for this process. If you are intrigued just like us, do get in touch!  

 

References

McCormack & Kwiecien, 2021. Coeval primary and diagenetic carbonates in lacustrine sediments challenge palaeoclimate interpretations. Scientific Reports    

How to cite: Kwiecien, O. and McCormack, J.:  Did you say ‘fast’? Mysterious early diagenesis in sub-recent lacustrine sediments of Lake Van, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13965, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13965, 2026.

EGU26-14720 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.11

Microbialite morphogenesis controls arsenic incorporation as a chemical biosignature 

Clément G.L. Pollier, R. Pamela Reid, Erica P. Suosaari, Brooke E. Vitek, Christophe Dupraz, and Amanda M. Oehlert

Arsenic enrichment patterns are recognized as chemical biosignatures in microbialites, reflecting biologically mediated trace element cycling that can persist in the geological record. However, microbialites are not a uniform archive for chemical biosignatures because they exhibit a wide range of morphologies, internal fabrics, and accretion mechanisms, even within the same depositional system. How this variability in initial microbialite morphogenesis influences microbially influenced trace element incorporation and long-term preservation of associated chemical biosignatures remains largely unconstrained, limiting our ability to interpret arsenic enrichments in both modern and ancient microbialites.

Here, we investigated how microbialite morphogenesis controls arsenic enrichment patterns using actively accreting microbialites from Hamelin Pool, Shark Bay, Western Australia. We integrated petrographic characterization with sequential leaching experiments and elemental analyses to quantify arsenic concentrations of organic matter, micrite, and trapped-and-bound sedimentary fractions among microbialites with contrasting morphologies (sheet mats versus discrete buildups), fabrics (laminated versus clotted), and accretion mechanisms (micritic versus agglutinated). Our results show that arsenic enrichment patterns vary systematically with aspects of microbialite morphogenesis1. Specific trends in arsenic enrichment patterns arise from variable contributions of microbial activity, sedimentary inputs, and seawater chemistry, the relative importance of which is controlled by microbialite morphology, fabric, and accretion mechanism.

Consequently, arsenic enrichment patterns are not universal chemical biosignatures, but context-dependent archives of biological activity shaped by microbialite morphogenesis. By explicitly linking morphology, fabric, and accretion mechanism to arsenic incorporation pathways, this study provides a framework for interpreting arsenic enrichments in modern and ancient microbialites, and for distinguishing biological signals from environmental and sedimentary contributions. More broadly, because microbialite morphogenesis governs the relative contributions of organic matter, authigenic carbonate, and trapped sediment, the same architectural controls are likely to influence the incorporation and preservation of other trace elements commonly used as chemical biosignatures through geological time.

1. Pollier, C. G. L. et al. Arsenic enrichment patterns are defined by microbialite morphology, fabric, and accretion mechanism. Nature Communications 16, 10218 (2025).

How to cite: Pollier, C. G. L., Reid, R. P., Suosaari, E. P., Vitek, B. E., Dupraz, C., and Oehlert, A. M.: Microbialite morphogenesis controls arsenic incorporation as a chemical biosignature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14720, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14720, 2026.

Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event (NOE) is significant oxidation of surface Earth environment on the eve of the origin of metazoan. Marine oxygenation of NOE, supported by multiple redox-sensitive proxies, is suggested to start in the interglacial period of Cryogenian snowball Earth ice ages. Paleoenvironmental conditions before Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event were recorded in marine deposits in late Tonian ocean. We investigated marine authigenic mineral assemblages in fine-grained siliciclastic successions (<758 Ma), below Sturtian-age Chang’an diamictite (i.e., >720 Ma), deposited in deep-water basin, in South China. The authigenic mineral assemblages, occur as lenticular concretion, consist of sparry calcite, equant Fe-Mn-dolomite, and radial barite fans. There is sharp contact between Fe-rich zone and Mg-rich zone in the equant dolomites. The carbonate isotopes of authigenic carbonate minerals yield a highly 13C-depleted variation range from -15‰ to -20‰ (relative to V-PDB). In addition, there is scarce pyrite in concretion and host rock of siltstone whereas radial barite fans exist closely with dolomite. The barites yield consistent δ34S values of ~+27.5‰ (relative to V-CDT). The results suggest that there was possibly significant Fe-Mn reduction-driven organic oxidation in early-diagenetic sediment under a bottom-water condition beneficial to the formation of manganese and iron oxidant/hydroxide. Moreover, the occurrence of authigenic sulfate with modern seawater-like δ34S is interpreted as the consequence of widespread sulfide re-oxidation at late-Tonian seafloor. We link authigenic mineral assemblage with sporadic seafloor oxidation in deep-water basin before Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event.

How to cite: Wang, Z., Liu, C., and Yang, J.: Pre-NOE seafloor oxidation archived in authigenic mineral assemblage in late Tonian marine sediments, South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16678, 2026.

EGU26-20427 | Posters on site | SSP3.11

Biofilm and carbonate trace metals as biomarkers : tentatively tracking enzymatic pathways in geobiological objects  

Daniel Ariztegui, Camille Thomas, Christophe Thomazo, Johanna Marin-Carbonne, Julien Alleon, Amotz Agnon, Nuphar Gedulter, Kadda Medjoubi, Stephanie Sorieul, and Caroline Thaler

The redox evolution of Earth and the evolution of life are tightly coupled through the progressive bioavailability of transition metals. As microbial metabolisms emerged and diversified, newly available metals were incorporated into oxydoreductase enzymes, reshaping global biogeochemical cycles and the redox state of the atmosphere and oceans. This evolutionary history is preserved in microbial metallomes, which record the metals integrated into metabolic nanomachinery over geological time and thus provide potential proxies for paleo-metabolic reconstructions.

Here, we imaged trace-metal distributions in commercial enzymes, modern carbonate spherules from microbial mats of the Dead Sea shores, and Archean mineralized biofilms from the 2.72 Ga Tumbiana formation using synchrotron-based XRF and particle-induced X-ray emission (PIXE), and integrate sedimentological, mineralogical, and geochemical constraints to infer the nature of the microbial metabolisms involved. Beyond this comparative approach, we aim to assess whether mineralized microbial systems retain diagnostic signatures of ancient metabolic pathways and redox conditions.

In practice, trace-metal measurements in enzymes are feasible, as demonstrated by our synchrotron-based analyses of carbonic anhydrase and associated calcium carbonate, which show systematic Zn enrichment. In modern arsenic-rich microbial mats from the Dead Sea, carbonate (aragonite) spherules and needles are enriched in Sr and Ni, likely linking carbonate precipitation to urease activity, which contains two Ni²⁺ ions per active site. Despite strong arsenic enrichment in the extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) driven by seasonal arsenic pulses in spring waters (Thomas et al., 2024), arsenic is excluded from the carbonate crystal lattice. In arsenic-rich Tumbiana stromatolitic laminae, PIXE analyses of layers containing nanopyrite and carbonaceous matter reveal complex but potentially syngenetic metal distributions. Multivariate discrimination identifies metal signatures in carbonaceous horizons dominated by As, Cu, and Mo. Taking into account both passive abiotic metal enrichment and previous interpreted metabolic signatures inferred for  the Tumbiana Formation stromatolites (i.e.  arsenic reduction and oxidation, nitrification and denitrification, sulfate reduction, anaerobic oxidation of methane ; Marin-Carbonne et al., 2018; Sforna et al., 2014; Thomazo et al., 2011) metallomic signatures may be in agreement with microbial arsenic and nitrogen cycling (Sforna et al., 2014). Given the complexity and different nature of metal accumulation in those enzymes, carbonates or modern and fossilized biofilms, extracting a metabolic signature associated to a metallome remains elusive without integrating lab-based approaches. Further work is therefore needed to constrain metal circulation and immobilization in organic matter (EPS, biofilm) and mineralizing phases to better assess biosignatures associated to metals and their isotopes in such objects.

Marin-Carbonne et al. (2018). Sulfur isotope’s signal of nanopyrites enclosed in 2.7 Ga stromatolitic organic remains reveal microbial sulfate reduction. Geobiology, 16(2), 121–138. 

Sforna et al. (2014). Evidence for arsenic metabolism and cycling by microorganisms 2.7 billion years ago. Nature Geoscience, 7(11), 811–815. 

Thomas et al. (2024). Combined Genomic and Imaging Techniques Show Intense Arsenic Enrichment Caused by Detoxification in a Microbial Mat of the Dead Sea Shore. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 25(3), e2023GC011239. 

Thomazo et al., (2011). Extreme 15N-enrichments in 2.72-Gyr-old sediments: Evidence for a turning point in the nitrogen cycle. Geobiology, 9(2), 107–120.

 

How to cite: Ariztegui, D., Thomas, C., Thomazo, C., Marin-Carbonne, J., Alleon, J., Agnon, A., Gedulter, N., Medjoubi, K., Sorieul, S., and Thaler, C.: Biofilm and carbonate trace metals as biomarkers : tentatively tracking enzymatic pathways in geobiological objects , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20427, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20427, 2026.

EGU26-20592 | ECS | Orals | SSP3.11

Early diagenetic evolution of shelly phosphorites: REE signatures traced by LA-ICP-MS mapping 

Sophie Graul, Vincent Monchal, Paul Guyett, Rémi Rateau, Andre Gregor, Nata-Ly Pantšenko, and Rutt Hints

Sedimentary phosphorites are the primary sources of nitrogen-phosphorus-potassium fertilisers, and they have recently been highlighted as a potential economic source of rare earth elements (REE). The growing need for clean technologies strongly influences the demand for REE, and in Europe, most deposits have not been investigated in detail since the 1970-1980s.

Lower-Ordovician shelly phosphorites in Estonia are among Europe's most extensive phosphate rock reserves, with a tonnage of approximately three billion tons. The ore consists of sandstone rich in phosphatic brachiopod fragments deposited in a shallow marine peritidal environment of the Baltic Paleobasin. Mineralisation is carried out carbonate fluorapatite (CFA), an apatite with a highly diverse chemical composition [Ca10-a-bNaaMgb(PO4)6-x(CO3)x-y-z(CO3⋅F)x-y-z(SO4)zF2]. The shells themselves are complex objects, with apatite originating from the crystallisation of organic tissues and the precipitation of secondary phosphate during sediment burial. The partitioning and uptake of the individual REEs in them depend on many factors, including input from marine sources, the oxygenation state of the sedimentary column, and the precursors carriers phases of REEs that may have different affinities for each rare earth.

In the REMHub project, investigations were conducted on three deposits: Toolse, Aseri, and Ülgase; representing a dataset of 630 ablations up to date. The LA-ICP-MS imaging technique developed by Drost (2018), addressed elemental distribution as raster maps, allowing identification and discrimination by integrating semi-quantitative data through elements' stepwise distribution. Diagenetic stages and compositions were evaluated using the following pathfinders as pooling channels. Sr, U, and Ce. 

On average, apatites present homogeneous REE patterns, MREE-enriched up to 15-folds compared to PAAS, with Y-Ce anomalies indicative of early-digenetic overprinting.  However, the degree of overprint varied. In Ülgase, authigenic concretions and shells presented depleted REE signals, close to coastal signature. However, concretions showed a lower enrichment (∑REE 400-800ppm) compared to shells (REE 1500-3000 ppm). In Toolse, shells presented intermediate recrystallised textures, with Sr-U-depleted stages allowing the tracing of pristine signals, and U-rich stages presenting marked Gd-U and La anomalies. The average REE grade is 1966ppm. In Aseri, U-sorting reveals a second, alteration-driven enrichment in which the fragment edges present a ΣREE up to 12 754ppm (120 folds).

Overall, investigations demonstrated a progressive evolution of REE signals during early diagenesis, highly influenced by redox cycles in shallow sediments, authigenic recrystallisation, organic matter decomposition within the shells, and possibly late distal alteration fluids.

 

 

 

How to cite: Graul, S., Monchal, V., Guyett, P., Rateau, R., Gregor, A., Pantšenko, N.-L., and Hints, R.: Early diagenetic evolution of shelly phosphorites: REE signatures traced by LA-ICP-MS mapping, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20592, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20592, 2026.

Mineral surfaces can be considered fascinating records of geochemical environments. Microscopic surface features, such as growth spirals, etch pits, macrosteps, twinning, and intergrowths, reveal the history of their formation and alteration. Nanoparticles and micro-size particles can often have diverse and rich morphology in some cases resembling living organisms. Bacteria and other organisms often leave morphological signatures of their presence as etch pits, incrusting precipitates, stromatolites, or other fossilized forms. In order to understand which structures can be read as biogenic or abiotic, it is necessary to consider different molecular-scale scenarios leading to their development.

Kinetic modelling of mineral-water interaction provides important insights into the mechanistic relationships between mineral structure, water chemical composition, and morphological surface features. In this talk, I will show mechanisms and pathways for etch pit formation, crystal and biomorph growth, derived from my kinetic Monte Carlo and Cellular Automata simulations. I will also discuss bacterial etch pit tracers and their formation mechanisms.

References:

 Kurganskaya, I., 2024. Dissolution Mechanisms and Surface Charge of Clay Mineral Nanoparticles: Insights from Kinetic Monte Carlo Simulations. Minerals 14, 900. https://doi.org/10.3390/min14090900

Kurganskaya, I., Churakov, S.V., 2018. Carbonate Dissolution Mechanisms in the Presence of Electrolytes Revealed by Grand Canonical and Kinetic Monte Carlo Modeling. J. Phys. Chem. C 122, 29285–29297. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b08986

Kurganskaya, I., Luttge, A., 2021. Mineral Dissolution Kinetics: Pathways to Equilibrium. ACS Earth Space Chem. 5, 1657–1673. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.1c00017

Kurganskaya, I., Luttge, A., 2013a. Kinetic Monte Carlo Simulations of Silicate Dissolution: Model Complexity and Parametrization. J. Phys. Chem. C 117, 24894–24906. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp408845m

Kurganskaya, I., Luttge, A., 2013b. A comprehensive stochastic model of phyllosilicate dissolution: Structure and kinematics of etch pits formed on muscovite basal face. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 120, 545–560. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2013.06.038

García-Ruiz, J.M., 2023. Biomorphs, in: Encyclopedia of Astrobiology. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 395–399. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-65093-6_5464

García-Ruiz, J.M., Nakouzi, E., Kotopoulou, E., Tamborrino, L., Steinbock, O., 2017. Biomimetic mineral self-organization from silica-rich spring waters. Science Advances 3, e1602285. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1602285

 

How to cite: Kurganskaya, I.: Kinetic modelling of mineral dissolution and growth: biomorph formation, surface morphologies, and bacterial tracers, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20837, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20837, 2026.

EGU26-21542 | Posters on site | SSP3.11

  Iron oxidation and associated structural alterations in K-bearing minerals: How do they impact K phytoavailability in soils? 

Atsushi Nakao, Ayano Nakajima, Toshihiro Kogure, and Junta Yanai

Potassium (K) is ubiquitous in soils and has therefore received much less attention in modern edaphology compared with nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P). However, the need to elucidate the phytoavailability of native soil K has recently been re-emphasized due to the rising cost of K fertilizers. Although native soil K largely occurs in minerals in immobile forms, biotite—a trioctahedral mica containing iron (Fe) and magnesium (Mg) in the octahedral sheet—can release K more rapidly than other K-bearing minerals. Octahedral Fe in biotite, originally present as ferrous iron (Fe²+), is oxidized to ferric iron (Fe³+). This Fe oxidation is hypothesized to cause two opposing effects on K retention. If the oxidized Fe³+ remains in the trioctahedral structure, the reduced layer charge may weaken K retention in the interlayer. Conversely, if part of the oxidized Fe³+ is released from the octahedral sheet, the structure shifts from a trioctahedral to a dioctahedral type, which may strengthen interlayer K retention. Although both mechanisms have been proposed, no direct evidence has been provided to date. The objective of this study was to determine how Fe oxidation in biotite influences K retention in the interlayer.

Biotite (2–50 µm) was first treated with sodium (Na) tetraphenylborate solution to replace most interlayer K with Na. The Na-biotite was then reacted with H2O2 at molar ratios of 0, 0.1, 0.5, and 10 relative to structural Fe, resulting in Fe³⁺ proportions of 6%, 30%, 69%, and 92%, respectively. These oxidized Na-biotite samples were subsequently washed several times with KCl solution to refill the interlayer with K, yielding biotite samples with varying degrees of Fe oxidation. Their atomic arrangements were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Iron speciation was examined using selective dissolution analysis and Mössbauer spectroscopy. The release rate of interlayer K from biotite was evaluated using a resin extraction method.

XRD 060 reflections clearly showed a gradual shift from tri- to dioctahedral structures with increasing Fe³+ proportions, which was also supported by shifts in the OH absorption bands in the FTIR spectra. Although we initially assumed that this alteration would strengthen interlayer K retention, the oxidized and dioctahedral biotite released K more rapidly than the less oxidized samples. The weaker K retention after Fe oxidation could not be explained solely by changes in the octahedral sheet structure. TEM analysis revealed that highly oxidized biotite exhibited partially expanded interlayer spaces, which were likely filled with Fe hydroxides.

We concluded that Fe oxidation not only modifies the octahedral sheet structure but also promotes the formation of Fe hydroxides within the interlayer, leading to weakened K retention and enhanced K release from biotite.

How to cite: Nakao, A., Nakajima, A., Kogure, T., and Yanai, J.:   Iron oxidation and associated structural alterations in K-bearing minerals: How do they impact K phytoavailability in soils?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21542, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21542, 2026.

The precipitate dolomite under Earth surface conditions has been a longstanding problem in geology. Many experiments have been performed under different conditions using a wide range of additives, including different precursor minerals, such as aragonite, organic matter, bacteria, and more recently also sulphide, microbial expopolymeric substances, or clay minerals. At the same time, a study by Gregg et al. (2015) revealed that many of these experiments exhibit no ordering peaks (c-reflections) characteristic of ordered dolomite. The c-reflections are specific for the R-3 symmetry of dolomite showing cation ordering. If the ordering reflections are missing, the mineral exhibits an R-3c symmetry typical of calcite, even if the cations Ca2+ and Mg2+ occur in a near to 1:1 stoichiometric ratio – this mineral is informally called “Very high Mg-calcite” or “protodolomite”. Gregg et al. (2015) revealed that the ordering peaks have been misinterpreted in several experimental studies, and that they may in fact represent peaks of other phases, such as phosphates. Here we revisit the discussion initiated by Gregg et al. (2015), suggesting an alternative origin for the reflection at 34.7° 2theta, i.e. at the position where the 015-ordering reflection of dolomite would be expected.

A diffraction peak occurs around 34.6° 2theta in a wide range of clay minerals, such as illite, smectites, and kaolinite. While clay minerals usually exhibit only very broad baseline elevations rather than distinct peaks at higher 2theta angles, the peak seems to amplify by superposition of diffraction patterns if multiple clay minerals are present, giving rise to a sharp peak. This has been recognised in natural shale samples from Pierre Shale (South Dakota, USA; Schultz, 1964) containing a variety of different clay minerals.

In conclusion, caution must be taken in dolomite precipitation experiments if clay-rich sediment is added as a carbonate-free matrix or nucleation substrate, where the XRD reflections of clay minerals may indeed mimic the 015-ordering reflection of dolomite within 0.1° 2theta. This essentially would leave the finding of ordered dolomite unconfirmed.

Gregg, J.M., Bish, D.L., Kaczmarek, S.E. and Machel, H.G. (2015) Mineralogy, nucleation and growth of dolomite in the laboratory and sedimentary environment: a review. Sedimentology, 62, 1749–1769.

Schultz, L.G. (1964) Quantitative interpretation of mineralogical composition from x-ray and chemical data for the pierre shale. Geological Survey Professional Paper 391-C. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402.

How to cite: Gier, S. and Meister, P.: An X-ray diffraction signal common to a wide range of clay minerals can mimic the 015-ordering reflection of dolomite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22356, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22356, 2026.

EGU26-449 | ECS | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Flow direction and internal structure of Seaward Dipping Reflectors along the Mid-Norwegian Volcanic Margin 

Pradyut Phukon, Amar Agarwal, Natalia Varela, Mamilla Venkateshwarlu, and Eric C. Ferré

The Mid-Norwegian margin hosts a thick volcanic succession of break-up–related basalts forming the seaward-dipping reflectors (SDRs). We investigated the magnetic fabric of basalts sampled from the feather edge of inner SDR packages. Azimuthally unoriented samples were collected during International Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 396, from three sites along the margin from Kolga High in the south to the Skoll High in the north. Rock magnetic characterization suggests the presence of pseudo-singe domain Ti-magnetite as the main remanence carrier in the basalt. Our results show that the AMS in SDR basalt primarily reflects distribution anisotropy arising from subhedral/euhedral Ti-magnetite grains enclosed within an early-formed silicate framework.

The direction of natural remanent magnetization (NRM) preserved in the basalts is used to reorient the specimens into their in-situ orientation, allowing interpretation of the AMS fabric in a geographic coordinate system. Reoriented magnetic fabrics show systematic alignment with independent flow indicators.

Individual lava flows exhibit a strong zonation of magnetic fabric, characterized by oppositely dipping foliations in the top and basal parts. The opposing pair of foliations is attributed to flow-induced shear strain that is effective in the distal parts, away from the eruption centre, once a semi-solid / solid upper crust is developed. Imbricated magnetic foliations developed at the base of individual flows are used to decipher the lava flow direction, which indicates a consistently landward-directed lava transport towards the south. AMS-derived flow directions are also supported by seismic images, which show subvertical dyke swarms at the seaward edge of the inner SDR in the north, that likely served as feeders to the thick basaltic succession.

How to cite: Phukon, P., Agarwal, A., Varela, N., Venkateshwarlu, M., and Ferré, E. C.: Flow direction and internal structure of Seaward Dipping Reflectors along the Mid-Norwegian Volcanic Margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-449, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-449, 2026.

EGU26-587 | ECS | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Shock Effects on Magnetic Remanence in Rocks from the Dhala Impact Structure, India 

Ambrish Kumar Pandey, Amar Agarwal, Satish J. Sangode, and Gaurav Joshi

Impact-generated shock waves can modify the remanence properties of magnetic minerals in target rocks, but their effects remain poorly understood. This study examines shock-induced modifications in the magnetic properties of both unshocked lithologies and impactites at the Dhala impact structure in India. The structure formed during the Paleoproterozoic (2.5–1.7 Ga) and lies within the Bundelkhand craton of the Indian Shield, with an original diameter of ~11 km. The unshocked target lithologies are primarily granitoid, while two types of impactites, impact melt rock and monomict breccia, are prominently exposed at the surface. Primary magnetic carriers are multidomain (MD) Ti-poor magnetite in unshocked rocks; pseudo–single-domain (PSD) Ti-magnetite with minor Ti-hematite and pyrrhotite in impact melt rock; and pseudo–single-domain to single-domain (PSD–SD) Ti-magnetite with minor Ti-hematite in monomict breccia (Pandey et al., 2026). To evaluate coercivity spectra, domain state, and remanence efficiency, alternating field (AF) demagnetization, isothermal remanent magnetization (IRM), and anhysteretic remanent magnetization (ARM) experiments were conducted on unshocked granitoid rocks and on impactites.

AF demagnetization results reveal distinct magnetic decay patterns among the lithologies. Unshocked rocks exhibit a peak in magnetization intensity at 10 mT, likely due to removal of a low-coercivity antiparallel component, followed by gradual decay, with median destructive field (MDF) values of ~20–60 mT and 65–90% loss of magnetization at 100 mT. Impact melt rocks exhibit smoother decay trends, with MDFs ranging from 10 to 40 mT, corresponding to 75–98% loss of magnetization at 100 mT. In contrast, monomict breccia displays the most unstable behavior with fluctuating magnetization intensity, often retaining >50% of remanence at 100 mT. The average mass-normalized saturation IRM1000mT values vary systematically among lithologies, with the lowest (4.18×10-3 Am2 kg-1) in monomict breccia, intermediate (1.11×10-2 Am2 kg-1) in impact melt rocks, and the highest (6.7×10-1 Am2 kg-1) in unshocked rocks. Average mass-normalized ARM values follow a similar trend, with the lowest (2.18×10-6 Am2 kg-1) in monomict breccia, intermediate (3.65×10-5 Am2 kg-1) in impact melt rocks, and the highest (1.03×10-2 Am2 kg-1) in unshocked rocks.

Together, these results demonstrate a progressive reduction in remanence acquisition capacity and magnetic stability from unshocked rocks to monomict breccia. Overall, the findings highlight that impact-generated shock waves significantly modify the domain state, coercivity spectrum, and remanence efficiency of the target rocks.

Reference: Pandey, A. K., Agarwal, A., Joshi, G., Sangode, S., & Venkateshwarlu, M. (2026). Shock demagnetization in an ambient magnetic field at the Dhala impact structure, India. Communications Earth & Environment. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-03164-6

How to cite: Pandey, A. K., Agarwal, A., Sangode, S. J., and Joshi, G.: Shock Effects on Magnetic Remanence in Rocks from the Dhala Impact Structure, India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-587, 2026.

EGU26-1428 | ECS | Orals | EMRP3.2

 Micromagnetic constraints on Pullaiah curves for magnetite 

Ualisson Donardelli Bellon, Wyn Williams, Lesleis Nagy, and Adrian R. Muxworthy

Fifty years ago, Pullaiah et. al (1975) derived temperature-dependent relaxation curves for single-domain (SD) magnetite, which have since been widely applied to a range of paleomagnetic problems. However, ideal SD behaviour is restricted to a narrow particle-size range. Most of the stable geological remanence carried by magnetite is instead held by vortex-state particles, for which SD theory fails to provide an adequate description. This study presents new numerical results for micromagnetically determined, temperature-dependent relaxation curves for submicron oblate, prolate and equidimensional cuboctahedral magnetite particles from 45-200 nm, with varying elongations. MERRILL was used to compute local energy-minimum (LEM) states over the full temperature range from 20 to 579 °C, and the nudged elastic band (NEB) method was employed to obtain energy barriers for use in Néel–Arrhenius estimates of relaxation times. The resulting relaxation curves are analysed and compared with the classical Pullaiah curves, highlighting the implications for interpreting paleomagnetic records carried by vortex-state particles.

How to cite: Donardelli Bellon, U., Williams, W., Nagy, L., and Muxworthy, A. R.:  Micromagnetic constraints on Pullaiah curves for magnetite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1428, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1428, 2026.

EGU26-2019 | Orals | EMRP3.2

Identifying Framboidal Pyrrhotite: A Proxy for hydrothermal alteration of Organic-Rich Sediments 

Yong Zhang, Yin Wang, and Adrian Muxworthy

Framboidal pyrrhotite, in sharp contrast to framboidal pyrite, has been rarely reported, and its formation remains poorly understood. Here we report its clear identification in a shale‐gas well core and explore its potential as a proxy for diagenesis or low‐grade metamorphism of organic-rich sediments. A range of complementary results including petrography, geochemistry, rock magnetism and paleomagnetism, collectively support the identification of framboidal pyrrhotite, whose coexistence with other framboidal minerals indicates pseudomorphic replacement of framboidal pyrite. A strong correlation between total organic carbon and natural remanent magnetization, together with its restriction to organic-rich layers, highlights organic matter's role in its genesis. Paleomagnetic and vitrinite reflectance data further link its formation to magmatic heating (∼274°C). We therefore propose hydrothermal replacement of framboidal pyrite by framboidal pyrrhotite, involving heating and organic matter. This study highlights its diagnostic features, key conditions, and proxy potential for hydrothermal alteration and low‐grade metamorphism in organic-rich sediments.

How to cite: Zhang, Y., Wang, Y., and Muxworthy, A.: Identifying Framboidal Pyrrhotite: A Proxy for hydrothermal alteration of Organic-Rich Sediments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2019, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2019, 2026.

The Galápagos Archipelago has been formed as the Nazca Plate moved over a volcanic hotspot. The islands' age increases from west to east, and they exhibit pronounced climatic zonation, ranging from arid lowlands to humid highlands. In this work, topsoil and parent material samples from four islands, Isabela, Floreana, Santa Cruz, and San Cristóbal, were analyzed to investigate iron mineralogy as a function of island age and climate. Samples were collected from six sites in the humid highlands on all four islands, as well as from two sites in very dry and dry zones on Floreana and San Cristóbal, respectively.

Room-temperature Mössbauer spectroscopy and magnetic measurements, including hysteresis loops (up to 3.0 T) and temperature-dependent magnetization (50 – 1000 K), were performed to identify and characterize the iron-bearing phases. Mössbauer spectra reveal the presence of Fe²⁺ and Fe³⁺ doublets attributed to iron silicates, as well as a sextet corresponding to hematite. In all samples, the relative contribution of the Fe²⁺ doublet decreases from parent material to topsoil, accompanied by an increase in the Fe³⁺ doublet contribution. Samples from the older islands (Santa Cruz and San Cristóbal), in addition to the presence of Fe3+, showed an important sexted associated with hematite in the topsoil and parent material samples. We cannot rule out the contribution of fine particle size and superparamagnetic goethite and/or ferrihydrite associated with the Fe3+ doublet.

Climate-dependent variations are also evident. Mössbauer spectroscopy data of topsoil samples from humid environments exhibit a higher hematite contribution (59%) compared to those from dry environments (49%). For parent materials, humid conditions yield a 54% hematite contribution, whereas samples from dry conditions show a 17% contribution from maghemite. The magnetic results are complemented by hysteresis loops, which indicate the presence of a high-magnetization phase, consistent with Ti-magnetite and/or Ti-maghemite. The absence of a Verwey transition near 120 K in low-temperature magnetization curves and a drop in magnetization near 580 °C in high-temperature magnetization curves further support the presence of Ti-magnetite. AC magnetic susceptibility curves exhibit a frequency dependency, which may indicate a broad distribution of particle sizes, due to the contribution of superparamagnetic iron phases.

How to cite: Berquo, T. and Zehetner, F.: Magnetic investigation of iron oxides of the Galápagos Archipelago and the relationship with island age and climate, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4098, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4098, 2026.

EGU26-4440 | Orals | EMRP3.2

Microscale pseudo-Thellier palaeointensity using a Quantum Diamond Microscope 

Wyn Williams, Ualisson Bellon, Gelson de Souza-Junior, Adrian Muxworthy, Leonardo Uieda, Roger Fu, and Ricardo Trindade

In this study, we present the first full palaeointensity protocol based on quantum diamond microscope (QDM) measurements of the vertical magnetic field component (bz ) above thin sections of an archaeological ceramic. A key advantage of the QDM approach is that it enables the identification, isolation, and tracking of individual magnetic sources within a thin section, allowing ideal palaeomagnetic recorders to be analysed while excluding poorly behaved contributors that dominate bulk measurements. We invert magnetic moments associated with both near-surface and subsurface magnetic sources from QDM maps, and follow their response to alternating-field demagnetisation and anhysteretic remanent magnetisation (ARM) acquisition. Mean directions derived from these selectively inverted sources closely match bulk measurements obtained using a cryogenic rock magnetometer. We quantify the effects of filtering sources based on inversion quality and magnetic behaviour, and demonstrate that for well-separated dipole-like particles, pseudo-Arai slopes constructed from fitted ARM acquisition and AF demagnetisation curves yield palaeointensity estimates that agree, within uncertainty, with double-heating absolute palaeointensity determinations on sister samples. When combined with micro magnetic modelling constraints on the relationship between ARM and thermoremanent magnetisation, these results demonstrate that QDM-based palaeointensity methods offer a promising route toward high-precision, carrier-selective micropalaeomagnetic analysis at the thin-section scale.

How to cite: Williams, W., Bellon, U., de Souza-Junior, G., Muxworthy, A., Uieda, L., Fu, R., and Trindade, R.: Microscale pseudo-Thellier palaeointensity using a Quantum Diamond Microscope, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4440, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4440, 2026.

EGU26-4909 | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Shallow Vertical Magnetic Susceptibility Profiles for Exploring Soil Discrimination across Multiple Locations Using Statistical and Geostatistical Methods 

Jaroslaw Zawadzki, Piotr Fabijańczyk, Michał Bućko, Hana Grison, Michał Jankowski, Tadeusz Magiera, Eduard Petrovsky, Vilém Podrázský, Marcin Sykuła, Marcin Szuszkiewicz, and Zdeněk Vacek

Magnetic susceptibility is a widely used non-destructive proxy for soil characterisation. In this study, shallow vertical magnetic susceptibility profiles were analysed to explore their potential for soil discrimination across multiple locations representing different environmental settings. Magnetic susceptibility was measured in situ down to a depth of 30 cm, providing high-resolution vertical profiles.

The analysis focused on vertical patterns and variability of magnetic susceptibility along the soil profile. A combination of descriptive statistics and geostatistical parameters, as well as multivariate analysis, was applied to assess similarities and differences among soil profiles from different locations. The applied methodology aimed to evaluate the reliability and applicability of magnetic susceptibility as a proxy for comparative soil analysis.

The results show that shallow vertical magnetic susceptibility profiles exhibit substantial variability among profiles and locations, allowing for the identification of characteristic vertical patterns and differences between locations. Geostatistical parameters provided additional insight into the spatial organisation of magnetic susceptibility along the vertical axis, supporting the interpretation of profile variability.

The study demonstrates that shallow vertical magnetic susceptibility profiles can support comparative analysis of soils across multiple locations, while also highlighting the limitations of using magnetic susceptibility alone for soil discrimination.

How to cite: Zawadzki, J., Fabijańczyk, P., Bućko, M., Grison, H., Jankowski, M., Magiera, T., Petrovsky, E., Podrázský, V., Sykuła, M., Szuszkiewicz, M., and Vacek, Z.: Shallow Vertical Magnetic Susceptibility Profiles for Exploring Soil Discrimination across Multiple Locations Using Statistical and Geostatistical Methods, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4909, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4909, 2026.

EGU26-4948 | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Spatial Structure of Surface Soil Magnetic Susceptibility Measured with MS2D across Multiple Soil Types in Poland and the Czech Republic 

Piotr Fabijańczyk, Jarosław Zawadzki, Michał Bućko, Hana Grison, Michał Jankowski, Tadeusz Magiera, Eduard Petrovsky, Vilém Podrázský, Marcin Sykuła, Marcin Szuszkiewicz, and Zdeněk Vacek

This study examines the spatial variability of soil magnetic susceptibility measured on the soil surface across multiple sites in Poland and the Czech Republic. The investigated areas encompass a broad range of soil types, including Podzol, Gleysol enriched with iron ore, Rubic Arenosol, Ranker‑Cambisol, Cambisol, Luvisol, Brown acidic soil, and Podzolic brown soil. Surface magnetic susceptibility was measured with Bartington MS2D to capture both natural pedogenic patterns and potential anthropogenic magnetic enhancement. Spatial correlations were quantified using experimental variograms and their parameters to assess the scale and structure of spatial variability of soil magnetic susceptibility. Among these parameters, nugget effects varied substantially between soil types, indicating differences in micro-scale heterogeneity and surface disturbance.

The results demonstrate that surface magnetic susceptibility, combined with geostatistical analysis, is a sensitive indicator of both natural soil-forming processes and anthropogenic pollution.

How to cite: Fabijańczyk, P., Zawadzki, J., Bućko, M., Grison, H., Jankowski, M., Magiera, T., Petrovsky, E., Podrázský, V., Sykuła, M., Szuszkiewicz, M., and Vacek, Z.: Spatial Structure of Surface Soil Magnetic Susceptibility Measured with MS2D across Multiple Soil Types in Poland and the Czech Republic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4948, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4948, 2026.

EGU26-5006 | Orals | EMRP3.2

The magnetic fabric of fine-grained sediments laid from the Cretan 365 CE tsunami on the SE coast of Sicily 

Leonardo Sagnotti, Alessandra Smedile, Paolo Marco De Martini, Raphaël Paris, and Christophe Lecuyer

Along Sicily's southeastern coast, sandy barriers and geological features isolate coastal lagoons known locally as "pantani." This study examines the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) in 69 oriented samples from the Pantano Morghella wetland, north of Portopalo. Collected in 2 cm³ plastic cubes from a single trench ~700 m from the present shoreline, samples follow two parallel profiles (alternated by 1 cm) spanning 134 cm of stratigraphic sequence. This includes sediments from one of antiquity's most devastating tsunamis, which struck offshore Crete on July 21, 365 CE (Gerardi et al., 2012, https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-12-1185-2012).

The basal tsunami deposit at the trench site consists of a ca. 5 cm thick yellowish bioclastic sandy layer, whose abrupt and probably erosive lower boundary is at about 101.5 cm stratigraphic depth. The rest of the analysed stratigraphic sequence consists of massive grey to blackish muds and grey to pale brown muds, respectively below and above the tsunami sand.

Magnetic susceptibility profiles and AMS data divide the sequence into six zones, revealing distinct depositional environments.

Zone VI (134–101.5 cm): Lowest susceptibility (~500 × 10⁻⁶ SI) and oblate fabric, with a minimum susceptibility axis (kmin) close to the vertical and the maximum (kmax) and intermediate (kint) susceptibility axes scattered in the horizontal plane. This indicates undisturbed, low-energy lagoon/wetland deposition.

Zone V (101.5–94 cm): The sandy tsunami layer, with only three samples showing scattered AMS axes, reflecting chaotic high-energy deposition.

Zone IV (94–63 cm): High susceptibility (1000–2500 × 10⁻⁶ SI), prolate fabric, clustered E-W horizontal kmax, and kint and kmin axes scattered in the N-S vertical plane. This indicates deposition under the action of high-energy currents almost perpendicular to the coast.

Zone III (63–53 cm): Similar fabric to Zone IV but lower susceptibility, decreasing upward to ~500 × 10⁻⁶ SI, suggesting waning high-energy influence.

Zone II (53–35 cm): Returns to Zone VI-like low susceptibility and oblate fabric, typical of calm lagoon conditions.

Zone I (35 cm upward): High susceptibility (>2000 × 10⁻⁶ SI in top 20 cm) and triaxial fabric, linked to human salt pan activities – that started in the XIX century - altering sedimentation.

The trends of magnetic fabric are then compared to CT-scan data (X-ray microtomography) providing statistics of size, shape, and orientation of the sand grains. Overall, AMS analyses provide a robust proxy for paleoenvironmental reconstruction in Pantano Morghella. They distinguish intervals of undisturbed, low-energy sedimentation typical of a lagoon/wetland environment from those disrupted by natural catastrophes, such as the 365 CE tsunami, and later anthropogenic activities over the past two centuries.

How to cite: Sagnotti, L., Smedile, A., De Martini, P. M., Paris, R., and Lecuyer, C.: The magnetic fabric of fine-grained sediments laid from the Cretan 365 CE tsunami on the SE coast of Sicily, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5006, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5006, 2026.

In anoxic marine sediments, in steady state conditions, organoclastic sulfate reduction and anaerobic oxidation of methane release hydrogen sulfide to pore waters. Hydrogen sulfide, in turn, reacts with either solid-phase Fe(III) (oxyhydr)oxides or dissolved Fe2+ liberated by dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction to form iron sulfides with greigite as a precursor phase and pyrite as the end member of the reaction sequence. This process is characteristic for sulfate-methane transition zones (SMTZ). However, non-steady state conditions are common in marine sediments and the sequence described above may be disrupted. These conditions may lead to the preservation of early diagenetic greigite and/or to a late formation of greigite during burial enabled by reactivated biotic or abiotic processes. Site U1417 drilled during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 341 in the Gulf of Alaska has no shallow SMTZ and a deep inverse SMTZ at ~650 meters below sea floor, with a thick sulfate-free and methane-free zone above the deep inverse SMTZ, which makes non-steady state diagenetic conditions at this site unique. The deep inverse SMTZ is likely caused by tectonically-induced fluid circulation related to plate bending fractures. In this study, we aim to investigate how the inverse diagenetic zonation and related tectonically-induced fluid circulation impact the magnetic mineral assemblage and the paleomagnetic record in the sediment. We will pay special attention to the authigenic phases such as greigite which is responsible for secondary magnetizations. We will also assess the role of the diagenetic processes on the original detrital magnetic minerals, and their impact on the iron, sulfur, and carbon elemental cycles.

How to cite: Kars, M. and Zindorf, M.: Magnetic properties and mineralogy in non-steady state diagenetic conditions: Study in IODP Expedition 341 Site U1417 marine sediments, Gulf of Alaska, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5399, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5399, 2026.

EGU26-5424 | ECS | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Magnetic Characterization of α-Fe Oxidation Kinetics: Implications for Source Attribution in Urban Pollution. 

Felix Ostermeier, Stuart Gilder, Nikolai Petersen, and Kai-Uwe Hess

Iron-bearing nano- and microparticles are ubiquitous in urban environments, often emitted by anthropogenic pollution sources. However, the occurrence of metallic iron (α-Fe) in non-reducing, near-surface environments is anomalous given the oxidizing nature of Earth’s atmosphere. Quantifying the magnetic changes associated with the oxidation kinetics of these particles allows for the determination of their atmospheric residence times. We conducted hysteresis measurements on synthetic iron powders of varying grain sizes (1-149 µm) at specific intervals following exposure to temperatures ranging from 200°C to 500°C. By plotting saturation magnetization (Ms), saturation remanent magnetization (Mrs), and coercive force (Hc) against oxidation time, we observed that oxidation is most likely diffusion-limited: it proceeds rapidly at the grain surface and decelerates as oxygen penetration becomes restricted by the oxide shell. Using MS decay as a proxy for oxidation progress, we constructed an Arrhenius plot to determine activation energies. This allows for the extrapolation of reaction rates to room temperature. Consequently, we present a method to estimate the time elapsed since particle emission. When combined with meteorological data, we can backtrack trajectories to pinpoint specific anthropogenic sources of α-Fe emission.

How to cite: Ostermeier, F., Gilder, S., Petersen, N., and Hess, K.-U.: Magnetic Characterization of α-Fe Oxidation Kinetics: Implications for Source Attribution in Urban Pollution., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5424, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5424, 2026.

EGU26-6469 | Orals | EMRP3.2

Relationship between surface-soil magnetic susceptibility and its shallow vertical distribution 

Eduard Petrovsky, Tadeusz Magiera, Michal Jankowski, Marcin Szuszkiewicz, Hana Grison, Marcin Sykula, Michal Bucko, Jarek Zawadzki, Piotr Fabijanczyk, and Sarka Stejskalova

Measurements of magnetic susceptibility on the soil surface are routinely used for, e.g., assessment of distribution of atmospherically deposited dust particles rich in iron oxides. In general, the data obtained using Bartington MS2D coil integrate signal from a depth down to about 10 cm, with non-linear response function. Therefore, it is believed that the iron oxides in this layer may be due to atmospheric deposition, weathering of lithogenic rocks, and pedogenic processes occurring directly in the soil. In order to assess the significance of these sources, as well as to observe the stratification of the soil column, shallow vertical soil cores, usually down to 30 cm, are used. However, there is no comprehensive comparison of the vertical distribution of magnetic susceptibility, projected on the surface, with the values actually measured on the soil surface. In our contribution, we use the known response function, defining the weight of magnetic susceptibility with depth, to obtain the total model susceptibility projected on the soil surface, and compare it with the real data measured in the field. Our results show that good agreement between the measured and modelled surface values is not a general rule. Thus, the use of shallow vertical distribution of susceptibility in terms of interpreting the data measured on the surface is subject to ambiguities and doubts.

How to cite: Petrovsky, E., Magiera, T., Jankowski, M., Szuszkiewicz, M., Grison, H., Sykula, M., Bucko, M., Zawadzki, J., Fabijanczyk, P., and Stejskalova, S.: Relationship between surface-soil magnetic susceptibility and its shallow vertical distribution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6469, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6469, 2026.

EGU26-6858 | ECS | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Towards nanometre-scale imaging of paleomagnetic recorders  

Silvi Klein Schiphorst, Philipp D’Astolfo, David Cortés-Ortuño, and Lennart de Groot

Quantum Diamond Microscopy (QDM) has opened new avenues for palaeomagnetism by enabling magnetic imaging at micrometre-scale spatial resolution, bridging the gap between bulk rock measurements and grain-scale magnetic observations. Micromagnetic Tomography (MMT) experiments integrate QDM data with micro- or nano-CT–derived grain geometries to determine magnetic moments of individual grains within a sample. Adding spatial information to the inversion problem makes it possible to calculate magnetic moments of individual iron-oxide grains even in samples with high grain concentrations, complex domain states, and overlapping magnetic signals. This enables the magnetic contribution of individual particles to be quantified, compared through consecutive (de)magnetization steps, and tested for stability. MMT therefore provides direct experimental access to grain-scale magnetic moments and goes beyond what bulk or surface-integrated measurements can reveal.

The goal of MMT has always been to isolate and select contributions of only the most reliable recorders in a rock sample. Nevertheless, MMT faces a fundamental challenge in spatial scales: wide-field QDM imaging achieves spatial resolutions of ~1 µm, while the practical resolution of micro- and nano-CT similarly limits the detection of magnetic particles to sizes of ~1 µm and larger. Magnetite and titanomagnetite grains in this size range are typically characterized by multidomain behaviour and are therefore often magnetically unstable, limiting their usefulness as reliable paleomagnetic recorders. As a result, current grain-scale approaches predominantly probe particles that are least suitable for preserving stable remanent magnetisations.

Accessing the information stored in smaller, submicron, vortex-state grains that are reliable recorders of the Earth’s magnetic field requires moving beyond wide-field QDM imaging. Improvements in spatial resolution of wide-field QDMs are fundamentally restricted by the optical diffraction limit, motivating a transition to Quantum Scanning Microscopy (QSM). In QSM, a single nitrogen-vacancy centre functions as an atomic-scale magnetometer, enabling nanometre-scale spatial resolutions that are ideal for magnetic imaging of vortex-state grains.

Here we present the first results of QSM stray-field imaging applied to a volcanic rock sample, in combination with slice-and-view FIB-SEM analysis of the same sample to characterise the particles’ geometries. These measurements demonstrate the feasibility of detecting magnetic signals at length scales inaccessible to wide-field QDM and current MMT techniques, while highlighting both the opportunities and technical challenges associated with pushing paleomagnetic observations into the nanoscale. Together, these developments provide a path forward towards resolving the magnetic behaviour of the particles that are most relevant for reliable paleomagnetic recording in rock samples.

How to cite: Klein Schiphorst, S., D’Astolfo, P., Cortés-Ortuño, D., and de Groot, L.: Towards nanometre-scale imaging of paleomagnetic recorders , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6858, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6858, 2026.

EGU26-8031 | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

Mapping Sources of Fine Metallic Particles Near Schools in Greater Paris Using Passive Biocaptors: transforming environmental monitoring practices 

Aude Isambert, Claire Carvallo, Laure Turcati, Yann Sivry, Gabriel Junghans, Eugénie Bontemps, Frédéric Fluteau, Nestor Herran, Justyna Moizard, and Christine Franke

As of 2024, 100% of Parisian residents remain exposed to concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM₂.₅) that exceed the World Health Organization’s (WHO) guideline limit of 5 µg/m³. Despite gradual improvements in air quality, atmospheric pollution—particularly from fine particles and nitrogen dioxide (NO₂)—continues to pose a major public health challenge. Recent findings by the French association Respire revealed that 682 daycare centers and schools in Île-de-France (Administrative region of Paris) exceed WHO NO₂ thresholds, underscoring the urgent need for intervention and the increasing mobilization of local stakeholders.

In the Paris region, wood heating and road traffic are the primary sources of fine particulate matter. Ultrafine particles (<1 µm), often enriched in heavy metals and exhibiting magnetic properties due to their iron content, present significant health risks. Their high reactivity and association with toxic metals suggest a potential link to neurodegenerative diseases.

This study presents the first results from the interdisciplinary Nanomap project (based on the Ecorc’Air scientific protocol), launched in 2024 in Île-de-France. The project integrates researchers from social sciences, geosciences, and participatory science, collaborating with nine citizen associations. Its objective is to map fine and ultrafine metallic particles pollution near schools and daycare centers, with the aim of tracing and determining the variability of pollution sources in urban areas. Additionally, the project examines scientific practices and interactions between researchers and citizen groups.

The study employs plane tree bark as a passive pollution sensor, leveraging its annual renewal and widespread presence in cities (more than 42,000 plane trees in Paris) to enhance spatial and temporal resolution. In 2025, nearly 700 samples were collected by citizens, with half of which were situated near educational facilities. Magnetic susceptibility measurements revealed varying concentrations of metallic particles.

Samples collected near potential pollution sources (e.g., ring roads, high-traffic areas) are currently undergoing advanced chemical analysis (ICP-MS and spICP-MS) and detailed magnetic characterization. This integrated approach is essential for validating suspected sources before any public disclosure to the citizen groups involved in the Nanomap project.

How to cite: Isambert, A., Carvallo, C., Turcati, L., Sivry, Y., Junghans, G., Bontemps, E., Fluteau, F., Herran, N., Moizard, J., and Franke, C.: Mapping Sources of Fine Metallic Particles Near Schools in Greater Paris Using Passive Biocaptors: transforming environmental monitoring practices, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8031, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8031, 2026.

Remagnetization in sedimentary basins is commonly regarded as “noise” that overprints primary remanence. However, if its acquisition timing and underlying mechanism can be constrained, remagnetization can instead be exploited as a physical archive of burial history, tectonic deformation, clay-mineral transformation, and hydrocarbon-related fluid activities. With the growing importance of hydrocarbon resource evaluation, magnetization resetting associated with organic-matter maturation and hydrocarbon migration has gradually become a major focus of remagnetization studies. To explore the relationship between remagnetization and hydrocarbon activity, we targeted the Upper Ordovician Zhaolaoyu Formation in the Fuping area along the southern margin of the Ordos Basin and carried out an integrated investigation combining petrographic observations, rock-magnetic experiments, paleomagnetic analyses, and organic geochemical measurements.

The results showed that magnetite was the dominant magnetic carrier, and stepwise demagnetization isolated a stable characteristic remanent magnetization. The corresponding paleomagnetic pole matched the Early–Middle Triassic segment of the apparent polar wander path of the North China Block, indicating a Triassic remagnetization. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility results indicated a primary sedimentary compaction fabric, and together with previous high-resolution Sr-isotope studies showing no signature of tectonically derived fluids in the section, these observations effectively ruled out remagnetization driven by subsequent tectonic fluids. Optical microscopy showed heterogeneous iron-oxide infillings within microfractures, and SEM further revealed spherical magnetite developed within microfractures; fluorescence microscopy also indicated that organic matter was predominantly hosted within microfractures. Collectively, these microscopic observations suggested that the spatial distribution of authigenic magnetite may be linked to the presence of organic matter. Notably, based on the commonly used parameter (NRM–TOC), natural remanent magnetization (NRM) showed a significant positive correlation with total organic carbon (TOC), further supporting an association between remagnetization in the Zhaolaoyu Formation and hydrocarbon activity. Meanwhile, we introduced the hydrocarbon generation potential (Pg) and the ratio of effective specimen number to total specimen number (N₀/N), and established quantitative relationships between Pg and NRM, as well as between N₀/N and TOC to evaluate the relationship between magnetic records and organic matter. Both relationships showed positive correlations.

In summary, the Zhaolaoyu Formation records an Early–Middle Triassic chemical remagnetization event associated with organic-matter maturation. This interpretation is consistent with previous hydrocarbon-generation modeling results for the study area. This study provides key constraints on the hydrocarbon-generation evolution of Ordovician source rocks along the southern margin of the Ordos Basin and, for the first time in the Ordos Basin, verifies the feasibility and applicability of using remagnetization as a tool to constrain hydrocarbon activity. In addition, the two parameter sets proposed in this study (NRM–Pg and N0/N–TOC) provide new quantitative metrics that can be applied to explore similar remagnetization mechanisms in other stratigraphic intervals and sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Lan, S., Cheng, X., and Wu, H.: Hydrocarbon-linked chemical remagnetization in the Upper Ordovician Zhaolaoyu Formation, southern margin of the Ordos Basin: constraints from paleomagnetism and geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8962, 2026.

EGU26-10591 | Orals | EMRP3.2

Towards Thermally Activated High-Field Micromagnetism 

Greig Paterson, Brendan Cych, Lesleis Nagy, and Wyn Williams

High-field magnetic measurements and procedures, such as hysteresis, first-order reversal curves (FORC), and alternating-field (AF) demagnetization, are foundational methods in rock and paleomagnetic studies. Interpreting these data can be challenging and often requires an understanding of the particle scale contributions to these signals. This requires a numerical approach using micromagnetic models along with the inclusion of thermal fluctuations, which result in time dependent relaxation in experimental observations. This is a challenge that requires knowledge of all stable domain states, their connectivity, and  energy barriers that partition the energy landscape that results from the field strength and orientation of each particle. This typically requires considerable user input and analysis, making this an unfeasibly time-consuming endeavor.

We are developing a method that calculates exact energy surfaces for uniformly magnetized particles and approximate energy surfaces for single vortex (SV) particles, akin, to software tools such as the Singe Domain Comprehensive Calculator (SDCC; Cych et al., 2025, doi: 10.1093/gji/ggaf149). This technique is integrated into the micromagnetic software package MERRILL and readily identifies minimum energy domain states, their connectivity, and (using the nudged elastic band method), can calculate the energy barriers between states. This automated process dramatically reduces user input and analysis at the cost of additional computational time resulting in high-field energy landscapes (HELs) which can then be used to simulate a wide range of thermally activated experiments, including hysteresis loops, FORC diagrams, anhysterestic remanent magnetization (ARM) acquisition and AF demagnetization. Additional computational resources are not, however, significant, since our method runs in a matter of minutes to hours on a modern laptop computer. This new approach will take the rock and paleomagnetic community one step closer to incorporating micromagnetic tools as a part of the standard analytical repertoire used to interpret the behavior of natural samples and reconstruct the signals they carry.

How to cite: Paterson, G., Cych, B., Nagy, L., and Williams, W.: Towards Thermally Activated High-Field Micromagnetism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10591, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10591, 2026.

First-order reversal curves (FORC) are gaining increasing popularity as an effective tool for characterizing magnetic minerals in rocks and sediments. The associated two-dimensional representation of hysteretic magnetization processes, known as FORC diagrams, enables the identification of specific fingerprints associated with magnetic grain size and mineralogy, and, in certain cases, the separation of magnetic components with widely overlapping coercivities, thus reducing the ambiguity of other magnetic characterization techniques. Recent progress in micromagnetic calculations also enable to calculate FORC diagrams for given magnetic mineral assemblages with enough statistical relevance to enable direct comparisons with real counterparts. Yet, interpretation ambiguities cannot be totally excluded, due to the different magnetization processes underlying each point of the FORC diagram. The additional measurement of zero-field hysteresis measurements to the original measurement protocol (Zhao et al., 2017) enables the separation of reversible and irreversible magnetization processes on a non-local basis, yielding different types of diagrams for each contribution. A local solution, which works for every point along a magnetization curve, is proposed here. It consists in the repeated measurement of Rayleigh loops in the applied field of the classic FORC protocol, as if low-field susceptibility would be instantaneously measured on the top of magnetometric measurements. Adequate processing of this modified measurement protocols divides the slope of magnetization curves into four contributions originating from (1) irreversible, (2) reversible, (3) viscous, and (4) aftereffect magnetization processes. Selected examples show the additional information that can be extracted from these measurements, as well as the disambiguation of not yet explained FORC features associated with the pseudo-single-domain and multidomain signatures of magnetite particles.

How to cite: Egli, R.: FORC-Rayleigh: A new measurement protocol for investigating the origin of magnetization changes in first-order reversal curves, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11730, 2026.

EGU26-12388 | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

New results of the Ecorc’Air citizen science project: Biomonitoring of Vehicular Air Pollution in Cologne, Germany 

Christine Franke, Stephanie Scheidt, Claire Carvallo, Aude Isambert, Kathrin Jung, Yann Sivry, and Laure Turcati

Airborne particulate matter (PM) is known to have serious effects on human health. Unfortunately, assessing spatial variability of PM at high resolution remains challenging due to limitations in the number of existing regulatory air quality stations in cities. As an alternative approach, biomonitoring using vegetation within cities has been proposed in recent years.

In the framework of the Ecorc’Air citizen science project, a robust protocol has been developed based on the annual collection of plane tree bark, which serves as a passive airborne PM collector using magnetic susceptibility as a proxy parameter to estimate PM abundance in cities (Carvallo et al. 2024). This has been used to create annual maps showing the variations in magnetic particle concentrations. Since the project started in Paris (France) in 2016, there has been a growing participation of inhabitants, associations, and municipalities and it has recently grown beyond national borders.

In Germany, sampling took place downtown Cologne in spring 2025 as part of the DFG-funded project “Mapping the concentration of particles in the air in the city of Cologne using environmental magnetic techniques – a first step towards participation in the European science network Euro'Air”. In this presentation, we focus on the results obtained from analyzing the collected plane bark samples. We show the spatial distribution of magnetic susceptibility and frequence dependent magnetic susceptibility. Additionally, our preliminary results from attempts to characterize the particles by magnetic hysteresis parameters and first order reversal curves (FORC) as well as scanning electron microscopy (SEM/EDX) analyses. The outcome will be discussed with respect to the spatial distribution of the PM concentrations in Cologne.

How to cite: Franke, C., Scheidt, S., Carvallo, C., Isambert, A., Jung, K., Sivry, Y., and Turcati, L.: New results of the Ecorc’Air citizen science project: Biomonitoring of Vehicular Air Pollution in Cologne, Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12388, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12388, 2026.

EGU26-13427 | Posters on site | EMRP3.2

On the precision of anisotropy of magnetic remanence: Measuring designs, high-field experiments and tensor fitting toolbox 

Martin Chadima, František Hrouda, and Josef Ježek

Unlike anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS), which can be determined in a more or less simple way, the determination of anisotropy of magnetic remanence (AMR) is a relatively complex and laborious procedure involving a series of demagnetizations, directional magnetizations and measurements of the imparted directional remanence.

This complexity may logically imply larger errors in subsequent fitting of the AMR tensors compared to the AMS. The accuracy of the AMR determination primarily depends on the precision of imparting the directional remanence, the number of measuring directions, and the symmetry of the measuring design. The importance of the above control factors was investigated by means of mathematical modelling.

As shown in the previous model studies, the precision of the determination of the anisotropy of magnetic remanence (AMR) is directly proportional to the precision of the determination of the directional remanent magnetizations with respect to the degree of anisotropy. While the AMR imparted in weak to moderate fields is relatively commonly used in rock fabric studies (e.g., anisotropy of anhysteretic remanent magnetization), only a few attempts to determine the AMR in high fields (hfAMR) were reported most likely due to instrumental (insufficient precision in setting up the intensity of magnetizing field and its insufficiently homogeneity) or other methodological reasons.

Recently, a high-field impulse magnetizer has been developed (commercial name PUMA) that allows the standard palaeomagnetic specimen to be magnetized in a set of 18 predefined directions in the wide range of magnetic fields ranging from 1 mT to 5 T.

The elaborate design of this magnetizer allows precise setting of the pulse intensity and high homogeneity of the field over the entire specimen volume. To experimentally assess the precision of the hfAMR determination, the reproducibility in imparting the magnetic remanence in the same direction by the same magnetizing field was examined. We also investigated whether it was necessary to demagnetize the specimen between individual magnetizations to improve the remanence reproducibility despite the fact that each high field magnetization (“saturation”) should theoretically obliterate the previous remanence. The investigations were made on specimens having single mineral ferromagnetic fraction (magnetite, hematite, and pyrrhotite). The results helped us to decide whether the hfAMR is convenient to most rocks or only to strongly magnetic and strongly anisotropic ones.

In order to fit the AMR tensors, we present a simple, user-friendly toolbox which facilitates tensor fitting from an array of magnetic remanence vectors according the chosen magnetizing design (6, 9, 12, 15, 18 directions). This toolbox provides a graphical visualization of the intensity of measured remanence vectors and their directional comparison with the respective magnetizing directions.

How to cite: Chadima, M., Hrouda, F., and Ježek, J.: On the precision of anisotropy of magnetic remanence: Measuring designs, high-field experiments and tensor fitting toolbox, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13427, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13427, 2026.

EGU26-13503 | Orals | EMRP3.2

Quantitative relationship between opAMS and ipAMS in some pyrrhotite-bearing rocks 

Frantisek Hrouda, Martin Chadima, and Josef Ježek

The anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of pyrrhotite-bearing rocks (typically represented by ultramafic rocks) is often composite, carried not only by pyrrhotite, but also by magnetite and mafic silicates. In magnetic fabric studies, it is therefore desirable to separate the AMS component due to pyrrhotite from that due to the rest of the rock. This can be made, in addition to other techniques, by the anisotropy of the out-of-phase component of the AMS (opAMS). For comparative studies, it is vital to know quantitative relationship between opAMS and ipAMS, which is the aim of this paper. This knowledge is useful in interpreting the AMS of rocks in which pyrrhotite is important but not dominant magnetism carrier.

The out-of-phase susceptibility (opMS) of the pyrrhotite-bearing rocks investigated increases significantly with the field intensity within the field range between 10 A/m and 700 A/m. The increase is faster in very low fields (<100 A/m) than in stronger fields. The principal directions of the opAMS are virtually field independent in the entire low-field range used, being also very well parallel to the ipAMS directions. The degree of opAMS is also virtually field independent, but much higher than the degree of ipAMS. The shape parameter in opAMS is also field independent and resembles that in ipAMS.

The Rayleigh Law range, in which magnetization is linearly related to the field, is relatively narrow, less than 40 A/m. Theoretical quadratic relationship was suggested by Markert and Lehman (1996, GJI) between the tensor of initial ipMS and the tensor of Rayleigh coefficient characterizing the opAMS. The tensors are related by a constant c, which in general may or may not be direction independent. The direction independence would give rise to very simple relationship between the respective anisotropy degrees. Our investigations show that the constant c is in case of pyrrhotite direction independent. The tensor of the Rayleigh coefficient can be calculated from the opAMS measurement in one field, while the same tensor determined from field variation of ipAMS requires measurement in multiple fields (in two in minimum).

How to cite: Hrouda, F., Chadima, M., and Ježek, J.: Quantitative relationship between opAMS and ipAMS in some pyrrhotite-bearing rocks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13503, 2026.

EGU26-13582 | Posters on site | EMRP3.2 | Highlight

Rock magnetic and microstructural investigation of Fe-bearing coatings on sand grains from the Namib Sand Sea 

Julie Carlut, Laurie Barrier, Lucie Perrenx, and Oscar Bruneau

The Namib Desert (Namibia) hosts giant dune fields whose sand color ranges from yellow to deep red. While provenance and grain composition contribute to these variations, a major control is the occurrence of Fe-bearing coatings (“varnish”) made of iron oxides and oxyhydroxides (e.g., magnetite, hematite, goethite) that surround sand grains. In this study, we analyze a set of 10 samples collected across various environments within a ~600 km perimeter in the northern Namib Desert. The mineralogical and textural nature of these coatings was investigated using a rock-magnetic approach. We combine bulk magnetic measurements, including magnetic susceptibility, hysteresis parameters, IRM acquisition, and thermomagnetic experiments, to identify the dominant magnetic carriers and assess the relative contributions of ferrimagnetic versus antiferromagnetic phases. These data are coupled with complementary mineralogical analyses (optical and scanning microscopy, Raman spectroscopy). Preliminary observations suggest that the magnetic phases are embedded in a clay-rich matrix and may be associated with microbial aggregates, raising questions about their origin and formation pathways. Furthermore, dune, terrace, and riverbed samples display distinct magnetic signatures, indicating the role of transport and/or in situ processes. By linking magnetic signatures to colorimetric variability and microstructural observations, this study aims to evaluate sand color as a potential environmental proxy for sediment transport pathways, weathering conditions, and hydroclimatic controls on iron oxide formation in arid environments.

How to cite: Carlut, J., Barrier, L., Perrenx, L., and Bruneau, O.: Rock magnetic and microstructural investigation of Fe-bearing coatings on sand grains from the Namib Sand Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13582, 2026.

EGU26-16059 | Orals | EMRP3.2

Absolute Paleointensity Through Quantum Diamond Microscope Measurements 

Gelson F. Souza-Junior, Leonardo Uieda, Ricardo I. F. Trindade, Ualisson D. Bellon, Carolina S. de Moraes, and Roger Fu

Absolute paleointensity reconstructions provide critical constraints on the dynamics and long-term evolution of the geodynamo. Yet, a high failure rate persists in paleointensity experiments due to limitations inherent to bulk measurement techniques. As a result, measurements are often compromised by mineralogical alteration, multidomain behavior, magnetic interactions, and the presence of non-ideal remanence carriers that cannot be spatially isolated or individually evaluated. We present a new approach to absolute paleointensity determination based on Quantum Diamond Microscopy (QDM), enabling direct observation of thermoremanent magnetization (TRM) acquisition and decay at the sub-millimeter scale. We apply this technique to natural basalt and archaeological ceramic samples subjected to controlled laboratory TRM inductions, providing an opportunity to investigate magnetic recording processes at the level of localized anomalies. Experimental tests of TRM acquisition demonstrate that the direction of the applied laboratory field can be recovered from the magnetic vectors obtained from several hundred individual anomalies. For bias fields exceeding 2μT, the recovered vectors closely match the bulk direction, with minimal angular misfits across the population of carriers. This result provides direct physical validation, at the grain scale, of fundamental paleomagnetic recording assumptions that are traditionally inferred from statistical behavior in bulk measurements. This directional fidelity establishes the physical basis for extending micro-scale observations to quantitative paleointensity analysis. Using QDM, we implemented a full Thellier-style zero-field/in-field (ZI) protocol, monitoring both the thermal decay of natural remanent magnetization (NRM) and the acquisition of partial TRM (pTRM) on an anomaly-by-anomaly basis. This allows the identification and isolation of ideal magnetic recorders while excluding poorly behaving carriers, and enables the construction of localized Arai diagrams with a level of selection and quality assessment unattainable in conventional bulk techniques. The ceramic sample shows highly consistent paleointensity estimates, highlighting the robustness of the method. In contrast, paleointensity estimates for the basalt sample show larger variability, reflecting the influence of non-ideal magnetic carriers and local mineralogical heterogeneity. However, when rigorous spatial quality criteria are applied, including high Arai diagram linearity and vectorial decay constraints, the resulting paleointensity estimates converge toward the laboratory field with substantially improved accuracy and reduced uncertainty compared to bulk magnetometer results. Our results demonstrate that absolute paleointensity can be reliably determined at the micro-scale through the controlled ensemble analysis of magnetic anomalies. This approach represents a significant methodological advance in paleomagnetism, opening new perspectives for high-precision paleointensity studies of magnetically heterogeneous, minute, or rare materials, including meteorites, archaeological artifacts, and single crystals.

How to cite: F. Souza-Junior, G., Uieda, L., I. F. Trindade, R., D. Bellon, U., S. de Moraes, C., and Fu, R.: Absolute Paleointensity Through Quantum Diamond Microscope Measurements, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16059, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16059, 2026.

EGU26-1511 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

Ancient Antarctic Magmatism: Heat Flux within the Ferrar Large Igneous Province Sill Complex 

Katharine Gilchrist, James Muirhead, Faye Nelson, Michael Rowe, Sandra Rodrigues, Zoe Armstrong, Veda Patel, and David Dempsey

Large igneous provinces (LIPs) are massive areas of predominantly mafic magmatism, often 105 -107 km2 in area with volumes greater than 105 km3, emplaced over a short period (1-5 m.y.). Field studies examining heat transfer processes acting within LIP sill complexes are relatively rare, despite the potential for contribution towards understanding LIP emplacement dynamics and overall interconnectivity of intrusive magmatic systems. This study uses paleomagnetic techniques (alternating field (AF) and thermal demagnetisation) to assess the magnitude of heat transfer associated with the Ferrar LIP sill complex, emplaced 183 Ma across the Transantarctic Mountains and through Tasmania and South Australia. Sampling was carried out through 3000 m of stratigraphy across four sites within the McMurdo Dry Valleys, South Victoria Land, Antarctica, in which 200 m thick Ferrar dolerite sills intrude the Beacon Supergroup sedimentary sequence. Our results quantify the vertical extent of magmatic heating from the Ferrar LIP sill complex, revealing an asymmetry in contact aureoles surrounding sills, which suggests contribution of differing heat transfer mechanisms above and below intrusions. Estimated contact aureole volumes also indicate increased heat flux with depth in the stratigraphy, suggesting more long-lived magma flux through deeper intrusions compared to those further up the sequence. This study has implications for understanding magma and heat fluxes during sill complex emplacement and the potential for these systems to liberate extinction-level volumes of carbon through crustal heating.

How to cite: Gilchrist, K., Muirhead, J., Nelson, F., Rowe, M., Rodrigues, S., Armstrong, Z., Patel, V., and Dempsey, D.: Ancient Antarctic Magmatism: Heat Flux within the Ferrar Large Igneous Province Sill Complex, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1511, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1511, 2026.

EGU26-3184 | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

Coal-magma interaction in the Ferrar Large Igneous Province, Antarctica: implications for magma propagation and plumbing system development 

Zoe Armstrong, James Muirhead, Katharine Gilchrist, Sandra Rodrigues, and Michael Rowe

The mechanical properties and rheology of the host rock in magmatic systems have a major control on the development of the plumbing system by affecting how magma propagates through the crust, via a range of brittle and non-brittle processes. In continental Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs), interaction between magma and carbon-rich layers (e.g. coal) is a fundamental process that has been shown to release large volumes of volatiles in the atmosphere, affecting global climate and sometimes triggering mass extinctions. While coal-magma interaction in continental LIPs has been well studied in the context of climate change and mass extinctions, few studies consider how this volatile release affects magma propagation and plumbing system development at the LIP scale. To infer how magma was emplaced in the crust, we analysed the morphologies of dikes associated with the 183 Ma Ferrar LIP emplaced in Beacon Supergroup sedimentary rocks using a range of structural measurements and field observations across three sites in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. A majority of dikes emplaced at ≥ 2 km paleodepth exhibit straight parallel margins, tapered tips, and stepped segments, indicative of brittle emplacement via tensile opening. However, we observe a noticeable transition to non-brittle behaviour at ≤ 1 km paleodepth, coinciding with dikes intersecting the late Permian Weller Coal Measures. Here, folding, faulting, and fluidisation of the host rock is commonly observed adjacent to dikes and is accompanied by a sudden shift in dike morphology and geometry. We hypothesise that local- and regional-scale heating of coal and carbonaceous shale resulted in large-scale volatile release, triggering host rock fluidisation, and ultimately promoting non-brittle modes of magma propagation at shallow paleodepths. Our findings support an evolving host rock rheology for LIPs intruding through volatile-rich sedimentary basins, which affects intrusion geometries, magma propagation processes, and the spatial and temporal development of LIP plumbing systems.

How to cite: Armstrong, Z., Muirhead, J., Gilchrist, K., Rodrigues, S., and Rowe, M.: Coal-magma interaction in the Ferrar Large Igneous Province, Antarctica: implications for magma propagation and plumbing system development, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3184, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3184, 2026.

EGU26-3636 | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

Lateral variation in dike density within the lithosphere beneath the Ontong Java Plateau 

Azusa Shito and Daisuke Suetsugu

The Ontong Java Plateau (OJP) is thought to have formed through large-scale Cretaceous volcanism, however the process of the massive volcanism remains largely unknown. Shito et al. [2025] explored the ascent process of the thermochemical plume and its impact on the physicochemical properties of the preexisting lithosphere. Based on the high-frequency seismic wave analysis revealed that the internal structure of the lithosphere beneath the OJP is a hybrid structure comprising dike swarms that are superimposed on the laminar structure. Moreover, the lithosphere exhibits lower seismic wave velocities than normal oceanic lithosphere, suggesting that the lithospheric mantle was physicochemically altered by the intrusion of dike swarms filled with magma from a large-scale thermochemical plume.

This study employed two-dimensional tomography analysis to estimate lateral variations in dike density. The model parameter is relative energy reduction of So wave to Po wave and the data is Po and So wave envelope. As the first step, the two-dimensional tomography was performed under the assumption that the observed Po/So energy ratio is a simple integral value along the great circle path. The results revealed the presence of an area in the central part of the OJP where the reduction in So wave energy is significantly greater compared to Po waves. This suggests it corresponds to an area with high dike density and, also suggests the possibility that this location is the center of a massive eruption.

Future research aims to examine quantitative relationship between dike density and energy reduction of Po and So wave and the validity of the linearity, and to estimate the two-dimensional distribution of dike density using more appropriate methods.

How to cite: Shito, A. and Suetsugu, D.: Lateral variation in dike density within the lithosphere beneath the Ontong Java Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3636, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3636, 2026.

EGU26-3969 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

Numerical Simulation of CO₂ Emissions in Large Igneous Provinces and their Implication on Climate Evolution 

Sandrine Ritter, Attila Balázs, Julian Rogger, Dominic Stemmler, and Taras Gerya

Large igneous provinces (LIPs) are associated with the non-linear dynamics of deep mantle plume - lithosphere interactions, partial melting, volcanic emplacement and volatile emission on variable spatial and temporal scales. CO₂ emissions during such events are a major driver of mass extinction, the severity of which depends not only on the characteristics of the mantle plume, but also on the overlying lithosphere in which it is emplaced. The complex, multiscale processes connecting mantle-plume dynamics with surface volcanism, CO₂ outgassing, and the possible consequences for biological factors still needs further understanding.

To address this question, we use the thermomechanical numerical model I3ELVIS. This model incorporates mantle dynamic processes, such as partial melting and melt extraction. CO₂ is emitted in a simplified manner under the assumption of melt equilibrium and can be monitored over time and space. Our aim is to link deep Earth geodynamics with surface environmental and climatic consequences in order to provide a better, more comprehensive framework for understanding LIP events and quantifying their impact on mass extinctions.

Our preliminary results indicate that the intensity and temporal evolution of CO₂ outgassing depends on the geological setting and are not always synchronous with volcanic activity. Large igneous plume activity under oceanic crust results in single-peak rather than multi-peak outgassing, as observed in normal crustal and cratonic geological settings. Preliminary implications for climate and vegetation evolution are discussed.

How to cite: Ritter, S., Balázs, A., Rogger, J., Stemmler, D., and Gerya, T.: Numerical Simulation of CO₂ Emissions in Large Igneous Provinces and their Implication on Climate Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3969, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3969, 2026.

Linking small-scale fracture processes to lithosphere-scale magma transport remains a core challenge in understanding the development of magmatic plumbing systems in Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs). In this study, we employ a two-dimensional Discrete Element Method (DEM) to investigate the coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical evolution of plumbing systems in the continental lithosphere. Using the MatDEM framework, we simulate fracture propagation, magma migration, and heat transfer from a magma chamber located at the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary to the upper crust. Magma transport is modeled through a pore density flow approach, allowing dynamic coupling between pore pressure, temperature, and mechanical deformation of the host rocks. Scaling principles are applied to ensure mechanical and thermal similarity between numerical models and natural systems. The initial model shows that magma overpressure and thermal expansion generate radial fractures around the magma chamber, which progressively evolve into vertically connected magma pathways (i.e., dikes). We systematically examine the influence of layering structure, pre-existing faults, lower crustal strength, crustal thickness variations, magma viscosity, and magma overpressure on plumbing system development. The existence of horizontal weak zones or mechanical boundaries, such as the Moho and intra-crustal compositional boundaries will promote sill emplacement along these horizontal boundaries prior to renewed upward magma propagation. Steeply dipping faults further localize magma ascent and control geometry and number of sub-vertical conduits. A mechanically strong lower crust acts as a barrier to vertical magma ascent, favoring magma underplating and prolonged magma storage near the Moho. Crustal thickness gradients will drive magma migration toward the thinner crust. Increasing magma viscosity reduces magma flowability and limits the extent of fracture-controlled magma networks, whereas higher magma overpressure enhances fracture opening and results in a plumbing system with wider conduit width and larger spatial distribution. Our results fit well with geological and geophysical observations of LIPs. This DEM-based approach provides a bridge between small-scale fracture processes and the large-scale magma transport and emplacement in LIPs.

How to cite: Zhang, J., Wang, Q., Liu, C., and Liu, H.: Discrete Element Method (DEM) Simulation of Coupled Thermal, Mechanical and Melt Dynamics during Formation of Plumbing Systems of Large Igneous Provinces, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6064, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6064, 2026.

Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) represent major sources of volcanic CO2 to the Earth system and are widely linked to the past climate perturbations [1]. However, robust quantification of LIP CO2 fluxes remains limited by uncertainties in magma production rates, eruption rates and lack of direct C constraints [2]. Here we present a new approach to reconstructing time- resolved CO2 fluxes during emplacement of the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) by integrating high-precision 40Ar/39Ar geochronology with geochemical CO2 degassing proxies derived from basaltic lavas.
 
Our methodology builds on recent advances demonstrating systematic relationships between CO₂/S gas ratios, trace element systematics, and mantle melting processes [3.4]. Observed correlation between trace element ratios and inferred CO2/S ratios are used to assess CO2 released for individual lava units. These are combined with modelled eruption volumes and high-precision 40Ar/39Ar age constraints to calculate eruption-rate-scaled CO2 fluxes.
 
This novel approach presented here provides a transferable methodology for reconstructing CO2 flux histories of other LIPs where direct volatile measurement are limited. By coupling high precision geochronology with geochemical degassing proxies, this study generates improved constraints on the links between large-scale volcanism, carbon cycle perturbations, and climate change.
 
LITERATURE:
[1] Kasbohm, J., Schoene, B., & Burgess, S. (2021). Radiometric constraints on the timing, tempo, and effects of large igneous province emplacement. Large igneous provinces: A driver of global environmental and biotic changes, 27-82. [3]
[2] Black, B. A., Neely, R. R., Lamarque, J. F., Elkins-Tanton, L. T., Kiehl, J. T., Shields, C. A., ... & Bardeen, C. (2018). Systemic swings in end-Permian climate from Siberian Traps carbon and sulfur outgassing. Nature Geoscience11(12), 949-954. [3] Black, B. A., & Aiuppa, A. (2023). Carbon release from Large Igneous Province magmas estimated from trace element-gas correlations. Volcanica6(1), 129-145.
[3] Black, B. A., & Aiuppa, A. (2023). Carbon release from Large Igneous Province magmas estimated from trace element-gas correlations. Volcanica6(1), 129-145.
[4] Aiuppa, A., Casetta, F., Coltorti, M., Stagno, V., & Tamburello, G. (2021). Carbon concentration increases with depth of melting in Earth’s upper mantle. Nature Geoscience14(9), 697-703.

How to cite: Lisica, K., Mark, D., and Barfod, D.: Quantifying mantle carbon fluxes during NAIP emplacement using trace element proxies and high-precision Ar–Ar geochronology , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7939, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7939, 2026.

EGU26-10981 | Orals | GMPV7.1

Are Deccan basalts contaminated by the continental crust?  

Sara Callegaro, Andrea Marzoli, Laurie Reisberg, Manfredo Capriolo, Paul R. Renne, Massimo Chiaradia, Christine M. Meyzen, Steve Self, Loyc Vanderkluysen, and Andrea Boscaini

Basalts from the Western Ghats lava sequences of the ca. 66 Ma Deccan Large Igneous Province (LIP) display substantial geochemical variability from enriched, crust-like signatures in the Late Cretaceous Kalsubai and Lonavala Subgroup basalts (e.g., 87Sr/86Sri mainly 0.705-0.715) to more depleted, mantle-like signatures in the Early Paleogene Wai Subgroup basalts (generally, 87Sr/86Sri ca. 0.703-0.706). By contrast, Os isotopic compositions are relatively uniform throughout the Western Ghats stratigraphy (187Os/188Osi = 0.12 to 0.21). The lowest Os isotopic ratios are found in the Ambenali Formation of the Wai Subgroup (0.120) and may reflect a modest contribution from the subcontinental lithospheric mantle. Overall, the combined isotopic and trace-element data—particularly the Os isotopic signatures—indicate that assimilation of Proterozoic to Archean Indian crust was generally minimal (<3 wt.% of the parental magma) and did not exceed 8 wt.% in any of the analyzed samples. Comparable findings have been reported for other areas of the Deccan (Peters and Day, 2017) and other Phanerozoic LIPs. We therefore propose that the emplacement of LIPs as short-lived eruptive pulses, separated by relatively long hiatuses, limited sustained heating of the crust above its solidus and thus inhibited significant crustal contamination (Marzoli et al., 2026).

 

Marzoli, A., Reisberg, L., Capriolo, M., Callegaro, S., Renne, P. R., Chiaradia, M., Meyzen, C. M., Self, S., Vanderkluysen, L., Boscaini, A. (2026). Limited crustal contamination in large igneous province basalts: Sr-Nd-Pb-Os isotope evidence from the Western Ghats, Deccan Traps. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 678, 119847. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2026.119847.

How to cite: Callegaro, S., Marzoli, A., Reisberg, L., Capriolo, M., Renne, P. R., Chiaradia, M., Meyzen, C. M., Self, S., Vanderkluysen, L., and Boscaini, A.: Are Deccan basalts contaminated by the continental crust? , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10981, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10981, 2026.

EGU26-11540 | ECS | Orals | GMPV7.1

The PORO-CLIM experiment: Did the North Atlantic Igneous Province drive the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum? 

Hazel Knight, Stephen M Jones, John R Hopper, Thomas Funck, and Brian M O'Reilly

Throughout Earth's history, episodic Large Igneous Province emplacements coincide with remarkable environmental perturbations including mass extinction, global warming, and oceanic anoxia events.  The causal mechanism for this association remains unclear.  An exemplar is the temporal coincidence between the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) and the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) global warming event.  The NAIP was emplaced over a period of c. 10 million years, whereas the PETM onset spanned c. 10 thousand years.  This discrepancy in pacing has motivated the hypothesis that NAIP-derived carbon-based greenhouse gas emissions slowly changed the background climate until a threshold was reached, triggering positive feedbacks that rapidly released additional non-volcanic carbon emissions that drove the PETM.  Here, we address an alternative hypothesis: that thermal mantle plume pulsing caused a pulse of NAIP magma generation and consequently a pulse of greenhouse gas emissions on the timeframe of the PETM.  To test this hypothesis, the PORO-CLIM experiment has generated an approximately 400 km long wide-angle seismic model of oceanic crust south of the Rockall Plateau, within the outer NAIP.  Crustal thickness and composition along this profile can be interpreted as a tape-recording of asthenospheric mantle temperature throughout NAIP emplacement.  Mantle temperature was cool during late Cretaceous continental break-up, increased through the Paleocene coincident with early NAIP activity, peaked near the Paleocene/Eocene boundary coincident with the most voluminous NAIP activity, and decreased through the early Eocene as NAIP activity waned.  This temperature cycle supports a plume initiation model for the NAIP.  Multiple thermal pulses are superimposed on the long-term temperature cycle.  The crustal morphology of these pulses resembles the V-Shaped Ridges currently forming in oceanic crust south of Iceland, which are thought to reflect thermal pulsing of the modern Icelandic Mantle Plume.  The biggest hot mantle pulse observed on the PORO-CLIM profile is associated with the PETM.  The difference between the age of this pulse recorded here within the outer NAIP and its age recorded within the inner NAIP by kilometre-scale uplift of sedimentary basins shows that the pulse travelled rapidly within the asthenosphere from the centre to the edge of the NAIP.  This pulse of hot, solid mantle travelled sufficiently rapidly to generate a pulse of NAIP magma by decompressional melting on the 10–100 thousand year timeframe of the PETM.  Thus the PORO-CLIM experiment supports a model in which the NAIP supplied a substantial proportion of volcanic greenhouse gases that triggered the PETM.  More generally, we propose that thermal plume pulsing is a key physical process that explains how relatively slow Large Igneous Province emplacements coincide with relatively rapid environmental perturbations. 

How to cite: Knight, H., Jones, S. M., Hopper, J. R., Funck, T., and O'Reilly, B. M.: The PORO-CLIM experiment: Did the North Atlantic Igneous Province drive the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11540, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11540, 2026.

EGU26-12527 | ECS | Orals | GMPV7.1

Impact of magmatic activity and magma-sediment-fluid interactionson the transfer and sequestration of volatiles in the Guaymas Basin 

Alban Cheviet, Martine Buatier, Flavien Choulet, Christophe Galerne, Wolfgang Bach, and Sara Callegaro

Volcanic basins play a central role in the exchange of volatiles between the lithosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere and biosphere. The intrusion of magmas into sedimentary basins induces complex interactions between magma, sediments and fluids, profoundly modifying the biogeochemical cycles of carbon and sulphur. These phenomena are known to have contributed to major climatic and biological crises throughout Earth's history, but the mechanisms by which volatiles are partially trapped are still poorly understood.

            This study (Cheviet et al. 2023; 2025) focuses on magma-sediment-fluid interaction processes and their consequences for the mobilisation and sequestration of carbon and sulphur in the Guaymas Basin (Gulf of California), a young system where basaltic sills were emplaced in unconsolidated sediments rich in organic matter and pore water. Three levels of interaction have been identified: (1) contact metamorphism, (2) magmatic contamination (3) late hydrothermal circulation. Taken together, these processes allow several hundred thousand tonnes of sulphur and large quantities of carbon to be stored locally. On a basin-wide scale, these interactions transform sills and their direct surroundings in volatile traps, modifying the global balance of greenhouse gases emitted during magmatic intrusions. This study shows that, contrary to the classic paradigm of complete degassing into the atmosphere, a significant proportion of volatiles can be sequestered in magmatic and metamorphic rocks over the long term. These magma-sediment-fluid processes will be studied at basin scale within the framework of the DEGAS project (ERC-2024-CoG).

 

Cheviet, A., Buatier, M., Choulet, F., Galerne, C., Riboulleau, A., Aiello, I., Marsaglia, K. M., and Höfig, T. W.: Contact metamorphic reactions and fluid–rock interactions related to magmatic sill intrusion in the Guaymas Basin, Eur. J. Mineral., 35, 987–1007, https://doi.org/10.5194/ejm-35-987-2023, 2023.

Cheviet A., Goncalves P., , Choulet F., Bach W., Riboulleau A., Vennemann T., Buatier M.: Carbon trapping during contact metamorphism in magmatic basins. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology https://doi.org/10.1007/s00410-025-02262-0, 2025.

ERC-2024-CoG “Deconvolving sources and sinks of carbon and sulfur in magmas to reconstruct DEGASsing from Large Igneous Provinces” https://doi.org/10.3030/101170872

How to cite: Cheviet, A., Buatier, M., Choulet, F., Galerne, C., Bach, W., and Callegaro, S.: Impact of magmatic activity and magma-sediment-fluid interactionson the transfer and sequestration of volatiles in the Guaymas Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12527, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12527, 2026.

EGU26-12753 | ECS | Orals | GMPV7.1

Contact metamorphism and sulfur release during Large Igneous Provence emplacement 

Lindsi Allman, Emily Stewart, and Michael Diamond

The emplacement of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) and subsequent volatile release are associated with catastrophic changes to the earth system and mass extinctions. LIP volatiles can be directly released through igneous degassing and/or indirectly released through metamorphic processes as carbon and sulfur bearing sediments are heated by intrusions and lava flows. Sediment derived carbon emission has been given consideration for its impact on warming (Heimdal et al., 2018; Svensen et al., 2018). Svensen et al (2018) found through modeling that Siberian Trap sill emplacement was predicted to have released 2.3 × 1016 moles of sedimentary C in just 0.7–1.2% of the Tunguska Basin, and modeling by Heimdal et al (2018) proposed that Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP) sills could cause 2.0 × 1018 moles C to be degassed from sediment through contact metamorphism in just two CAMP basins. While the metamorphic carbon production during LIP emplacement has been given attention metasedimentary sulfur emission has been largely ignored. One study, Yallup et al (2013), looks at both metamorphic carbon and metamorphic sulfur emission during LIP emplacement finding evidence of decarbonation and desulfurization substantially increasing the sulfur yield to the surface.

Aside from Yallup et al., (2013) metamorphic sulfur degassing is largely disregarded partly due to the broad assumption that sulfur must reach the stratosphere to drive sustained cooling. However, if the input of sulfur into the troposphere itself is sustained, this can extend the climatic cooling. Metamorphic sulfur degassing during LIP emplacement offers a mechanism for this type of prolonged cooling. We will begin by presenting thermodynamic modeling of sediment metamorphism in tangent with a simple carbon cycle and planetary energy balance model. Together these models show carbon and sulfur emissions from contact metamorphism could be sustained long enough to cause centennial scale sulfate aerosol cooling spikes of several kelvin superimposed on millennial scale warming from carbon dioxide emission. This suggests that metamorphic sulfur should be considered as a plausible driver of sustained cooling.

Further, we present sulfur and carbon geochemical data from a field test of metamorphic volatile emissions to verify modeled mechanisms using an observational approach.  We use samples from the Sugar Grove dike, an Eocene basalt intruded into the Devonian Millboro black shale in West Virginia, as a well-exposed and accessible proxy for basaltic LIP intrusion. We find evidence of decreasing pyrite and increasing pyrrhotite concentrations in the shale approaching the dike as a potential indicator of sulfur release. We will also present isotopic data for pyrite and pyrrhotite sulfur, organic carbon, carbonate carbon, and carbonate oxygen. Together these results will constrain the magnitude of metamorphic sulfur release and test its viability as a mechanism for cooling before warming during LIP emplacement.

How to cite: Allman, L., Stewart, E., and Diamond, M.: Contact metamorphism and sulfur release during Large Igneous Provence emplacement, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12753, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12753, 2026.

The interaction between mid-ocean ridges and mantle plumes (~1000 km scale) is a fundamental geodynamic process, generating complex spatio-temporal patterns of volcanism exemplified by the Galápagos platform and the prominent, en-echelon Wolf-Darwin lineaments. Unlike axial volcanism driven by pure extension, these off-axis features form in a regime where plate motion and deep plume flow create a dominant shear component. While such lineaments are characteristic of plume-ridge interaction (PRI) settings, the physical mechanisms governing their distinct spacing, orientation, and longevity remain enigmatic. Understanding these mechanisms is critical, as the resulting topographic heterogeneity governs seamount formation, which in turn profoundly influences ocean circulation and the distribution of deep-sea benthic habitats.

Here, we test the hypothesis that these lineaments result from melt localization instabilities driven by asthenospheric shear. We employ numerical models of viscous two-phase flow1 to simulate the deformation of pre-existing melt heterogeneities embedded in a porous background, treating the system as a localized shear box. We systematically vary the background porosity (φback= 0.01 - 0.05) and the melt pocket porosity (φmp = 0.04 - 0.08) to determine the conditions under which melt patches remain distinct—forming separate features like the Wolf-Darwin lineaments—versus coalescing into background flow channels.

Our results identify a hierarchy of length scales controlling melt structure evolution. Consistent with linear stability analysis and laboratory experiments, we observe an intrinsic background instability scale of λinst ≈ 0.1· δc (where δc is the compaction length). We find that the survival of pre-existing melt pockets follows a gradient dependent on the porosity contrast (φmpback): generally, pockets must exceed λinst by a factor of 2–4 to survive shear as intact features. Furthermore, we constrain the critical separation distance for maintaining distinct lineaments. Simulation results demonstrate that a minimum edge-to-edge separation of ≈ 1· δc is required to prevent hydraulic connectivity; below this threshold, pressure gradients drive adjacent patches to connect via background melt channels and coalesce.

To validate these scaling laws against natural systems, we apply a quantitative 2D continuous wavelet analysis2 to both simulation porosity fields and high-resolution bathymetry of the Galápagos Archipelago. This comparative spectral approach allows us to objectively quantify the dominant wavelengths and anisotropy of the observed lineaments without bias. By mapping the modeled stability regimes to the observed lineament spacing, we place constraints on the effective mantle viscosity and permeability structure required to preserve the Wolf-Darwin lineaments. These findings provide a mechanical framework for interpreting off-axis volcanism and define specific targets for future seafloor magnetotelluric and seismic anisotropy campaigns aimed at resolving lateral melt transport in PRI system.

1Zhongtian Zhang, & Jacob S. Jordan. (2021). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4460676
2Ungermann, J. (2025). JuWavelet (v01.03.00). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16962346 

How to cite: Turino, V. and Mittal, T.: Stability of Melt Lineaments in Plume-Ridge Interaction Settings: Insights from Two-Phase Flow Models and Wavelet Analysis of the Galápagos Platform, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13028, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13028, 2026.

EGU26-14092 | Orals | GMPV7.1

The IMPULSE experiment: New oceanic crustal record of thermal plume pulsing of Earth’s strongest mantle plume 

Stephen M Jones, Nirmit Dhabaria, Tim Henstock, and Nicky White

Thermal pulsing is thought to be a characteristic process of major mantle convection cells.  Seafloor features near Iceland, known as the "V-Shaped Ridges" (VSRs), may comprise the best record of thermal plume pulsing.  However, a satisfactory test of this thermal plume pulsing model has been compromised by the lack of suitable geophysical and geochemical datasets from the VSRs.  Here, we present the first full crustal seismic image of multiple complete VSR cycles.  In 2024, the IMPULSE experiment acquired an approximately 400 km long profile that straddles the Reykjanes Ridge spreading axis and several V-Shaped Ridge/Trough cycles spanning over 18 million years.  Traveltime picks for crustal and upper mantle refractions and PmP wide-angle Moho reflections were inverted using the TOMO2D software package to obtain crustal thickness as well as crustal and upper mantle seismic velocity.  The results show crustal thickness variations that correlate with VSR geometry.  They also reveal seismic velocity variations which indicate fluctuations in mineralogy of the lower crustal cumulates that correlate with the VSRs.  Mid-ocean ridge basalts sampled by International Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 395 at five sites along the seismic profile show trace element variations that correlate with the VSRs.  Significantly, we have imaged both conjugate flanks of the spreading axis along a plate spreading flowline.  Comparison of conjugate crustal thickness and structure permits us to disentangle primary melt supply processes from asymmetric crustal accretion processes.  The combined geophysical and geochemical dataset supports a model in which the VSRs form when thermal plume pulsing causes fluctuations in the volume and composition of magma supplied to the mid-oceanic ridge, and crustal accretion processes related to oblique spreading at variable rate then modify VSR morphology in different locations.

How to cite: Jones, S. M., Dhabaria, N., Henstock, T., and White, N.: The IMPULSE experiment: New oceanic crustal record of thermal plume pulsing of Earth’s strongest mantle plume, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14092, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14092, 2026.

EGU26-14098 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

A New mantle source contributing to volcanism in the Indian Ocean 

Julien Seghi, François Nauret, Vincent Famin, Xavier Quidelleur, Loraine Gourbet, Sidonie Révillon, and Maëlis Arnould

Intra-plate volcanism is commonly attributed to mantle plumes originating from deep-seated therm0-chemical anomalies that rise buoyantly through the mantle and puncture the overlying lithosphere. These long-lived magmatic systems can persist for tens of millions of years, producing age-progressive volcanic chains and, in some cases, interacting with mid-ocean ridges to generate off-axis volcanism. The Rodrigues Ridge, and more generally the Mascarene Islands in the Indian Ocean have traditionally been interpreted within this framework as the result of interaction between the Central Indian Ridge and the Réunion hotspot. Here, we present a new geochemical and geochronological investigation of volcanic rocks from Rodrigues Island, the subaerial expression of the Rodrigues Ridge, which challenges this classical model. Compared with published data from the Mascarene islands, our major, trace element and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic analyses reveal systematic deviations from compositions expected for simple mixing between depleted mid-ocean ridge mantle and Réunion plume-derived melts. Instead, Rodrigues subaerial lavas, along with the intermediate and younger volcanic series of Mauritius Island; record the contribution of a third, geochemically distinct mantle source whose signature lies in the focus zone (FOZO) of Ocean Island Basalts isotopic compositions. This additional component requires the involvement of material derived from another deep mantle source. The most suitable candidate providing this plume-related material is the Mascarene Basin asthenospheric reservoir (MBAR), a low shear velocity zone in the asthenosphere beneath the Mascarene Basin identified by seismic tomographies described in Barruol et al. (2019). Moreover, on-axis volcanism in the Central Indian Ridge —and thus recent— have already been linked to the influence of the MBAR (Vincent et al., 2024). K-Ar geochronology combined with geochemistry allows us to constrain the timing of its contribution to the magmatism of the western Indian Ocean to the last ~4 million years. These results highlight the complexity of mantle plume–ridge interactions and suggest that the Indian Ocean upper mantle is fed by multiple plume sources whose contributions may overlap in space and time. Our study emphasizes the need to reconsider the upper mantle architecture beneath off-axis volcanic ridges and sheds light on the dynamics of plume dispersal within the asthenosphere.

How to cite: Seghi, J., Nauret, F., Famin, V., Quidelleur, X., Gourbet, L., Révillon, S., and Arnould, M.: A New mantle source contributing to volcanism in the Indian Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14098, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14098, 2026.

EGU26-15423 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

Quantitative Reconstructions of Large Igneous Province Gas Emissions Using Mercury Chemostratigraphy  

Isabel Fendley and Oliver Neilson

Large Igneous Provinces (LIP) emplacement is commonly associated with severe environmental change. A primary way LIPs affect the environment is via the emission of climatically active gases, such as carbon (CO2, CH4) and sulfur (SO2, SO4 aerosol). The flux and tempo of these gas emissions control the effect they have on the environment, with different feedback effects dominating depending on emission tempos. Hence, estimates of LIP gas emissions at high temporal resolution are required to constrain the potential environmental impacts of a specific LIP. However, complex LIP chronostratigraphy and non-eruptive degassing make these estimates challenging.

Volcanic gas emissions are the main natural source of mercury to the environment. Increases in mercury concentration in sedimentary archives have thus been commonly used as a qualitative indicator of LIP activity. Our recent work has expanded this tool to quantitative reconstruction of volcanic gas fluxes. This technique requires understanding the size and rate of mercury emissions that correspond to an observed change in sedimentary records. However, a critical issue is that mercury records sometimes exhibit different patterns within the same time interval, complicating interpretation.  

We use our understanding of the mercury cycle as represented by environmental mercury box models to evaluate several questions: A) What size/duration of eruptions are resolvable in sedimentary mercury records? Modern large explosive eruptions are rarely observed, whereas LIPs are. What are the limits? B) How do mercury records vary between different environments (e.g., terrestrial, coastal marine, deep marine settings)? C) Can we understand spatial and temporal changes in mercury deposition as a function of environmental conditions (e.g., regional riverine flux and long-term trends in volcanic activity)?

To answer these questions, we have developed several new tools. First, we adapt an existing environmental mercury box model to paleoenvironmental conditions, using parameters from continental hydrological models and background mid-ocean ridge and subduction zone volcanic activity. This model is used to simulate mercury deposition in different environmental settings for a variety of eruption (Hg emission event) rates and durations.

Then, we use a novel Bayesian inversion framework to analyze these results with published Hg records across multiple time periods and depositional environments, to test whether different coeval records are consistent with the same underlying forcing. We find that our model results, accounting for sediment accumulation rate and sampling resolution, effectively predict enrichment patterns across environmental settings, supporting the use of mercury records as a quantitative proxy. Additionally, the geologically short lifetime of mercury in the surface environment makes results highly sensitive to sediment accumulation rate and to volcanic pulse duration - e.g., short (<~100 year) pulses are not likely to be distinguishable from background variability in many sedimentary environments.  

How to cite: Fendley, I. and Neilson, O.: Quantitative Reconstructions of Large Igneous Province Gas Emissions Using Mercury Chemostratigraphy , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15423, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15423, 2026.

EGU26-16847 | Orals | GMPV7.1

Petrographic and geochemical characteristics of a possible vent-related ejecta deposit at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary in the Vøring Basin, offshore Norway 

Henrik H. Svensen, Christian Tegner, David W. Jolley, Henk Brinkhuis, Madeleine S. Nygaard, Morgan T. Jones, and Sverre Planke

Hydrothermal vent complexes are degassing structures that form in response to rapid volatile generation and release associated with igneous sill intrusions in sedimentary basins. They are discovered in numerous basins worldwide, originating from sills and contact aureoles and terminating at the paleosurface where they form up to 10 km wide craters. Field studies and numerical models have suggested that the venting processes were explosive, releasing aureole-derived gases, sedimentary pore fluids, and fragmented sedimentary rocks to the seafloor or land surface. However, ejecta deposits originating from hydrothermal vent complexes are poorly studied and hard to identify, hampering detailed reconstructions of vent formation and evolution. Here we report the characteristics of a possible ejecta deposit from Vøring Basin Hole U1570D drilled as part of IODP Expedition 396 in 2021. During core logging, an unusual layer was identified immediately overlaying the top Paleocene strata. This layer is about 2m thick, contains Apectodinium augustum dinocysts restricted to the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), and also yields abundant reworked Paleocene and Cretaceous microfossils. Moreover, the layer is characterized by rounded fragments of claystone, angular chert and quartz fragments, dolerite fragments, fresh and devitrified volcanic tephra, and a mixed groundmass of smectite-illite with diatoms and early diagenetic pyrite. Electron microprobe analyses document a bimodal tephra geochemistry, with both basaltic and rhyolitic compositions and morphologies indicating no or minor reworking. In the presentation we will discuss two possible formation scenarios for the layer, including 1) erosion from nearby marginal highs, and 2) ejecta deposit sourced from an explosive submarine eruption from a hydrothermal vent complex, mobilizing Cretaceous and Paleocene strata from the conduit zone. In any case, the bimodal tephra composition stresses the presence of an evolved igneous system in the Vøring Basin during the PETM, with a potential genetic link to a recently discovered Paleocene granite.

How to cite: Svensen, H. H., Tegner, C., Jolley, D. W., Brinkhuis, H., Nygaard, M. S., Jones, M. T., and Planke, S.: Petrographic and geochemical characteristics of a possible vent-related ejecta deposit at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary in the Vøring Basin, offshore Norway, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16847, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16847, 2026.

EGU26-17771 | ECS | Orals | GMPV7.1

Imprints of Cretaceous magmatism on the oldest Pacific lithosphere: evidence from seismic anisotropy 

Kai-Xun Chen, Takehi Isse, Hitoshi Kawakatsu, Hajime Shiobara, Nozomu Takeuchi, Hiroko Sugioka, Hisashi Utada, Ban-Yuan Kuo, Patty Pei-Ying Lin, Shu-Huei Hung, Ping-You Chang, Yih Yang, Wu-Cheng Chi, YoungHee Kim, Sang-Mook Lee, and Yuancheng Gung

Hotspot chains and Cretaceous large igneous provinces (LIPs) in the southern Pacific are spatially associated with the South Pacific Superswell and have been linked to the possible presence of a “superplume” in the deep South Pacific mantle, potentially rooted near the Pacific LLSVP at the core–mantle boundary. Compared with the long-lived, age-progressive Hawaiian-type chain, many South Pacific intraplate volcanic chains appear short-lived and/or discontinuous, which is inconsistent with key assumptions of the classical Wilson–Morgan hotspot hypothesis. Nevertheless, geophysical observations remain sparse, limiting our understanding of plate thermal evolution and the underlying mantle dynamics. To decipher the impact of Cretaceous magmatism and to further improve our understanding of the thermal evolution of oceanic plates, we constrained the lithospheric seismic structure using data recorded by ocean-bottom seismometer arrays. As part of the Pacific Array, an ongoing transnational collaboration, the Oldest-2 deployment was jointly carried out by research teams from Taiwan and Japan. We integrated Oldest-1 data to expand the spatial coverage across the oldest Pacific seafloor, sampling the Magellan Seamount and two adjacent Large Igneous Provinces, the East Mariana Basin and the Pigafetta Basin. We applied the ambient noise tomography method to constrain the three-dimensional isotropic and anisotropic shear-wave velocity structure of the oldest Pacific lithosphere. The resulting radial anisotropy exhibits distinct characteristics between the Magellan Seamount and the two adjacent LIPs. The seamount shows strong radial anisotropy from the crust down to ~30 km depth, indicating well-developed, horizontally oriented crystallized sills. In contrast, the LIPs exhibit negative radial anisotropy within the crust and uppermost mantle. We interpret this anisotropic signature as reflecting former magma conduits, where large volumes of magma were transported vertically from deeper sources to the surface over a relatively short timescale. These findings suggest that, although the seamounts and LIPs beneath the southern Pacific seafloor were likely formed by secondary magmatic sources, the oceanic plate has remained affected by these magmatic processes and continues to preserve clear seismic signatures of such activity, providing valuable observational constraints on the oceanic lithosphere–asthenosphere system.

How to cite: Chen, K.-X., Isse, T., Kawakatsu, H., Shiobara, H., Takeuchi, N., Sugioka, H., Utada, H., Kuo, B.-Y., Lin, P. P.-Y., Hung, S.-H., Chang, P.-Y., Yang, Y., Chi, W.-C., Kim, Y., Lee, S.-M., and Gung, Y.: Imprints of Cretaceous magmatism on the oldest Pacific lithosphere: evidence from seismic anisotropy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17771, 2026.

EGU26-18922 | ECS | Orals | GMPV7.1

Sill intrusions in the Oslo Rift were pulsed: New evidence from CA-ID-TIMS U-Pb geochronology. 

Helge Nipen, Sara Callegaro, Henrik Svensen, Lill Karoline Syversen, and Lars Eivind Augland

Intrusive networks in continental rifts provide key constraints on the depth, lifespan, and organisation of magmatic plumbing systems. In the Oslo Rift, maenaite (microsyenite) and camptonite sills have long been interpreted as the earliest magmatic products and linked to specific early stress regimes, largely on the basis of Rb–Sr whole-rock and mineral ages of ~304–294 Ma (e.g. Sundvoll et al., 1992). Within this framework, the coexistence of felsic maenaite and phenocryst-rich camptonites has been used to infer tectonically controlled emplacement during a transition from compressional to extensional conditions at the onset of rifting (Larsen et al., 2008). However, U–Pb geochronology indicates prolonged intrusive magmatism in the Oslo Rift.

Here we present new high-precision U–Pb zircon CA-ID-TIMS ages from maenaite sills across the Oslo Rift. Maenaite sills at Jevnaker, central Oslo, and Slemmestad yield ages of 280–278 Ma. A younger maenaite sill at Byrud Emerald Mines yields ~271 Ma, and a trachyte sill in Alnabru yields ~265 Ma. These data define two principal sill-emplacement pulses at 282–278 Ma and ~273–270 Ma, followed by a later phase of intrusions at ~265 Ma, documenting a pulsed magma emplacement throughout most of the lifespan of the magmatic province.

The ~280 Ma pulse coincides with late plateau to early caldera-stage magmatism, including rhomb porphyry no. 11 (RP11), the Skrim Plutonic Complex, the B2 basalt, and the Ramnes Caldera (Corfu et al., 2024). The younger ~273–270 Ma pulse overlaps central volcano–caldera systems such as Drammen and Nittedal, broadly consistent with the stage-based evolution of the Oslo Rift outlined by Larsen et al. (2008). The revised chronology therefore removes the temporal basis for interpreting the maenaite sills as purely a product of an early, distinct tectonic regime. Instead, linking sill emplacement to more mature stages of rift evolution in an extensional to transtensional setting, when magma transport was apparently organised by mature plumbing systems also feeding central volcanoes.

Petrological observations support this interpretation. Although only maenaites are dated here, they occur together with camptonites, sometimes observed in the same sill, indicating a close relationship. The camptonites commonly contain very high proportions of amphibole and clinopyroxene phenocrysts and display cumulate textures, consistent with repeated recharge of deeper magma reservoirs. Preliminary thermobarometric calculations show amphibole and clinopyroxene crystallization in magma chambers at 20-30 km depth, in line with a model suggesting the presence of mafic cumulates remaining in the deeper crust, as indicated in geophysical data (Neumann et al., 1992).  

Together, these results show that Oslo Rift sill emplacement records deep-rooted, long-lived magmatic systems pulsing throughout much of the lifespan of the volcanic province, providing new insight into how mantle and deep crustal processes govern magmatism in intracontinental rifts.

How to cite: Nipen, H., Callegaro, S., Svensen, H., Syversen, L. K., and Augland, L. E.: Sill intrusions in the Oslo Rift were pulsed: New evidence from CA-ID-TIMS U-Pb geochronology., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18922, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18922, 2026.

EGU26-19698 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV7.1

Influence of Mantle Rheology on Plume Dynamics and Periodicities 

Alexandre Koessler, Maëlis Arnould, Jean-Philippe Perrillat, and Vincent Famin

Many hotspots worldwide display evidence of fluctuating magmatic activities that may be linked to time-dependent variations in melt production within mantle plumes. These periodicities are observed globally on Earth, ranging from 1 Myr to 20 Myr [Morrow and Mittelstaedt, 2021 ; Sokolov et al., 2025]. Remarkably, the Réunion hotspot exhibits short magmatic pulsations with a periodicity of ~400 kyr [Famin et al., in rev.]. Given the ~230 km separation between La Réunion and Mauritius, the synchronous short-period pulsations observed at the Réunion hotspot imply that they originate from deeper plume dynamics.

 

Understanding the physical controls behind these pulsations could establish links between mantle convection, plume dynamics, and surface volcanism. Previous studies suggest that plume behavior is sensitive to mantle rheology. Plume pulsations with periods of ~1-10 Myr have indeed been reported in numerical experiments and can stem from thermochemical instabilities due to the interaction of plumes with small-scale convection in the asthenosphere [Ballmer et al., 2009], thermal instabilities in sufficiently vigorous convection (Rayleigh number > 5×10⁶), buoyancy changes due to mineralogical phase transitions [Trubitsyn and Evseev, 2018], horizontal shearing caused by plate motions over an asthenosphere dominated by dislocation creep, leading to unstable tilted plume conduits [Neuharth and Mittelstaedt, 2023].

 

Here, we seek to investigate how mantle rheology can favour short-period pulses of plume activity and aim to identify the core physical mechanisms that control plume dynamics. We thus run 3D regional convection models in spherical cap geometry with plate-like behavior (viscoplastic rheology) at the surface using the StagYY code [Tackley, 2000]. We developed an automated algorithm to detect and track plumes in space and time, by  defining plumes as the highest percentiles of the upwards vertical advective heat transport . The morphology and dynamics of plumes are then quantified using various parameters such as the buoyancy flux, heat flux, angle of inclination, along with their associated uncertainties. Our study explores the effects of surface yield stress (ranging 10-100 MPa), radiogenic heat production (3-15 pW/kg), a 30 to 100 fold viscosity jump at the transition zone, and of compressibility and phase transitions (especially the post-spinel transition at ~660 km depth that works as an accelerator of upwellings plumes and thus favors dynamic instabilities [Faccenda and Dal ZIlio 2016]) on plume dynamics as well as on plate tectonics. We aim to understand how these parameters control the generation of periodic activity and short-period term plume pulses and ultimately to estimate  melt production variations at the surface in order to compare it with geological observations of magmatic products at the Réunion hotspot. Preliminary results indicate that surface yield stress and radiogenic heat production primarily affect plate tectonics, whereas a viscosity jump across the transition zone promotes periodic (~2 Myr) plume behavior.

How to cite: Koessler, A., Arnould, M., Perrillat, J.-P., and Famin, V.: Influence of Mantle Rheology on Plume Dynamics and Periodicities, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19698, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19698, 2026.

EGU26-23102 | Orals | GMPV7.1

The structure, distribution and environmental implications of voluminous sill and hydrothermal vent complexes in the Vøring and Møre basins 

Sverre Planke, Dmitrii Zastrozhnov, Nina Lebedeva-Ivanova, John M. Millett, Henrik H. Svensen, Mansour M. Abdelmalak, Jan Inge Faleide, Christian Berndt, Stefan Bünz, Cornelia Binde, Alan Bischoff, Mikal Trulsvik, and Reidun Myklebust

The magma plumbing system of large igneous provinces may include emplacement of voluminous sill complexes in sedimentary basins. Key examples include the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP; c. 56 Ma), the Karoo-Ferrar province (c. 183 Ma), and the Siberian Traps province (c. 251 Ma). In these basins, thousands of kilometer-sized hydrothermal vent complexes are associated with the sill complexes. We have interpreted new and legacy 2D and 3D seismic data in the Vøring and Møre basins offshore Norway to characterize the sill and hydrothermal vent complexes in a 100,000 km2 large region. The upper part of one of the hydrothermal vent complexes, the Modgunn Vent, was cored by five boreholes during IODP Expedition 396 in 2021. Saucer-shaped sills and overlying domes at the Top Paleocene level characterize the Jolnir, Tulipan and Infinity sill complexes in the Møre Basin. In contrast, sill complexes in the Vøring Basin display more variable morphologies, including ponding thick sheets and transgressive sheets reflecting the variations in deep basin structure and type of host rocks. The extensive Vivel Sill in the Vigrid Syncline is locally more than 200 m thick in the deeper parts of the basin, with some domal-shaped geometries that crosscut the deep basin stratigraphy and layer-parallel planar geometries at shallow stratigraphic levels. The hydrothermal vent complexes are mainly present as pipe-like disruptive seismic anomalies above transgressive sill segments connecting the contact aureoles with crater- or eye-shaped upper parts of the vent complexes near the Top Paleocene reflection. Scientific and industry drilling samples document that the vent craters were infilled during earliest Eocene times, most likely related to sill emplacement during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). In conclusion, the current geometries of voluminous igneous sheet intrusions both reflect the pre-emplacement deep basin structure and post-emplacement structural deformation, whereas the contact metamorphic processes triggers pipe-like deformation and focused fluid flow during formation of hydrothermal vent complexes.

How to cite: Planke, S., Zastrozhnov, D., Lebedeva-Ivanova, N., Millett, J. M., Svensen, H. H., Abdelmalak, M. M., Faleide, J. I., Berndt, C., Bünz, S., Binde, C., Bischoff, A., Trulsvik, M., and Myklebust, R.: The structure, distribution and environmental implications of voluminous sill and hydrothermal vent complexes in the Vøring and Møre basins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23102, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23102, 2026.

SSP4 – Palaeontology, Palaeoecology and Evolution of Life

Dichotomous thinking also known as “black-and-white” and “all-or-nothing” thinking is a common cognitive distortion in which one sees things in absolute extremes without any middle ground. Not only does this bias distort reality and lead to interpersonal conflicts, but it also hinders problem solving. In the Geosciences, this bias is the source of a > 100 years old divide between tectonicists, i.e., early supporters of Continental Drift Theory (e.g., Alfred Wegener, Alexander du Toit), and paleontologists, who argued for (now sunken) land bridges between the continents based on similar fossil records (e.g., Charles Schuchert, John Gregory, Hermann von Ihering, Bailey Willis). Despite explaining the similar fossil record on continents now separated by oceans, Land Bridge Theory implied continental fixity. It was therefore completely abandoned in the 60–70s with the growing body of evidence supporting continent motion. Continental Drift Theory was then fully accepted without any middle ground despite the fossil record suggesting prolonged connection between the continents at specific localities. Possible causes for the black-or-white approach of the Geoscience community include (1) simplicity: easier to envision one hypothesis being right rather than a compromise of both, (2) guilt: Alfred Wegener had died in Greenland in 1931 only to be proven right 30 years later upon acceptance of continent motion, and (3) a feeling of inferiority amongst paleontologists and feeling of superiority (i.e., feeling of inferiority in disguise) amongst tectonicists upon demonstrating continental motion.

Since then, paleontologists have explored new hypotheses to explain the migration of species at times when oceans are believed to have fully separated the continents, e.g., migration of primates from western Africa to South America and of lizards the other way around in the Oligocene. A hypothesis under testing involves floating vegetation islands rafting the species as small groups of individuals across the ocean. This hypothesis implies that enough individuals survived the crossing, i.e., enough food and/or quick journey, and found one another upon landing.

Neither the new hypotheses nor the old ones take into account all the evidence, e.g., microcontinents along major transform faults (e.g., Romanche and St Paul fault zones) and correlation of all former land bridges with major transform faults and rift-oblique orogens on the adjacent margins (e.g., Central African Orogen in western Africa and Sergipano Belt in northeastern Brazil). Orogenic Bridge Theory reconciles these with both continent motion and the fossil record. Orogenic bridges are ribbons of continental crust transected by orogenic structures highly oblique to the active rift. These structures are unsuitably oriented to thin the crust and thus hinder rifting, delay breakup, and control the formation of major transform faults and elongated microcontinents. Orogenic bridges have the potential to form prolonged land connections between the continents while oceanic crustal domains form on either side, thus further allowing the spreading of terrestrial species while hindering that of marine species. This illustrates the need for more multidisciplinary collaboration across the geosciences. Creating a more flexible community that is both inclusive and mindful of diversity is key to enhance collaboration.

How to cite: Koehl, J.-B. and Foulger, G.: Black and white: the bias that shaped plate tectonics and the ongoing > 100 years old divide of the geoscience community, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-507, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-507, 2026.

EGU26-1165 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Interacting environmental and evolutionary controls on shifting marine biodiversity hotspots through Cenozoic 

Venu Gopal Kella and Devapriya Chattopadhyay

Marine biodiversity hotspots are regions characterized by exceptionally high species richness compared to surrounding areas. Fossil and molecular evidence indicate that these hotspots have shifted across space and time throughout the Cenozoic; yet the mechanisms driving their emergence and relocation remain inadequately understood. Here, we examine these dynamics—and their links to environmental change—using genus-level fossil data for molluscs, cnidarians, and foraminifera compiled from the Paleobiology Database and published sources.

Because publicly available fossil occurrence data exhibit strong geographic and temporal sampling inhomogeneities, sampling standardization is essential for robust interpretation of diversity patterns. To reduce sampling biases, we applied Shareholder Quorum Subsampling (SQS) and identified paleo-hotspots as regions where sampling-standardized richness exceeded global confidence intervals. We detected 40 paleo-hotspots exhibiting distinct clade-specific macro-evolutionary signatures. Using models based on Hierarchical Bayesian structural equations reveal that environmental conditions (sea surface temperature, shelf area, sea level) influence hotspot development formation predominantly by modulating macro-evolutionary processes (origination, extinction, immigration), though the strength and direction of these pathways differ among groups. Cnidarian hotspots arise from high evolutionary turnover, where elevated origination rates and expansive shelf area strongly increase hotspot probability. In contrast, for both benthic and planktic foraminifera, no single environmental or macro-evolutionary factor exerts a dominant direct influence; rather, interconnected processes indirectly shape diversity and, ultimately, hotspot formation. Together, these results show that marine biodiversity hotspots arise through distinct, clade-specific macro-evolutionary mechanisms influenced by the environment.

How to cite: Kella, V. G. and Chattopadhyay, D.: Interacting environmental and evolutionary controls on shifting marine biodiversity hotspots through Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1165, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1165, 2026.

EGU26-1434 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Volcanic forcing of oxygenation dynamics in the mid-Proterozoic 

Longfei Sun, Jeroen E. Sonke, Simon W. Poulton, Dongjie Tang*, Xiaoying Shi, Xinqiang Wang, Xiqiang Zhou, Lin Meng, Baozeng Xie, Lei Xu, Shaochen Yang, and Romain Guilbaud

Large Igneous Province (LIP) volcanism is commonly considered to have driven ocean deoxygenation and associated mass extinctions during the Phanerozoic. However, the impacts and feedback mechanisms associated with LIP emplacement in the prevailingly low-oxygen Precambrian environment remain poorly understood. Here, we present mercury isotope, iron speciation and phosphorus phase partitioning data for mid-Mesoproterozoic marine sediments of the Shennongjia Group, South China, to reconstruct the response of the phosphorus cycle to LIP volcanism. Our data indicate that LIP volcanism triggered an expansion in marine euxinia, which enhanced phosphorus recycling and stimulated surface ocean primary production, thereby promoting increased burial of organic carbon and pyrite. This facilitated net marine oxygenation, with repeated volcanic pulses ultimately resulting in enhanced ventilation of the mid-Proterozoic ocean. We propose that while mid-Proterozoic LIP volcanism may have caused short-term ecological crises, the ensuing redox-nutrient feedbacks ultimately stimulated progressive oxygenation of Earth’s surface environment.

How to cite: Sun, L., Sonke, J. E., Poulton, S. W., Tang*, D., Shi, X., Wang, X., Zhou, X., Meng, L., Xie, B., Xu, L., Yang, S., and Guilbaud, R.: Volcanic forcing of oxygenation dynamics in the mid-Proterozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1434, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1434, 2026.

EGU26-1919 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Widespread chemically oscillating reactions and the phosphatization of hematite filaments and tubes in the oldest BIF from the Nuvvuagittuq Supracrustal Belt  

Yuzhou Ge, Dominic Papineau, Zixiao Guo, Zhenbing She, Jonathan O'Neil, and Marion Garçon

Accurately distinguishing between biotic and abiotic microstructures is crucial for understanding the evolution of early life and the search for extraterrestrial life. The oldest putative fossils reported occur in the form of hematite filaments and tubes in the jasper-carbonate BIF from the Nuvvuagittuq Supracrustal Belt (NSB), Québec, possibly as old as 4.3 Ga. Although these twisted and branched hematite filaments and tubes are very similar to the Fe-oxyhydroxide filaments produced by Fe-oxidizing bacteria in modern hydrothermal deposits, they are still being questioned because morphologically and compositionally similar abiotic filamentous biomorphs can be produced in “chemical gardens”. Additionally, the origin of ubiquitous circularly concentric rosettes that occur with the filaments and tubes remains unclear. Systematic mineralogical and morphological characterization of these microstructures using a variety of correlated in-situ micro-analytical techniques such as polarizing microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, SEM-EDS, and XPS now yield a new understanding of these ancient microscopic objects.

Firstly, new observations of hematite filaments and tubes preserved in apatite crystals indicate phosphatization as another taphonomic mode of preservation. These apatites with filaments that are several hundred micrometers in size, and usually distributed in discontinuous bands between the silicon-rich and iron-rich microbands. The diameter of these hematite filaments and tubes is 4 to 8 μm, while their lengths are 10 to 200 μm. They are thinner than those previously reported preserved in quartz and their diameter is closer to that of modern iron-oxidizing bacteria. As for co-occurring hematite tubes, their interior is usually filled with apatite. The walls of tubes are often straight, and even crossing crystal boundaries between apatite and microcrystalline quartz. Furthermore, new Raman spectra show the occasional presence of organic matter in these filaments preserved in apatite, independently supporting a biological origin.

Secondly, rosettes widely present in the quartz have circularly concentric layers, radially geometric crystals of acicular hematite, and circular double or triple twins. These microstructures are akin to patterns seen in botryoidal minerals and likely produced by abiotic chemically oscillating reactions (COR). In addition, the walls of the tubes preserved in quartz are also sometimes wavy, curved, or botryoidal-like, along with concentric layers, which is comparable to botryoidal coatings on modern hollow filaments of ferrihydrite in deep-sea hydrothermal ecosystems, indicating the interaction between iron-containing minerals and decaying organic matter from biomass during diagenesis.

The latest observations suggest that in the early Earth's submarine hydrothermal environments rich in phosphate and organic acids, the widespread phosphatisation enables the oldest life preserved in the apatite in the form of hematite filaments and tubes. The new observations also emphasize the potential role of abiotic COR in the formation of rosettes, as well as the modifications of the surface features of microfossils during diagenesis. These biological and abiotic “biosignatures” provide a valuable reference to search for life signals in extraterrestrial environments such as Mars and icy moons.

How to cite: Ge, Y., Papineau, D., Guo, Z., She, Z., O'Neil, J., and Garçon, M.: Widespread chemically oscillating reactions and the phosphatization of hematite filaments and tubes in the oldest BIF from the Nuvvuagittuq Supracrustal Belt , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1919, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1919, 2026.

EGU26-2111 | Orals | BG5.1

Phanerozoic trends in deep water rejuvenation: Is there a relation between global temperature and ocean mixing?  

Or Mordechay Bialik, Anta-Clarisse Sarr, Yannick Donnadieu, and Alexander Pohl

The concept of a warm, sluggish ocean recurs in the palaeoceanographic literature, yet over the last few years, both observation and model studies have challenged this concept repeatedly. Nevertheless, observations in the modern do link the ongoing anthropogenic warming to the slowing down of oceanic circulation. This mismatch between the different scales of observations presents a critical problem to our understanding of the past ocean. Here, we present a critical evaluation of this concept through an extensive series of intermediate complexity Earth system model experiments. Multiple paleogeographic scenarios across the Phanerozoic, CO2 concentration, and orbital configuration have been simulated to evaluate the relations between planetary surface temperatures and deep-water rejuvenation rate. Combined, the results of these simulations present a very limited contribution of warm climates to the global ocean circulation slowdown. For most experiments, warmer conditions enhanced overall oceanic turnover due to an increase in vertical density gradient, supporting more efficient downwelling. However, this state is only achieved in the long term, with some slowdown after the initial warming. The overall range of turnover time, even during the slowest period of deep-water rejuvenation, remains within the same order of magnitude as the modern. In light of these findings, it is unlikely that at any point through the Phanerozoic did oceanic turnover rate changed in a magnitude that would impact the mixing state of most marine dissolved chemical elements, at least at current flux state.

How to cite: Bialik, O. M., Sarr, A.-C., Donnadieu, Y., and Pohl, A.: Phanerozoic trends in deep water rejuvenation: Is there a relation between global temperature and ocean mixing? , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2111, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2111, 2026.

EGU26-3338 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Early Cenozoic mammal radiation coincides with increased terrestrial habitability 

Nicholas Hadjigavriel

Environmental variables like temperature, land availability and food availability constrain the ecological niches of terrestrial animals and, along with atmospheric oxygen levels, likely had a direct effect on their evolution and distribution over geological time. In this study we develop an agent-based terrestrial palaeoecological model, which we couple to an Earth system model to reconstruct how Earth’s habitability for terrestrial mammals has changed over the Mesozoic to Cenozoic eras. This allows us to investigate whether there was an environmental component to the early Cenozoic mammal radiation. Our findings indicate that Earth’s habitability for terrestrial mammals was maximised during the Cretaceous–Paleogene interval, due to the combination of elevated plant Net Primary Productivity (NPP), expansion of continental land areas, minimal glaciation, and elevated atmospheric oxygen levels. We propose that the rapid diversification of mammals during this period, while clearly enabled by the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs, was also influenced by the enhanced habitability of Earth’s surface during this time. Similar environmentally-driven changes in terrestrial habitability likely also play a significant role for other palaeobiological events.

How to cite: Hadjigavriel, N.: Early Cenozoic mammal radiation coincides with increased terrestrial habitability, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3338, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3338, 2026.

EGU26-4337 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

A Plate-Tectonic Framework for Predicting Ore Deposit Formation 

Jakub Ciazela, Taras Gerya, Christian Verard, Robert Stern, Matthew Leybourne, and Wenyong Duan

Long-term sustainability of human civilization depends on secure supplies of metals and critical minerals that underpin energy systems, infrastructure, and technology (IEA, 2021; UNEP, 2024). By 2040, total mineral demand from clean energy technologies is expected to double or quadruple (IEA, 2021), raising concerns about long-term supply sustainability as anthropogenic extraction operates on timescales and magnitudes unconstrained by geological ore-forming rates. Although recycling and substitution can mitigate pressure, widely adopted outlooks still require substantial expansion of primary supply and are commonly framed around reserves, production, and announced project pipelines (IEA, 2024; USGS, 2025).

We present a plate-kinematic framework to forecast ore deposit formation over the next 10 Myr by coupling tectonic setting–specific deposit-generation functions to a forward plate-motion model. Unlike reserve- or discovery-trend extrapolations, this approach explicitly links plate tectonics to mineralization rates, providing a first-order estimate of Earth’s natural “mineral renewal” capacity (IEA, 2024; USGS, 2025). We apply the method to two deposit types: (1) porphyry–epithermal systems in continental arcs, parameterized by plate convergence rates and lithospheric factors (crustal thickness, slab composition, and proxies for slab oxidation state), reflecting how rapid convergence and thick crust favor porphyry formation, while explicitly accounting for melt–fluid–driven mass transfer of copper and oxidized species within subduction zones; and (2) mid-ocean ridge seafloor massive sulfides (SMS), linked to spreading rate, ridge depth, and detachment fault occurrence at slow-spreading centers. These parameterizations are integrated into a global 1°-resolution plate model extrapolated 10 Myr into the future to produce spatially explicit, time-dependent maps of ore-forming potential. Because most new oceanic crust is not subducted within a 10 Myr horizon, our model estimates gross SMS formation within a limited accessibility window (controlled by sediment burial), while acknowledging subduction recycling as a longer-term sink.

The resulting formation- and accessibility-weighted metrics provide benchmarks for Earth’s natural mineral replenishment rate, against which scenario-based demand projections can be compared, thereby strengthening sustainability discussions with geodynamically grounded constraints.

References:

International Energy Agency (IEA): The Role of Critical Minerals in Clean Energy Transitions, IEA, Paris, 2021.

International Energy Agency (IEA): Global Critical Minerals Outlook 2024, IEA, Paris, 2024.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and International Resource Panel (IRP): Global Resources Outlook 2024 – Bend the trend: Pathways to a Liveable Planet as Resource Use Spikes, UNEP, 2024, doi:20.500.11822/44901.

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS): Mineral Commodity Summaries 2025 (ver. 1.2, March 2025), U.S. Geological Survey, 212 pp., doi:10.3133/mcs2025, 2025.

How to cite: Ciazela, J., Gerya, T., Verard, C., Stern, R., Leybourne, M., and Duan, W.: A Plate-Tectonic Framework for Predicting Ore Deposit Formation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4337, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4337, 2026.

EGU26-5361 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Tracking the spatial extent of redox variability in the mid-Proterozoic ocean 

Yafang Song, Benjamin Mills, Fred Bowyer, Morten Andersen, Frantz Ossa Ossa, Alexander Dickson, Jason Harvey, Shuichang Zhang, Xiaomei Wang, Huajian Wang, Donald Canfield, Graham Shield, and Simon Poulton

Emerging geochemical evidence suggests highly heterogeneous ocean redox conditions in the mid-Proterozoic. Quantitative estimates of the extent of different modes of anoxia, however, remain poorly constrained. Considering the complementary redox-related behaviour, uranium and molybdenum isotopes can be combined to reconstruct ancient marine redox landscapes, which has not been applied to the mid-Proterozoic. In this study, we present new δ238U and δ98Mo data for shales from the ~1.4 Ga Xiamaling Formation, North China Craton, together with independent redox proxies, including Fe speciation and redox-sensitive trace metals. We find that most oxic and dysoxic samples retain low U and Mo concentrations, with δ238U and δ98Mo values indistinguishable from continental crust. While euxinic samples record the highest authigenic δ238U and δ98Mo, consistent with efficient reduction of U and Mo. Samples deposited under ferruginous conditions exhibit a wider range of δ238U and δ98Mo values that generally fall between the (dys)oxic and euxinic end-members. Using a coupled U-Mo isotope mass balance model, we infer limited euxinia but extensive low productivity, ferruginous conditions in mid-Proterozoic oceans.

How to cite: Song, Y., Mills, B., Bowyer, F., Andersen, M., Ossa Ossa, F., Dickson, A., Harvey, J., Zhang, S., Wang, X., Wang, H., Canfield, D., Shield, G., and Poulton, S.: Tracking the spatial extent of redox variability in the mid-Proterozoic ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5361, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5361, 2026.

Prevailing interpretations of large underground cavities in carbonate terrains are predominantly based on karst-related genetic models, in which dissolution-driven hydrological processes are assumed to be the primary mechanism of formation. While effective for explaining certain cave types, these models commonly rely on an implicit assumption: that underground cavities should be analyzed as isolated natural features. This assumption has limited the recognition of broader spatial patterns and system-level organization.

This study proposes a geoarchaeological, system-based approach to the interpretation of underground spaces, using the Zagros Mountains as a key case study. Given the extensive carbonate lithology of the region, classical karst theory would predict cave development closely associated with active or fossil drainage networks. However, field observations reveal a contrasting pattern, with numerous underground openings located at elevated positions, often on cliff faces or near ridgelines, lacking any evidence of hydrological concentration or outlet channels.

A focal example is provided by the Deh Sheikh area (central Zagros), where multiple underground entrances occur at the same elevation level and are separated by relatively regular horizontal distances. Such repeated and level-aligned configurations are difficult to reconcile with stochastic karstic dissolution processes and instead suggest a coherent spatial logic that becomes visible only when these features are considered collectively rather than individually.

Additional evidence includes stable arched geometries and persistent cavities that contrast with the irregular, downward-oriented erosion expected from water-dominated processes. These observations indicate that natural processes observed today are largely secondary modifications, overprinting earlier phases of space formation.

Rather than rejecting natural cave formation mechanisms, this study argues that, in the Zagros region, a system-based geoarchaeological framework provides a more coherent and parsimonious interpretive model. The results highlight the importance of analytical scale and interdisciplinary perspectives in re-evaluating underground spaces.

 

How to cite: Baghbani, F. and Baghbani, H.: From Isolated Caves to Spatial Systems: A Geoarchaeological Re-reading of Underground Spaces in the Zagros Mountains, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5975, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5975, 2026.

EGU26-6597 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Distinguishing Snowball Earth climate modes using field data and climate simulations 

Chloe Griffin, Thomas Gernon, Minmin Fu, Elias Rugen, Anthony Spencer, Geoffrey Warrington, and Thea Hincks

The degree to which Earth’s climate retained seasonality and ocean-atmospheric coupling during the two Cryogenian snowball Earth glaciations, the Sturtian (~717-658 Ma) and Marinoan (~654-635 Ma), is unknown. The classic hypothesis envisions ice at equatorial latitudes with a largely quiescent hydrological cycle. However, other observations imply the persistence of open water in the tropics, permitting ocean-atmospheric coupling and reconciling photosynthetic survival with low-latitude glacial activity. Consequently, open questions remain as to whether internal climate cycles could operate during snowball Earth, and if so, what their expression reveals about the extent of open ocean and the dynamics of the Cryogenian climate system; important climate questions that carry key biological implications. Varve-like laminites provide high resolution records of climatic variability as far back as the Proterozoic. However, varved sediments that retain climatic information are rare in the Cryogenian. Here, we analyse field data from rhythmic laminites from the Port Askaig Formation (Scotland). Petrographic and spectral analysis indicates that the laminites represent glacio-lacustrine annual varves, which reveal statistically significant centennial to interannual periodicities strongly similar to solar phenomena and modern ocean-atmospheric climate patterns. We interpret these signals with fully coupled Cryogenian climate simulations using the Community Earth System Model (CESM) under varying degrees of ice coverage to reconstruct climate variability during this interval of the Sturtian glaciation. These simulations suggest that open water is present to some degree in the tropics. Our study reveals a wider range of climatic variability than previously envisaged under snowball Earth conditions, and hints at the possibility of unfrozen tropical waters during this discrete interval of the Sturtian glaciation, or yet unexplored mechanisms of interannual variability on icy worlds.

How to cite: Griffin, C., Gernon, T., Fu, M., Rugen, E., Spencer, A., Warrington, G., and Hincks, T.: Distinguishing Snowball Earth climate modes using field data and climate simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6597, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6597, 2026.

The shift from the climate of the “boring billion” without evidence for major glaciations to the globally ice-covered “Snowball Earth” events of the Cryogenian (720–635 million years ago, Ma) remains enigmatic. Various factors have been suggested to drive the cooling in the early Neoproterozoic (1000–539 Ma), most prominently decreasing carbon-dioxide levels due to enhanced weathering of tropical continents or fresh volcanic material. However, these processes should have operated during the boring billion as well, triggering the quest for alternative explanations. It has been suggested, for example, that the increase in both the diversity and the biomass of eukaryotic algae around 800 Ma could have contributed to the cooling via the emission of dimethyl sulfide (DMS), a source of cloud condensation nuclei instrumental in forming bright clouds over dark ocean surfaces. Here, we investigate this hypothesis with a coupled climate–ocean biogeochemistry model, allowing for the first time the quantification of the relevant marine carbon cycle feedbacks. We confirm that the increase in cloud condensation nuclei cools the Neoproterozoic climate and can lead to global glaciation at low atmospheric carbon-dioxide concentrations. Our analysis sheds light on the positive and negative feedback loops associated with the rise of algae and demonstrates that changes in cloud cover remain a plausible contribution to Neoproterozoic cooling.

How to cite: Feulner, G., Hofmann, M., Eberhard, J., and Petri, S.: Ocean biogeochemistry amplifies cooling caused by increase in cloud condensation nuclei from algae prior to Cryogenian Snowball Earth events, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6828, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6828, 2026.

EGU26-7017 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

African paleogeography since 30Ma : setting boundary conditions for climatic, physiographic and biodiversity models. 

Raphaël Tournier, Laurent Husson, Sandrine Prat, Jean-Renaud Boisserie, Doris Barboni, Nicolas Bellahsen, Cécile Doubre, Raphaël Pik, Tristan Salles, Pierre Sepulchre, and Christel Tiberi

The African continent has undergone major Cenozoic transformations, including the formation of the East African Rift System and the opening of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. The impact of these transformations on the various components of the Earth system over time—climate, hydrographic networks, and the dispersal and evolution of biological species—raises multiple questions.

In this context, we aim to reconstruct the paleogeographic evolution of continental Africa over the past 30 million years using a multi-layered modelling approach. First, the integration of several geodynamic components (including mantle-driven dynamic topography, the history of crustal tectonics, plate tectonic motions, and volcanic eruptive dynamics) allows us to produce an elevation model for Africa since 30 Ma that is continuous in space and time. This elevation model is then used as a boundary condition for climate simulations, followed by physiographic simulations, generating a more comprehensive and coherent representation of past environments.

The simulation outputs reveal the sensitivity of climate reconstructions to topographic boundary conditions, as well as temporal variations in hydrographic networks. These new topographic, climatic, and physiographic constraints provide improved calibration for future eco-evolutionary studies (e.g., geographic barriers, water availability, resource distribution, and environmental stability) on the African continent.

We then evaluate the spatial and temporal accuracy of these reconstructions by confronting them with field-based evidence. This assessment identifies the scales at which the models are most robust, informing which interrogation can be explored with confidence. It also highlights where the reconstructions are consistent with geological, paleoenvironmental, and paleontological data, and where their precision may require further refinement.

Looking ahead, the objective is to continuously update these maps and simulations, which will also be used to investigate the dispersal and evolutionary changes of Cenozoic faunal communities in Africa, notably early hominids. This whole study offers a coherent spatio-temporal context for evaluating links between the different components of the Earthsystem.

How to cite: Tournier, R., Husson, L., Prat, S., Boisserie, J.-R., Barboni, D., Bellahsen, N., Doubre, C., Pik, R., Salles, T., Sepulchre, P., and Tiberi, C.: African paleogeography since 30Ma : setting boundary conditions for climatic, physiographic and biodiversity models., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7017, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7017, 2026.

EGU26-7068 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

How palaeogeographic reconstructions influence climate: the Permian-Triassic Boundary case study 

Byeongseok Kang, Laure Moinat, Charline Ragon, Christian Vérard, and Maura Brunetti

Paleogeographic reconstructions of the deep past are affected by large uncertainties due to limitations in dating, the scarcity of sedimentary sequences, and imperfect constraints on the positions of tectonic plates. These uncertainties in the boundary conditions propagate into climate simulations, affecting their accuracy.

In this study, we compare two paleogeographic reconstructions, Panalesis [1] and PaleoMap [2], to assess how differences in the paleogeographic reconstructions influence the climate response at the Permian-Triassic Boundary. Climate simulations are performed using biogeodyn-MITgcmIS [3], a recently developed modelling tool in which the dynamical core of both the atmosphere and the ocean is provided by the MIT general circulation model, while offline coupling ensures the consistent evolution of vegetation and ice sheets (when present).

Beyond the direct comparison of paleogeographic reconstructions, aquaplanet and simplified configurations are employed under the same paleoclimate conditions to isolate feedbacks arising from land distribution. The resulting steady-state climates are systematically compared with those obtained using Pangea configurations derived from Panalesis and PaleoMap. The impact on terrestrial vegetation is also estimated and discussed. Overall, the results provide a framework for systematically assessing how paleogeographic reconstructions affect coupled climate-biosphere dynamics.

 

References

[1] Vérard, Geological Magazine 156, 320 (2019)

[2] Scotese, Atlas of Earth History, PALEOMAP Project (2001)

[3] Moinat et al., EGUsphere [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2025-2946 (2025).

How to cite: Kang, B., Moinat, L., Ragon, C., Vérard, C., and Brunetti, M.: How palaeogeographic reconstructions influence climate: the Permian-Triassic Boundary case study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7068, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7068, 2026.

EGU26-7342 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Can CO2 outgassing explain Lomagundi Excursion? 

P a Janaarthanan and Sanjeev Kumar

The Lomagundi-Jatuli event (2.3-2.0 Ga) is one of the grandest carbon isotopic (δ13Ccarbonate) excursion events in the Earth’s history, marked by anomalous δ13Ccarbonate reaching up to + 30 ‰. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain this excursion; however, they remain inadequate due to associated drawbacks. The conventional explanation is organic carbon burial due to enhanced productivity. But, the lack of organic rich stratas synchronous with the excursion demands the reconsideration of alternative biogeochemical processes to explain this isotopic anomaly. Moreover, the excursion is observed only in the evaporitic and nearshore carbonates, with no evidence from open ocean; demanding facies based biogeochemical explanation. Here, we explore the possibility of CO2 outgassing and calcite precipitation as potential drivers responsible for this excursion as these two processes remain the least explored among the proposed hypotheses. Through sedimentological evidences from previous studies and Rayleigh fractionation calculations, we argue that dominant loss of DIC through CO2 outgassing in the evaporitic facies and calcite precipitation in the nearshore facies along with a well-mixed DIC reservoir in the open ocean led to observed Lomagundi Excursion.

How to cite: Janaarthanan, P. A. and Kumar, S.: Can CO2 outgassing explain Lomagundi Excursion?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7342, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7342, 2026.

EGU26-7347 | Orals | BG5.1

The different approaches for reconstructing palæogeography at the global scale in deep time 

Christian Vérard and Florian Franziskakis

Plate tectonic reconstructions are different from palæogeographic reconstructions. The latter can be derived from the former, but not the opposite.

Many end-users (palæontologists, palæoclimate or mantle dynamics modellers) use a map (often without citing the source) of the palæogeography for a given time. However, there are various reconstructions of palæogeographies, based upon numerous plate tectonic models.

Aimed primarily at end-users, the presentation will focus on what are the main similarities and differences when creating a plate tectonic model. Then, different ways (mainly two) of proposing palæogeographies will also be discussed.

This information is crucial when using such maps and can have a significant impact on interpretations drawn from climate simulations or studies of the evolution of life through Earth history.

How to cite: Vérard, C. and Franziskakis, F.: The different approaches for reconstructing palæogeography at the global scale in deep time, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7347, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7347, 2026.

EGU26-7546 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Climate Sensitivity in a Pre-Plant World: Why High CO₂ May Not Have Been Sufficient to Maintain a Paleozoic Hothouse 

Niklas Werner, Florian Franziskakis, Andrew Merdith, Christian Vérard, Maura Brunetti, Taras Gerya, and Paul Tackley

Despite evidence for generally elevated atmospheric CO₂ concentrations, the climate of the early Phanerozoic appears to have been neither uniformly warm nor stable. Proxy records, climate simulations, and paleogeographic reconstructions all carry large uncertainties, yet taken together they suggest that greenhouse forcing alone may not fully explain observed climatic variability, including intervals of pronounced cooling, such as the Hirnatian Glaciation. Understanding how early Phanerozoic climate responded to high CO₂ therefore requires explicit consideration of the boundary conditions under which greenhouse forcing operated.

Here, we examine the combined roles of paleogeography, land-surface properties, and reduced solar luminosity in shaping early Phanerozoic climate states. Using an intermediate-complexity Earth system model, we systematically explore climate sensitivity across a wide range of atmospheric CO₂ concentrations under pre-vegetation boundary conditions and early Paleozoic paleogeographic configurations. The experimental design focuses on how land–sea distribution, continental arrangement, and surface characteristics influence large-scale heat transport, cryospheric feedbacks, and the CO₂ levels required to maintain ice-free conditions.

Our working hypothesis is that early Phanerozoic climates were intrinsically biased toward cooler states relative to later, vegetated periods, due to higher surface albedo, altered hydrological cycling, and reduced incoming solar radiation. In such a climate system, maintaining temperate conditions may have required persistently high CO₂ concentrations, while gradual CO₂ drawdown could have positioned the system close to critical thresholds. Under these circumstances, comparatively small paleogeographic changes—such as shifts in continental connectivity or topographic relief—may have been sufficient to trigger short-lived glacial episodes, without invoking abrupt or extreme changes in greenhouse forcing.

By framing early Phanerozoic climate evolution as a problem of threshold behavior under uncertain boundary conditions, this work aims to clarify why high CO₂ and cooling are not necessarily incompatible. The results will help constrain which combinations of forcing and boundary conditions are physically plausible and guide more robust interpretations of proxy records and future paleoclimate modeling efforts.

How to cite: Werner, N., Franziskakis, F., Merdith, A., Vérard, C., Brunetti, M., Gerya, T., and Tackley, P.: Climate Sensitivity in a Pre-Plant World: Why High CO₂ May Not Have Been Sufficient to Maintain a Paleozoic Hothouse, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7546, 2026.

EGU26-7612 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Effect of the Milankovitch cycles on climate multistability for the last 1 Myr 

Laure Moinat, Christian Vérard, Daniel N. Goldberg, Jérôme Kasparian, Taras Gerya, John Marshall, and Maura Brunetti

During the last million years, the growth and retreat of massive ice sheets in North America and Eurasia defined the alternating climate conditions of the glacial-interglacial cycle. The main driver of these climatic oscillations is the combined effect of precession, eccentricity, and obliquity frequency modes (Milankovitch cycles) [1]. However, the climate expected from the Milankovitch cycles does not always align with the records from the Marine Isotope Stages [2].

To address this discrepancy, we test the hypothesis that multiple climatic steady states (attractors) exist for a given CO2 concentration and can be destabilized by different combinations of Milankovitch forcing. We developed a biogeodynamical coupled setup, biogeodyn-MITgcmIS [3], which has the MIT general circulation model as its dynamical core, and asynchronously couples hydrology, ice sheets, and vegetation. The results of this new coupled model show that including the long-term dynamics of vegetation and ice sheets is crucial to evaluate past and future climate trajectories.  
 
First, we construct the bifurcation diagram by varying the CO2 concentration between 180 ppm and 320 ppm (i.e., within the observed range over the last 1 Myr). We analyze the stability range of the cold (glacial) and warm (interglacial) attractors, and identify their tipping points at the global scale. Second, we repeat selected simulations with different Milankovitch configurations to evaluate the robustness of the bifurcation structure. Finally, to detect signatures of climate multistability, we compare the simulation outputs with global mean sea level and temperature reconstructions [4], and we discuss preliminary results. 

 

[1] Barker et al. Science 387, eadp3491 (2025)

[2] Past Interglacials Working Group of PAGES, Rev. Geophys. 54, 162–219 (2016)

[3] Moinat et al. EGUsphere [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2025-2946 (2025).

[4] Clark et al. Science 390, eadv8389 (2025)

How to cite: Moinat, L., Vérard, C., Goldberg, D. N., Kasparian, J., Gerya, T., Marshall, J., and Brunetti, M.: Effect of the Milankovitch cycles on climate multistability for the last 1 Myr, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7612, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7612, 2026.

EGU26-7891 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Timing and magnitude of Phanerozoic plant diversification are linked to paleogeography and atmospheric CO2 

Julian Rogger, Bethany Allen, Philip Donoghue, Dirk Karger, Tristan Salles, Alexander Skeels, and Dan Lunt

The evolution of plant diversity through Phanerozoic time is often understood as a succession of dominating evolutionary floras. Following the onset of land plant expansion and diversification in the Silurian to Middle Devonian, these include the successive dominance of plant ecosystems by spore-bearing plants (Paleophytic flora), gymnosperms (Mesophytic flora), and angiosperms (Cenophytic flora). The succession of these floras is associated with major evolutionary innovations in plant growth forms, physiology and reproductive systems, allowing for new strategies to utilize resources and diversify. In concert with biological innovation, environmental conditions over the Phanerozoic have strongly varied due to plate tectonic rearrangements of continents and topography, together with variation in atmospheric CO2 and climate. However, our understanding of how biological innovation and environmental changes interacted to shape the diversity of land plants through deep time is limited by a fragmentary geologic record of both plant diversity and environmental conditions.

Here, we reconstruct high-resolution climatologies (0.5° in longitude and latitude) over the last 470 million years using the fully coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model HadCM3 [1], the landscape evolution model goSPL [2], and the mechanistic climate downscaling algorithm CHELSA [3]. Applying the trait-based plant diversity model TREED [4] we then investigate how paleogeographic changes, variation in atmospheric CO2, and climate conditions shaped the Phanerozoic plant diversification. Combining the model-based diversity reconstruction with an analysis of 140,000 plant fossil occurrences from the Paleobiology Database, we show that Phanerozoic plant genus originations were strongly associated with variation in atmospheric CO2 and the tectonic supercontinent cycle, both limiting terrestrial resource and niche availability, and modulating the efficiency of environmental heterogeneity to generate diversity. We further show that the angiosperm terrestrial revolution is unique not only due to the intrinsic diversification potential of flowering plants, but also because of the exceptional environmental opportunities following the Pangea supercontinent breakup.

 

[1] P. J. Valdes, et al., The BRIDGE HadCM3 family of climate models: HadCM3@Bristol v1.0. Geoscientific Model Development 10 (10), 3715–3743 (2017), doi:10.5194/gmd-10-3715-2017, https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/10/3715/2017/

[2] T. Salles, et al., Landscape dynamics and the Phanerozoic diversification of the biosphere. Nature 624 (7990), 115–121 (2023), doi: 10.1038/s41586-023-06777-z, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06777-z

[3] D. N. Karger, et al., Climatologies at high resolution for the earth’s land surface areas. Scientific Data 4 (1), 170122 (2017), doi:10.1038/sdata.2017.122, https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata2017122

[4] J. Rogger, et al., TREED (v1.0): a trait- and optimality-based eco-evolutionary vegetation model for the deep past and the present (2025), doi:10.5194/egusphere-2025-6002, https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-6002/

How to cite: Rogger, J., Allen, B., Donoghue, P., Karger, D., Salles, T., Skeels, A., and Lunt, D.: Timing and magnitude of Phanerozoic plant diversification are linked to paleogeography and atmospheric CO2, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7891, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7891, 2026.

During the Cambrian explosion, animals underwent profound ecological and evolutionary configuration. Small shelly fossils (SSFs), micrometre- to millimetre-scale skeletal elements representing multiple animal phyla, are particularly valuable for early Cambrian biostratigraphy and intercontinental correlation because of their widespread distribution. SSFs from North Greenland provide a high-resolution record of biotic and environmental change along the eastern margin of Laurentia. Here, we document a SSF assemblage that includes molluscs, hyoliths, brachiopods, ecdysozoans, echinoderms, and several problematic taxa from the Aftenstjernesø Formation in North Greenland. This integrated dataset enables detailed correlation with other Cambrian Series 2, Stage 4 successions on several palaeocontinents, including Gondwana, Siberia, and peri-Gondwana, based on shared taxa. During this period, many regions record a major faunal collapse associated with the first widely recognized Phanerozoic extinction event, the so-called Sinsk event, which has been linked to marine anoxia, decrease of diversity, and body-size reduction. In contrast, the Laurentian margin records pronounced taxonomic turnover dominated by faunal replacement rather than a net loss of diversity. This difference underscores the importance of palaeogeography and local geodynamic conditions in modulating how early Cambrian environmental crises were expressed biologically, and it demonstrates the utility of SSFs for reconstructing the biotic response to early Cambrian environmental crises.

How to cite: Oh, Y., Park, T.-Y. S., and Peel, J. S.: Global correlation of small shelly fossils from North Greenland and their importance for early Cambrian ecosystem change, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8575, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8575, 2026.

EGU26-9305 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Geodynamic controls on long-term carbon cycle: insights from fully integrated virtual planets 

Marie Martin, Nicolas Coltice, Yannick Donnadieu, Pierre Maffre, Tristan Salles, Julian Rogger, Maëlis Arnould, Laurent Husson, Jonathon Leonard, Sabin Zahirovic, and Loïc Pellissier

Over geological timescales climate is regulated by the long carbon cycle, in which a balance is struck between CO2 degassing from the solid Earth and CO2 consumption by continental silicate weathering stabilizing atmospheric CO2 levels and maintain habitable conditions. Geodynamic processes regulate both CO2 degassing rates as well as the distribution and elevation of continents, thereby controlling continental weatherability and, ultimately, atmospheric CO2 and long-term climate.

However, long-term carbon cycle models are often limited by their definition of degassing independently of geodynamics evolution and their inevitable attribution of continental weatherability as the primary driver of long-term climate. Furthermore, the sparsity of the geological record means that models often rely on observations of present-day Earth to simulate past Earth states. All these constrains provide limited insight into how geodynamics interacts with climate, and surface processes to regulate atmospheric CO2 over geological timescales.

To address these limitations, we use fully integrated "digital siblings” of the Earth: 3D fully virtual planets designed to simulate internally consistent evolution of habitable planets over a several 100~Myr timescales, not necessarily aiming to replicate Earth. We integrate three numerical models in a dynamically interdependent framework: the geodynamic model StagYY (Coltice et al., 2019), the climate model PLASIM-GENIE (Holden et al., 2016), and the surface processes model goSPL (Salles et al., 2023).

From these simulations, we compute time-dependent CO2 degassing rates, using geodynamic outputs, and weathering fluxes, using the formulation of West (2012). Our results reveal fluctuations in degassing rate over a factor of about three, consistent with reconstruction of Earth (Müller et al., 2024) and correlated with seafloor production rate. Weatherability strongly depends on True Polar Wander during supercontinent aggregation, and on sea level fluctuations controlled by seafloor production. Together, these results highlight how geodynamic evolution may regulate the long-term carbon cycle through its interdependent effects on degassing and continental weatherability.

How to cite: Martin, M., Coltice, N., Donnadieu, Y., Maffre, P., Salles, T., Rogger, J., Arnould, M., Husson, L., Leonard, J., Zahirovic, S., and Pellissier, L.: Geodynamic controls on long-term carbon cycle: insights from fully integrated virtual planets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9305, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9305, 2026.

EGU26-10596 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

 Numerical Simulation of True Polar Wander during Supercontinent Assembly 

Yusen Liu, Zheng-Xiang Li, and Xi Liu

The supercontinent cycle is often accompanied by True Polar Wander (TPW) events (Evans, 2003) — reorientation of the silicate Earth relative to its spin axis in response to internal mass redistribution. During TPW events, the maximum inertia axis (Imax) aligns with the spin axis to conserve the angular momentum (Gold, 1955). While an assembled supercontinent typically reside near the equator once it has developed its own degree-2 mantle structure driven by a circum-supercontinent subduction girdle with two antipodal superplumes (Li et al., 2023), this configuration is not always instantaneous with the assembly of a supercontinent. Supercontinent is in fact believed by some to assembly over a degree-1 mantle structure: a cold downwelling beneath the supercontinent and a hemispheric superplume on the opposite hemisphere (Zhong et al., 2007; Zhong and Liu, 2016). The resulting TPW behavior during such processes remains poorly constrained. Here we report a novel computational framework that couples 3D spherical mantle convection (CitcomS) with Earth’s rotational dynamics to simulate TPW driven by both convective mass anomalies and rotational bulge readjustment. We particularly examined the effect of varying upper/lower mantle viscosity ratios (ηum/ηlm).

Our results reveal a critical dependence of TPW behavior on viscosity stratification. For high ηum/ηlm (1:30), supercontinents assemble near the pole over a degree-1 mantle structure. Subsequent formation of a subduction girdle triggers TPW, transporting the supercontinent to the equator. In contrast, low ηum/ηlm (1:100) with a mean lower-mantle viscosity of 3×1022 Pa·s promotes equatorial assembly. Here, girdle development induces TPW that transports the supercontinent toward the pole, where it stabilizes for a considerable period. However, reducing lower-mantle viscosity destabilizes this polar position, causing rapid return to the equator. These dynamics arise because viscosity stratification determines the structure of the geoid kernel, which governs the geoid’s response to mass anomalies and thereby modulates TPW pathways. Our models demonstrate that before a stable degree-2 structure (e.g., modern LLSVPs) is developed, TPW can drive complex supercontinent trajectories—including equator-to-pole-to-equator round-trip migrations. Future work integrating plate reconstruction with viscosity constraints will refine predictions for specific supercontinents.

Evans, D. True Polar Wander and Supercontinents. Tectonophysics 362, 303-320 (2003).

Gold, T. Instability of the Earth’s axis of rotation. Nature 175, 526–529 (1955).

Li, Z.-X., Liu, Y. & Ernst, R. A dynamic 2000–540 Ma Earth history: From cratonic amalgamation to the age of supercontinent cycle. Earth-Science Reviews 238, 104336(2023).

Zhong, S., Zhang, N., Li, Z.-X. & Roberts, J. H. Supercontinent cycles, true polar wander, and very long-wavelength mantle convection. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 261, 551–564 (2007).

Zhong, S. & Liu, X. The Long-Wavelength Mantle Structure and Dynamics and Implications for Large-Scale Tectonics and Volcanism in the Phanerozoic. Gondwana Research 29: 83-104 (2016).

How to cite: Liu, Y., Li, Z.-X., and Liu, X.:  Numerical Simulation of True Polar Wander during Supercontinent Assembly, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10596, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10596, 2026.

EGU26-10751 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1 | Highlight

Ending the Proterozoic: A Poetic Reimagining  

Kate Simpson

The Ediacaran-Cambrian Transition (approx. 550-539 mya) was one of the planet’s most revolutionary events, marking the emergence of diverse and abundant animals. Changing environmental conditions – such as oxygen availability, carbon cycling and nutrient levels – are likely to have been both constricting and galvanising, resulting in the rapid radiation of diverse body plans alongside a permanently altered ocean-atmosphere system. For my PhD research, as part of the UK’s first Doctoral Training Programme in Extinction Studies, I took a biocultural approach, seeking to acknowledge both the catastrophic and creative aspects of ecological regime shifts, whilst offering an artistic response to the complex processes that occur at key chronostratigraphic boundaries, from mass extinctions and evolutionary radiations to global oxidation events. Combining palaeontological study and creative practice, I established a novel methodology conducting ‘lyric fieldwork’ at Global Stratotypes and Section Points, writing a radically ‘indisciplined’ thesis and accompanying long poem spanning deep time, from the Precambrian through to the Phanerozoic. In this presentation – a performative reading – I will share an excerpt of my poem, focusing on the closing moments of the Proterozoic Eon and the start of the Phanerozoic Era, where the Ediacaran Period moves into the Cambrian Period, and where major geochemical perturbations correspond with an ‘explosion’ of biological innovations, from biomineralisation and the evolution of hard body parts to the rise of predator-prey dynamics and increased locomotive strategies. 

How to cite: Simpson, K.: Ending the Proterozoic: A Poetic Reimagining , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10751, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10751, 2026.

EGU26-11212 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Modelling the Phanerozoic: Discrepancies and conformity with the geological record 

Chiara Krewer and Benjamin J. W. Mills

The Phanerozoic Eon is characterized by profound variability in global climate and biogeochemical cycles, driven by some combination of the formation and break up of supercontinents, changes to tectonic degassing, the emplacement of Large Igneous Provinces and by biosphere evolution. Understanding the key drivers of these environmental transitions is an ongoing challenge in deep-time Earth system science.

The Spatially Continuous IntegratiON (SCION) climate-biogeochemical model is often used for the analysis these processes, and has successfully reproduced a number of first-order global trends through the Phanerozoic (1) and Neoproterozoic (2), including reconstructions of atmospheric CO₂, atmospheric O₂, and surface temperature. But many notable mismatches still occur, e.g. during the late Paleozoic icehouse interval and in the underestimation of warmth during the Cretaceous greenhouse period. Furthermore, many novel or revised proxy records have not yet been compared to the model outputs (e.g. global erosion rates (3), or new records for Phanerozoic temperature evolution (4) and atmospheric CO₂ (5)).

Here, we present a new integration of multiple environmental proxy record compilations with the SCION model outputs. We determine the key periods of model-data mismatch and explore possible solutions within the current model formulation, or possible model extensions. We then suggest critical intervals where proxy development or sampling work may be best directed.

 

(1) Merdith et al., 2025, Science Advances

(2) Mills et al., 2025, Global and Planetary Change

(3) Hay et al., 2006, Palaeo3

(4) Judd et al., 2024, Paleoclimate

(5) Steinthorsdottir et al., 2024, Treatise on Geochemistry

How to cite: Krewer, C. and Mills, B. J. W.: Modelling the Phanerozoic: Discrepancies and conformity with the geological record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11212, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11212, 2026.

During the Neoproterozoic, early land biota consisted of cyanobacteria, microalgae and various fungi or fungi-like communities. Although called micro-organisms, their role in stabilising environments, and driving and controlling nutrient cycles [1], creates a macro-scale impact. Photosynthetic microbial mats are predicted to have been present ~3 billion years ago, creating microcosms of oxygen-rich environments that contribute towards global net primary productivity, weathering and nitrogen fixation [2]. However due to the lack of fossil evidence and understanding of their role in a non-vegetated environment, it is unclear what their impact is on biogeochemical cycling and thus the shaping of Neoproterozoic climate. Building on the new process based spatial vegetation model [3], we try to understand the role of expanding microbial communities on events such as the Neoproterozic Oxygenation Event and Snowball Earth.

 

[1] Taylor, T.N., Krings, M. (2005) Fossil microorganisms and land plants: Associations and interactions. Symbiosis 40:119-135

[2] Lenton, T.M., Daines, S.J. (2016) Matworld- the biogeochemical effects of early life on land. New Phytologist 215: 505-507

[3] Gurung, K., Field, K.J, et al. (2024) Geographic range of plants drives long-term climate change. Nature Comms 15: 1805

How to cite: Gurung, K. and Mills, B. J. W.: Influence of terrestrial productivity by photosynthetic microbial mats on biogeochemical cycles over the Neoproterozoic landscape, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11296, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11296, 2026.

EGU26-11517 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Modelling the changes in marine ecosystem and carbon cycle after the K/Pg boundary event 

Tomoki Takeda and Eiichi Tajika

The mass extinction occurred at the Cretaceous/Paleogene (K/Pg) boundary event, approximately 66 million years ago, which resulted in global-scale biotic turnover that was ecologically diverse but selective. This extinction coincides with both the activities of Deccan Traps volcanism spanning approximately one million years and a large asteroid impact which formed the Chicxulub crater on the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. These two events and their environmental and biological consequences left a global imprint in the deep-sea sediments. Deep-sea sediment records indicate the collapse of the oceanic bottom-to-surface gradient of carbon isotope ratio and the carbonate compensation depth (CCD) deepening for several hundred thousand years after the K/Pg boundary. The collapse of the carbon isotope gradient has been variously interpreted as changes in biological production, including a global shutdown of primary production, reduced export production, and enhanced spatial heterogeneity. However, these interpretations remain insufficiently tested for consistency with the geological records. The pronounced long-term decline of carbonate mass accumulation rates (MAR) after the K/Pg boundary is also indicated from deep-sea records. This suggests the necessity of a prolonged reduction in biological carbonate productivity. However, existing boron isotope-based ocean surface pH reconstructions do not support prolonged and severe ocean acidification, making it difficult to explain the long-term decrease of carbonate MAR.

Here, we first investigate changes in marine biological productivity and particulate organic matter (POM) decomposition rate using a vertical one-dimensional ocean carbon cycle model to interpret the collapse of the vertical carbon isotope gradient. We find that, provided POM production and burial persist in coastal regions, the collapse can be explained by either reduced export productivity in the open ocean or reduced POM sinking rates, but cannot discriminate them from the modeling of this study with existing data. These results support the discussion of Kump (1991) and the Living Ocean hypothesis (e.g., D’Hondt et al., 1998). In this model, the CCD deepened, but carbonate production rate was comparable to previous modelling studies, and we were unable to reproduce the pronounced long-term decline of carbonate MAR after the K/Pg boundary event.

Next, we explore an alternative explanation for the long-term decline in carbonate MAR based on changes in the structure of primary producers. At the K/Pg boundary, calcareous nannoplankton, such as coccolithophores, experienced catastrophic extinction, whereas non-calcifying phytoplankton, such as diatoms, were relatively resilient. In addition, enhanced diatom productivity has been suggested for several hundred thousand years following the K/Pg boundary in the South Pacific. Therefore, climate change and ocean eutrophication following the K/Pg boundary may have favored diatom primary production at the expense of carbonate production by calcareous nannoplankton, but its quantitative contribution remains poorly constrained. We will distinguish calcareous nannoplankton and diatoms by their physiological characteristics and explore how background environmental changes sustain enhanced diatom abundance and reduced carbonate production.

How to cite: Takeda, T. and Tajika, E.: Modelling the changes in marine ecosystem and carbon cycle after the K/Pg boundary event, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11517, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11517, 2026.

EGU26-11558 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Paleolatitude bias in reconstructions of Cenozoic greenhouse climates 

Bram Vaes, Yannick Donnadieu, Alexis Licht, Erwan Pineau, Pierre Maffre, Thomas Chalk, and Pietro Sternai

Cenozoic greenhouse climates offer important insights into Earth’s climate system and carbon cycle under elevated CO2 conditions. A major challenge in simulating these warm intervals lies in the accurate reconstruction of the paleogeography, yet its impact on modeled climates and their agreement with proxy data remains poorly quantified. In this study, we systematically assess the sensitivity of fully coupled climate simulations to alternative paleogeographic reconstructions for the Paleocene, early Eocene, and middle-late Eocene. Using the IPSL-CM5A2 Earth System Model, we find that regional climates are particularly sensitive to the paleolatitudinal position of landmasses and ocean basins. Latitudinal shifts of more than 5°, arising from the choice of mantle versus paleomagnetic reference frame, significantly alter modeled regional temperature and precipitation patterns, as well as ocean circulation patterns. Moreover, we demonstrate that reconciling simulated climates with temperature proxy data depends strongly on the reconstructed paleolatitude of the proxy sites. In regions such as the southwest Pacific, correcting for paleolatitude bias induced by a mantle frame reduces model-data temperature misfits by up to 5°C. Our results further show that the regional climatic impact of paleogeography can equal or even exceed that of a doubling of atmospheric CO2, particularly at mid-latitudes. These findings highlight the importance of using accurate paleogeographic reconstructions and an appropriate reference frame for improving paleoclimate simulations and their integration with proxy data.

How to cite: Vaes, B., Donnadieu, Y., Licht, A., Pineau, E., Maffre, P., Chalk, T., and Sternai, P.: Paleolatitude bias in reconstructions of Cenozoic greenhouse climates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11558, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11558, 2026.

EGU26-13853 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Phanerozoic paleogeography and its impact on long-term climatic change and habitability 

Eivind Straume, Trond Torsvik, Mathew Domeier, and Aleksi Nummelin

Paleogeography is a key boundary condition for reconstructing Earth’s climatic evolution and habitability. On geological timescales, paleogeographic changes control the latitudinal positioning of environments, governing received and reflected solar radiation and climatic zonation. The distribution and morphology of continents and oceans further control ocean–atmosphere circulation and influence the evolution and dispersal of marine and terrestrial biota.

Here we present a new effort to construct a continuous (1 Myr resolution) global paleogeographic digital elevation model for the entire Phanerozoic (540–0 Ma). The reconstructions integrate new and previously published plate models, and global and regional paleo-elevation datasets. Building on and extending methodologies previously applied to the Cenozoic (66–0 Ma), our approach incorporates dynamic topography from mantle circulation (100–0 Ma), oceanic lithospheric ages, sediment thickness, detailed continental margin evolution, parameterized subduction zones, and spatiotemporal interpolation between topographic datasets of different time intervals. The reconstructions focus in detail on key paleogeographic features relevant for ocean circulation, climate, and biogeography, including oceanic gateways, land bridges, and large-scale orogenies.

Finally, we present results from a variety of fully coupled Earth system model experiments, mainly with Cenozoic paleogeographic boundary conditions (e.g., present, Eocene–Oligocene, Late Eocene, and the DeepMIP Early Eocene ensemble), to demonstrate how paleogeographic changes influences planetary energy budgets, ocean circulation, and climate sensitivity. These results highlight systematic relationships that offer potential for extrapolation throughout the Phanerozoic.

How to cite: Straume, E., Torsvik, T., Domeier, M., and Nummelin, A.: Phanerozoic paleogeography and its impact on long-term climatic change and habitability, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13853, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13853, 2026.

EGU26-14220 | Posters on site | BG5.1

Reconstructing volcanic ash input to the Pacific Ocean: how does it link to Cenozoic climate? 

Jack Longman, Ann G. Dunlea, and Andrew S. Merdith

Volcanic ash is known to influence a range of biogeochemical processes once deposited in the oceans, with explosive volcanism inputting large amounts of highly reactive and nutrient-rich material to the oceans every year. This material can stimulate increases in primary productivity, with ash alleviating nutrient limitations. This may eventually lead to enhanced carbon burial at the seafloor, with evidence from deep time suggesting this process may play a role in episodes of global cooling. As a result, reconstructing the amount of volcanic ash entering the oceans is important for understanding the role explosive volcanic activity has on global climates. However, extant records of changing volcanic intensity are either limited to regional studies of small numbers of volcanoes or are based on imperfect methods such as visible tephra layer counting.

In this work, we use the output of a model-derived dataset of sediment provenance from the Pacific Ocean, which provides estimates of changing volcanic material input for 67 sites. We use these data, and an inverse weighting approach, to reconstruct changing levels of volcanic ash input for the Cenozoic Period (66 million years ago to present). With around 75% of all active volcanoes located in the Pacific Ring of Fire, this record likely represents the majority of all volcanic ash through the Cenozoic, and so we compare it to known climate change through the period. We see increases in volcanic ash input around 35 million years ago and 10 million years ago, which can be linked to eruptions from the Sierra Madre Occidental, and Izu Bonin Arc, respectively. The first uptick occurs at the same time as the Eocene-Oligocene transition, an episode of global climate cooling, whilst the second covers the descent into the Pleistocene glaciations. These findings hint at the climatic impact of ash input, one which has major implications for the development of the Earth system.

How to cite: Longman, J., Dunlea, A. G., and Merdith, A. S.: Reconstructing volcanic ash input to the Pacific Ocean: how does it link to Cenozoic climate?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14220, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14220, 2026.

EGU26-15332 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Local diversity remained relatively stable across the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) in South China 

Hanhui Huang, Tianyi Chu, Yiying Deng, Linna Zhang, Junxuan Fan, and Erin E. Saupe

The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) marks one of the most profound radiations of marine life in Earth history. Numerous hypotheses have been proposed for the drivers of the increase in richness during this interval. Distinguishing among these factors requires biodiversity to be evaluated at both local and regional scales across different environments. Here, we compiled a high-resolution, assemblage-level dataset comprising 557 stratigraphic sections and 12,898 fossil occurrences from South China. We integrated these records using a quantitative stratigraphic approach, to examine changes in local (assemblage-level) and regional marine species richness from the Furongian (late Cambrian) to the Middle Ordovician across four depositional environments: littoral, platform, slope, and deep-shelf. We additionally assessed faunal differences across environments and geographic space. Our results suggest regional richness increased four-fold during the GOBE, closely paralleling the spatial expansion of fossil-bearing environments, especially the platform and slope. In contrast, local (assemblage-level) richness remained relatively stable and low through the study interval, despite fluctuations within the slope environment. The taxonomic composition of the platform and slope environments diverged during the GOBE, and spatial turnover increased from the early to late stages of the GOBE. Our findings suggest the expansion of shallow-marine environments tied to increasing sea levels may have been one of the primary drivers of the Ordovician marine biodiversification in South China, with increased faunal differentiation across both environment and space.

How to cite: Huang, H., Chu, T., Deng, Y., Zhang, L., Fan, J., and Saupe, E. E.: Local diversity remained relatively stable across the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) in South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15332, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15332, 2026.

EGU26-15410 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Biogeodynamic controls on Caribbean community structure during the formation of the Isthmus of Panama  

Amanda Godbold, Aaron O’Dea, Ethan L. Grossman, Brigida de Gracia, Javier Pardo Díaz, Sven Pallacks, Jonathan Todd, Kenneth Johnson, and Sean R. Connolly

The progressive restriction of seaways between the Caribbean and Pacific during the formation of the Isthmus of Panama fundamentally reorganized ocean circulation, biogeochemical cycling, and marine ecosystem structure across the tropical Americas. This tectonically driven reorganization provides a natural experiment for examining how long-term Earth system processes influence the structure, stability, and resilience of biological communities. The Bocas del Toro region of Caribbean Panama preserves a rich fossil record that captures ecological responses to these coupled physical and environmental changes.

This study examines temporal variation in marine community composition and functional trait structure using fossil assemblages from four marine formations: Cayo Agua, Escudo de Veraguas, Old Bank, and Isla Colón, spanning approximately 6.0 to 0.43 Ma. The analyses integrate multiple taxonomic groups, including bivalves, gastropods, bryozoans, corals, and fishes, enabling comparison of ecological responses among organisms that differ in life habit, mobility, feeding strategy, tiering, and ecological function. By incorporating multiple clades with contrasting ecologies, this approach allows assessment of whether community change reflects reorganization within broadly conserved functional roles or more fundamental shifts in ecosystem structure.

Community dynamics are quantified using a combination of model-based ordination, taxon-specific response analyses, and functional diversity metrics applied within a stratigraphic framework. These methods explicitly account for variation in sampling intensity and taxonomic richness, allowing ecological patterns to be distinguished from sampling effects. Biological patterns are evaluated alongside sedimentological and geochemical records to place community dynamics within their environmental context. Environmental–trait and environmental–taxon relationships are evaluated within a generalized linear latent variable modeling (GLLVM) framework to assess how changes in physical conditions, sedimentary processes, and geochemical variability influence community reorganization before, during, and after the formation of the Isthmus of Panama. Comparisons among contemporaneous formations allow local ecological responses to be distinguished from regionally coherent environmental signals.

Overall, this study aims to clarify how long-term tectonic and oceanographic reorganization shapes marine ecosystem structure and stability, providing a stratigraphically grounded perspective on the links between Earth system processes and ecological dynamics over geological timescales.

How to cite: Godbold, A., O’Dea, A., Grossman, E. L., de Gracia, B., Pardo Díaz, J., Pallacks, S., Todd, J., Johnson, K., and Connolly, S. R.: Biogeodynamic controls on Caribbean community structure during the formation of the Isthmus of Panama , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15410, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15410, 2026.

The reconstruction of paleogeography, that is, the reconstruction of Earth’s surface elevation within a plate tectonic context, is crucial for understanding changes in past climate, sea level, as well as variations in biodiversity through deep time. Although often presented as picturesque maps in publications or even museums, paleogeography reconstructions can provide important geoscientific context and serve as a key boundary condition in many aspects of Earth science including, but not limited to, the simulation of past climates and landscape evolution modelling. However, despite the potential influence and impact of paleogeography on many aspects of Earth’s history, there are very few published global reconstructions of paleogeography, and available reconstructions are often constrained to a single time slice (e.g., Middle Miocene, ~15 Ma), or are available in and represent longer (~5–10 Myr) increments. Additionally, there are major uncertainties in reconstructions of paleogeography, in part due to the poor temporal and/or spatial coverage of proxy data, but also uncertainties within the underlying workflows used to derive its key components. Here, I examine published paleogeography reconstructions throughout the Cenozoic, focusing on key time intervals. I compare the similarities and differences in reconstructions, including aspects of their workflows and sources of uncertainties within them. Finally, I present new approaches for generating paleogeography and quantified uncertainties in a more open and reproducible framework, allowing for future advances in proxy data and other constraints to be incorporated.

How to cite: Wright, N.: Current state and future directions in paleogeography reconstructions throughout the Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15492, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15492, 2026.

Insects are the most diverse groups on earth and preserved with plenty of fossils. Disentangling their ecological roles are crucial for understanding the evolution of terrestrial ecosystems, however, reconstructing the adaptive evolution of extinct insects has been proven to be highly challenging. Here, we conduct integrated approaches to reveal the macroevolution of two insect clades, katydids (Hagloidea) and giant cicadas (Palaeontinidae), on the basis of newly compiled morphological datasets. Our results provide novel information for coevolution of insects and vertebrates in the Mesozoic, and highlight the significance of fossil morphologies. 1) Acoustic evolution of katydids. We present a database of the stridulatory apparatus and wing morphology of Mesozoic katydids and analyze the evolution of their acoustic communication. Our results demonstrate that katydids evolved complex acoustic communication including mating signals, intermale communication, and directional hearing, by the Middle Jurassic; evolved high-frequency musical calls by the Late Triassic. The Early—Middle Jurassic katydid transition coincided with the diversification of mammalian clades, supporting the hypothesis of the acoustic coevolution of mammals and katydids. 2) Flight evolution of giant cicadas. We reveal the flight evolution of the Mesozoic arboreal insect clade Palaeontinidae. Our analyses unveil a faunal turnover from early to late Palaeontinidae during the Jurassic–Cretaceous, accompanied by a morphological adaptive shift and improvement in flight abilities including increased speed and enhanced maneuverability. The adaptive aerodynamic evolution of Palaeontinidae may have been stimulated by the rise of early birds, supporting the hypothesis of an aerial evolutionary arms race between Palaeontinidae and birds.

How to cite: Xu, C.: Coevolution of Insects and vertebrates in the Mesozoic: examples from katydids and giant cicadas, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15628, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15628, 2026.

EGU26-16017 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Tectonic and climatic influence on sediment-hosted ore deposits in deep time  

Sheree Armistead and Simon Williams

Sediment-hosted copper–cobalt and base metal deposits are critical to the global energy transition, yet the environmental conditions that favour their formation and preservation through Earth history remain poorly understood. Evaporites are considered crucial for the formation of sediment-hosted ore deposits as they generate saline brines that circulate metals and sulphur. These tend to form in desert belts at particular latitudes where evaporation outpaces rainfall. The world’s largest sediment-hosted Cu-Co deposits – located in the Central African Copperbelt – are hosted by Neoproterozoic rocks that formed during one of Earth’s most chaotic climatic periods. Whether this is a coincidence, or whether extreme climate plays a role in mineralisation remains to be tested. The relative roles of tectonic setting, climate and latitude remain poorly constrained but have important implications for predicting where sediment-hosted ore deposits formed in deep time.

We integrate a global database of sediment-hosted ore deposits with full-plate tectonic reconstructions spanning the last billion years to explore the relationship between deposits, paleolatitude and tectonic setting. Plate reconstructions and fossil rift margin datasets are used to assess the spatial association between ore deposits and long-lived extensional settings, with a focus on Neoproterozoic basins.

Preliminary results indicate a spatial correlation between sediment-hosted ore deposits and rifted continental margins. Paleolatitude reconstructions suggest that many deposits formed at low to mid latitudes; however, their distribution varies through time, which may be driven by major climatic fluctuations, including global-scale glaciations. Ongoing work integrating depositional age constraints from key regions and paleoclimate model outputs aims to further quantify these relationships and refine predictive frameworks for underexplored sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Armistead, S. and Williams, S.: Tectonic and climatic influence on sediment-hosted ore deposits in deep time , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16017, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16017, 2026.

EGU26-16603 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Linking paleogeography and Earth system dynamics to evolutionary innovation during the Cambrian Explosion  

Anna Lewkowicz, Antonin Affholder, Nicolas Coltice, Marie Martin, Tristan Salles, Niklas Werner, Jonathon Leonard, and Loïc Pellissier

Geodynamic redistribution of continents fundamentally reshapes Earth’s climate, ocean circulation, and nutrient cycles, thereby exerting a first-order control on biological evolution. A possible example of this coupling is the Cambrian explosion, a rapid diversification of animal life that followed profound tectonic, climatic, and oceanographic reorganization during the late Neoproterozoic. However, identifying the causal drivers of the Cambrian explosion remains challenging due to the fragmentary geological record.  To circumvent these limitations, we implement aintegrated, mechanistic simulation framework that integrates the key Earth system processes governing climate, circulation, surface evolution, and marine biogeochemistry, allowing their interactions to be explored consistently in space and time. These components provide time-evolving boundary conditions for biological productivity, oxygen availability, and nutrient supply, which are then used to study how changing environmental states shape the range of biologically feasible organismal strategies.  Rather than simulating realized biodiversity or reconstructing a specific episode of Earth history, the model explores the full dynamical evolution of an Earth-like system across a supercontinent cycle, from continental assembly to breakup. In this framework, changing Earth system states expand or restrict the range of biologically feasible organismal strategies, providing a quantitative link between paleogeographic restructuring and the environmental opening of functional trait space relevant to the Cambrian explosion.  

How to cite: Lewkowicz, A., Affholder, A., Coltice, N., Martin, M., Salles, T., Werner, N., Leonard, J., and Pellissier, L.: Linking paleogeography and Earth system dynamics to evolutionary innovation during the Cambrian Explosion , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16603, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16603, 2026.

EGU26-16889 | Orals | BG5.1

Biogeodynamic Barrier: Lithospheric Delamination and Delayed Miocene Faunal Migration in the Anatolian Highland 

Oğuz H Göğüş, Joel Saylor, Demet Biltekin, Kurt Sundell, Chelsea Mackaman-Lofland, Xutong Guan, Cem Özyalçın, and Ömer Bodur

Biogeodynamics research seeks to link lithospheric scale processes with surface ecosystem evolution. Western Anatolia-Aegean region provides a critical testing ground for this coupling, where mantle dynamics have driven dramatic topographic reversals. Tectonostratigraphic and geomorphic insights indicate that Western Anatolia maintained elevated landscapes prior to and through Early Miocene extension. These observations are inconsistent with simple rift-related thinning but support dynamic uplift driven by removal of dense lithospheric mantle. Here, we integrate geodynamic modeling with geological observations to reconstruct the region's paleoelevation and its control on intercontinental faunal connectivity.  Our results indicate that lithospheric delamination (slab peel-back) was the primary driver of Early Miocene topographyNumerical models show that slab peeling from beneath the crust and subsequent asthenospheric upwelling triggered a transient surface uplift of > 1 km and southward younging volcanism from İzmir-Ankara suture to the western Taurides. Supported by metamorphic constraints indicating crustal thickness consistent with elevations of 2–3 km, these results are in good agreement with the existence of a paleo-"Anatolian Highland" at ~20 Ma Crucially, this geodynamically sustained topography acted as a significant biogeographic barrier. Synthesizing our models with recent fossil record analyses, we suggest that high elevations delayed faunal migration between Eurasia and Afro-Arabia, severing connectivity despite the closure of the Neo-Tethys. The timing of increased biotic interchange in the Middle–Late Miocene coincides with evidence for topographic lowering linked to post-delamination driven by crustal stretchingWe conclude that the thermal and mechanical evolution of the Anatolian lithosphere exerted a first-order control on the timing of biotic exchange, highlighting the direct link between lithosphere dynamics and vertebrate evolution.

How to cite: Göğüş, O. H., Saylor, J., Biltekin, D., Sundell, K., Mackaman-Lofland, C., Guan, X., Özyalçın, C., and Bodur, Ö.: Biogeodynamic Barrier: Lithospheric Delamination and Delayed Miocene Faunal Migration in the Anatolian Highland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16889, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16889, 2026.

EGU26-17018 | ECS | Posters on site | BG5.1

Assessing Sediment Flux Evolution for the entire Phanerozoic with Palaeogeography and Palaeoclimate simulations 

Florian Franziskakis, Niklas Werner, Christian Vérard, Sébastien Castelltort, and Grégory Giuliani
Deep-time Earth reconstructions, through plate tectonic models and derived products such as palaeogeography provide information about the location of continents, the size of oceans basins and the variations in sea level, hundreds of millions of years back.
Due to the uncertainties in plate tectonic models, and the current limitations of palaeogeographic reconstructions, understanding global scale surface processes such as the erosion of continental areas, the transport of these sediments and their deposition remains a challenge, despite recent advances (Salles et al., 2023a), who calculated the sediment fluxes at the global scale over the last 100 million years with the goSPL software (Salles et al., 2023b).
We present here new sediment fluxes calculations spanning the entire Phanerozoic (44 reconstructions over the last 545 million years). We use high resolution (10x10km) palaeogeographic maps created from the PANALESIS plate tectonic model (Franziskakis et al., 2025), together with climate simulations from the PLASIM model, to calculate the sediment flux at the local (drainage basin) scale following the BQART equation (Syvitski & Milliman, 2007).
We consider scenarios with increasing complexity in parameters, to assess the influence of ice coverage, climate zones and intensity of runoff. Our estimates allow us to better understand the distribution of sediment fluxes at outlet points and their variation in time at the global scale.
 
References:
Franziskakis, F., Vérard, C., Castelltort, S., & Giuliani, G. (2025). Global Quantified Palaeogeographic Maps and Associated Sea-level Variations for the Phanerozoic using the PANALESIS Model [Dataset]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15396265
Salles, T., Husson, L., Rey, P., Mallard, C., Zahirovic, S., Boggiani, B. H., Coltice, N., & Arnould, M. (2023). Hundred million years of landscape dynamics from catchment to global scale. Science, 379(6635), 918–923. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.add2541
Salles, T., Husson, L., Lorcery, M., & Hadler Boggiani, B. (2023). Landscape dynamics and the Phanerozoic diversification of the biosphere. Nature, 624(7990), 115–121. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06777-z
Syvitski, J., & Milliman, J. (2007). Geology, Geography, and Humans Battle for Dominance over the Delivery of Fluvial Sediment to the Coastal Ocean. Journal of Geology, 115(1), 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1086/509246

How to cite: Franziskakis, F., Werner, N., Vérard, C., Castelltort, S., and Giuliani, G.: Assessing Sediment Flux Evolution for the entire Phanerozoic with Palaeogeography and Palaeoclimate simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17018, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17018, 2026.

EGU26-17538 | Posters on site | BG5.1

Timing and mode of initial marine flooding in the southern Pannonian Basin: new U-Pb age constraints from the Prnjavor and Tuzla basin 

Oleg Mandic, Nevena Andrić-Tomašević, Robert Šamarija, Stjepan Ćorić, Ljupko Rundić, Armin Zeh, Davor Pavelić, Sejfudin Vrabac, and Patrick Grunert

The Pannonian Basin in Central and Southeastern Europe is a huge landlocked basin delineated by Alpine-Carpathian-Dinarides chain. This extensional backarc basin originating by tectonic rifting in the Early Miocene, was successively flooded by the Central Paratethys Sea. Slovenian Corridor along the Alpine-Dinarides junction enabled its communication with the Mediterranean Sea.  Marine flooding of the southern part of the Pannonian Basin - between the Styrian Basin in Austria and Velika Morava Basin in Serbia - is still poorly understood. While the conflicting biostratigraphic interpretations contribute to ongoing discussion on timing and mode of this major environmental turnover, independent radiometric data are still rare.  The present study contributes three new U-Pb zircon ages which are the very first such data on the Miocene marine transgression in northern Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dating from autochthonous tephra airfalls prove uniformly the middle Badenian age for marine transgression, with a 0.5 Ma eastwards-younging trend of its onset. This trend stays in line with the literature data suggesting a steady eastwards propagation of extension along the Pannonian Basin southern margin. Towards a better understanding of interplay between tectonic and glacioeustatic forcing of the regional marine progression, a review of published stratigraphic data has been conducted, depicted correspondingly in four paleogeographic maps of one-million-year resolution. Building on these data, we bracket the initial gradual flooding interval to the late Burdigalian–early Serravallian time interval, respectively, attaining up to 3.5 Myr overall duration in a step-wise manner.  Although the tectonic phases were main drivers in the creation of accommodation space, along the NE Dinarides, glacioeustasy driven by the global climate suspended landward propagation of the coastline during sea-level low-stands at long obliquity nodes. This result enables a more precise reconstruction of the interplay between landward sea ingression, regional climate change and effects to endemic evolution of biota inhabiting long-lived paleolakes in adjoining intramountainous basins.

This research was funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) grant DOI 10.55776/I6504 and by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) grant no. TO 1364/3-1.

How to cite: Mandic, O., Andrić-Tomašević, N., Šamarija, R., Ćorić, S., Rundić, L., Zeh, A., Pavelić, D., Vrabac, S., and Grunert, P.: Timing and mode of initial marine flooding in the southern Pannonian Basin: new U-Pb age constraints from the Prnjavor and Tuzla basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17538, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17538, 2026.

EGU26-18914 | Posters on site | BG5.1

Understanding the drivers of the Phanerozoic strontium isotope record 

Benjamin Mills, Jack Longman, and Andrew Merdith

The strontium isotope ratio of 87Sr/86Sr is one of the best-defined tracers of Earth’s evolving surface environment over the Eon of macroscopic life, due to the long residence time of Sr in the ocean. If offers tantalising clues about past CO2 emissions and the rate of continental weathering, which are vital considerations for understanding Earth’s changing surface temperature, climate, and atmospheric oxygen abundance. However, the Sr isotope ratio has strong regional lithological control, with mafic and felsic rocks having dramatically different isotopic compositions, which limits any simple analysis of Sr ratios over Phanerozoic timescales. We present an update to the SCION Earth Evolution Model, which allows it to track the spatial distribution of lithologies and Sr compositions over deep time, enabling regional-scale Sr isotope inputs to be assessed in the context of wider Earth system evolution. We use this to explore to what degree we currently understand the Phanerozoic Sr record, and how it can be used as a proxy to validate or falsify theories about long-term climate change and oxygen levels.

How to cite: Mills, B., Longman, J., and Merdith, A.: Understanding the drivers of the Phanerozoic strontium isotope record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18914, 2026.

EGU26-19123 | Posters on site | BG5.1

 Arctic cold-water corals record depleted radiocarbon signatures during the Holocene  

Jacek Raddatz, Martin Butzin, Sascha Flögel, Andres Rüggeberg, Klaus Wallmann, and Norbert Frank

Changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations during the last deglaciation have been attributed to the release of fossil carbon. However, the processes and mechanisms of the various carbon sources that contributed to this change in the carbon cycle are not yet fully understood. Cold-water corals and their ecosystems are considered important carbonate factories in the Arctic and are particularly vulnerable to changes in the carbon cycle and present an unique archive recording such changes.

Here, we present paired 230Th/U and radiocarbon (14C) measurements on pristine fragments of the scleractinian cold-water coral Desmophyllum pertusum, combined with measurements of stable carbon isotopes (δ13C) on various benthic foraminifera from a sediment core taken from the Lopphavet CWC reef (71°N, 21°E) covering the last 10 kyrs. This combined approach helps to narrow down sources of carbon cycled within this Holocene CWC reef in the Arctic.

Our results show Δ14C values that are as low as -500 ‰ resulting in extremely high bottom- atmosphere ages of up to 6000 years. Radiocarbon simulations performed with the 14C-equipped model CLIMBER-X show that such negative Δ14C values and high ventilation ages cannot be explained by oceanographically controlled changes in the marine radiocarbon cycle of the Arctic Ocean. Furthermore, the δ¹³C values of various benthic foraminifera with different microhabitats show the expected offsets, suggesting that the carbon source does not originate from dissociations of gas-hydrates.

We suggest that a continuous retreat of the ice-sheets has led to an accelerated release of terrestrial organic carbon into the Norwegian Arctic Ocean on which the corals fed on.  

Our results therefore highlight the need for further studies that constrain the mechanism and processes of organic carbon pathways from high-latitude terrestrial regime into the Arctic Ocean, especially in high latitude carbonate factories.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

How to cite: Raddatz, J., Butzin, M., Flögel, S., Rüggeberg, A., Wallmann, K., and Frank, N.:  Arctic cold-water corals record depleted radiocarbon signatures during the Holocene , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19123, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19123, 2026.

EGU26-19221 | ECS | Orals | BG5.1

Reef crises as an Earth-system driver of marine biodiversity loss 

Danijela Dimitrijevic and Wolfgang Kiessling

Metazoan reefs have experienced repeated crises throughout the Phanerozoic, marked by geologically rapid declines in reef carbonate production. While some of these crises coincided with major biotic turnovers, others left reef-building communities largely intact, and no simple relationship exists between crisis magnitude and ecological change. Consequently, the extent to which reef crises reshaped reef community composition and whether they triggered cascading extinctions among reef-dependent organisms remains unresolved.

Here, we use a global compilation of reef-related fossil occurrences over the Phanerozoic to test whether reef crises affected not only reef builders but also the wider marine biota. We distinguish three cohorts of reef affinity: (i) metazoan reef builders (i.e. colonial corals and sponges), (ii) reef dwellers, and (iii) non-reef organisms. By integrating these data with stage-level changes in reef volume, we evaluate extinction dynamics across four major Phanerozoic reef crises.

We find that reef builders and reef dwellers were tightly coupled over the last 500 million years. Although their background extinction patterns do not indicate simple, one-to-one cascading extinctions, extinction rates in both groups increased significantly during intervals of major reef loss. In contrast, non-reef organisms show no comparable response to reef crises. Our findings highlight the fundamental ecological interdependence between reef-building organisms and the diverse communities they support, and they underscore that the collapse of reef frameworks likely entails the loss of far more biodiversity than reef-building organisms alone.

How to cite: Dimitrijevic, D. and Kiessling, W.: Reef crises as an Earth-system driver of marine biodiversity loss, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19221, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19221, 2026.

EGU26-22916 | Orals | BG5.1

Ecological and biogeochemical consequences of benthic ecosystem engineer responses to the end-Permian mass extinction   

Alison Cribb, Aspen Sartin, Bethany Allen, Richard Stokey, Pedro Monarrez, and Dominik Hulse

Organisms whose activities impact the availability of resources in their environments, known as ecosystem engineers, are known to have profound controls on ecological and evolutionary dynamics throughout Earth history. Bioturbators – animals that mix seafloor sediments – are especially powerful ecosystem engineers due to their direct impacts on key benthic biogeochemical cycles. The emergence or loss of bioturbators throughout Earth history is associated with unique and profound shifts in benthic ecology and biogeochemistry. The end-Permian mass extinction (EPME), regarded as the most devastating climate-driven mass extinction in Earth history, saw devastating losses in marine benthic biodiversity and bioturbators, with the bioturbation-driven sedimentary mixed layer completely collapsing in some regions. The loss of bioturbating ecosystem engineers during the EPME has long been implicated in the rates of benthic recovery in the Early Triassic, although the precise impacts of bioturbator responses have remain unconstrained. Here, we test the hypothesis that loss of bioturbating ecosystem engineers during the EPME led to unique ecological and biogeochemical consequences in Early Triassic communities. Combining trace fossil data from literature and body fossil data from the Paleobiology Database for continuous stratigraphic sections across the EPME, we construct multiple comparative local time series of ecological responses of bioturbators and local benthic communities. We use the Earth system model cGENIE to reconstruct marine environmental conditions across the EPME, which also serve as boundary conditions for local biogeochemical models. For each region represented by continuous stratigraphic sections, we then use the fossil record to parameterise pre-EPME and post-EPME bioturbation in biogeochemical reactive-transport models and compare the impacts of the complete loss, reduction, or persistence of bioturbation on benthic biogeochemistry. Finally, we run local sensitivity analyses to constrain the impacts of bioturbation responses on biogeochemical change, and effect size analyses to quantify the relative roles of bioturbators and climate change on ecological responses across the EPME. These results address long-standing assumptions about the role of bioturbation in benthic ecosystem recovery through the Early Triassic and underscore the importance of local environments and community ecology for contextualising recovery in the aftermath of mass extinctions.

How to cite: Cribb, A., Sartin, A., Allen, B., Stokey, R., Monarrez, P., and Hulse, D.: Ecological and biogeochemical consequences of benthic ecosystem engineer responses to the end-Permian mass extinction  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22916, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22916, 2026.

Calcareous valves of various ostracod species from the Miocene (Burdigalian) Quilon Formation, Kerala Basin, southwest India, were separated and identified up to the species level. The 15 most abundant species were selected to determine the carbon and oxygen isotope composition, with 2 to 5 replicates to assess the variation among individual valves within each species. The δ¹³C ratios range from 0.56 to -4.65‰ VPDB with a standard deviation range between 0.08 to 0.53‰. The δ¹⁸O ratios varied between -2.57 to -4.25‰ VPDB with a standard deviation between 0.12‰ and 0.46‰. The seawater δ¹⁸O values were calculated using the empirical equation by Kim and Neil (1997), and they range between -3.08‰ to -0.01‰ (VSMOW), with an average of -1.85‰ (VSMOW). This study also tries to categorise the species into distinct habitat groups, namely the open ocean, mixed estuarine and shallow-marine environment with significant coastal upwelling influence, based on their isotopic composition. The results were compared with the habitats of their extant relatives at the family and genus levels, as well as information derived from valve ornamentations. Ostracods, namely Phlyctenophora meridionalis, Paranesidea cf. gajensis, Bairdoppilata sp., and Krithe autochthona inhabited a range of settings from shallow to deeper marine environments. The species Aurila singhi, Paractinocythereis gujaratensis, Stigmatocythere sp., Actinocythereis sp., Trachyleberis sp., Neocyprideis murudensis, Pokornyella chaasraensis, and Tenedocythere keralaensis are identified to inhabit an estuarine or shallow-marine environment influenced by freshwater influx. Whereas Paijenborchellina prona, Cytherelloidea sp., and Loxoconcha confinis show an indication of a shallow-marine environment with significant coastal upwelling influence.

How to cite: m s, A., kannan, P., and V Kapur, V.: Ecological and hydrological reconstruction of the western Indian coastal ocean during the Early Miocene (Burdigalian) based on the oxygen and carbon isotopes of multiple ostracod species., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-455, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-455, 2026.

A new book on the Carnian Pluvial Episode in Austria and the history of 150 years of scientific excavations is presented (Lukeneder A ed. 2026). It is nearly 40 years since Alastair H. Ruffel and Mike J. Simms stumbled upon the realisation that the Carnian Stage of the Late Triassic had experienced a dramatic episode of climate change that had profoundly affected the Global biota (Simms and Ruffell 1989; Simms et al. 1994).

Although the work of these authors more than 30 years ago recognized the widespread biotic changes seen through the Carnian Stage, they were unaware of an additional fascinating element of this interval, that of the Early Carnian Konservat-Lagerstätten (Lukeneder A and Lukeneder P 2021) described in this volume. Previous publications relating to these Lagerstätten occur scattered through literature spanning more than a century, but by bringing together a diverse range of geoscientists to address multiple aspects of this particular example at a key time during Earth history, this volume can substantially increase awareness of it. Given the importance of the CPE in Earth history, the Austrian Triassic Konservat-Lagerstätten must now rank alongside others with a higher profile and long history of research: Ediacara and counterparts at other sites around the world, the Burgess Shale, and the Solnhofen Limestone.

The chapters in this new multi-author volume fall into three broad categories: documentary, covering the history of research here and an exploration of techniques; paleontological; and stratigraphic, encompassing paleontology, mineralogy and geochemistry. The depth and diversity of the contributions in this volume add greatly to the knowledge of the CPE and how it developed.

How to cite: Lukeneder, A.: Late Triassic Konservat-Lagerstätten within the Carnian Pluvial Episode in Austria, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1483, 2026.

EGU26-1822 | Orals | SSP4.4

High Ecological and Environmental Fidelity of Marine Benthic Fossil Assemblages 

Michal Kowalewski and Carrie Tyler

Ecological and environmental estimates derived from paleontological data may be distorted due to taphonomic biases and time averaging. To assess how well fossils preserve ecological and environmental information, we compared multi-taxic macroinvertebrate benthic communities (135 species from 6 phyla) with sympatric skeletal accumulations (death assemblages; 150 species) for 52 coastal sites in North Carolina (USA). The series of resulting studies indicate that death assemblages have high informative value, and their fidelity relative to living communities is remarkably robust. First, the assessment of live-dead faunal composition captured community organization along an onshore-offshore depth gradient. In multivariate ordinations Axis 1 locality scores correlated significantly with locality water depth, and taxon scores were concordant with the observed occurrences of taxon depths. Moreover, the live and dead datasets yielded consistent habitat delineations in multivariate ordinations. This direct test across modern sites with known bathymetry supports the use of multivariate proxies derived from benthic marine death assemblages as a quantitative proxy for water depth. In addition, dead mollusks were an excellent proxy for all taxa when tracking depth gradients. Second, although community composition differed between the live and death assemblages, these differences were predictable with an overabundance of phyla and classes with robust skeletons in death assemblages. Third, compositional spatial heterogeneity (beta diversity) did not differ significantly between live and dead whether using all organisms, only mollusks, or only non-mollusks. These congruent estimates suggest that mollusks alone can also serve as reliable surrogate community proxies for beta diversity. Finally, high live-dead fidelity is also supported by congruence in quantitative indices of functional diversity (functional richness, redundancy, and vulnerability), biological traits, overlap in multidimensional functional space, and species distributions among functional groups. That is, despite the overabundance of mollusks and other skeletonized taxa, the live and dead estimates of functional diversity were concordant. Consistent with previous work in other study systems, these results indicate that shallow marine death assemblages can yield robust ecological estimates adequate for assessing the historical variability of ecosystems. Despite filters imposed by differential preservation and time averaging, the fossil record is likely reliable with respect to relative comparisons of biodiversity and ecology across shallow benthic marine assemblages. The high spatial fidelity of death assemblages supports the emerging paradigm of Conservation Paleobiology that paleontological data can quantify anthropogenic changes in marine ecosystems and advance our understanding of spatial and temporal aspects of biodiversity.

How to cite: Kowalewski, M. and Tyler, C.: High Ecological and Environmental Fidelity of Marine Benthic Fossil Assemblages, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1822, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1822, 2026.

EGU26-4067 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

How the differential preservation of ostracods (Crustacea) can obliterate records in conservation paleobiology studies 

Francisca Raiany Soares de Moura and Matias do Nascimento Ritter

Some biological organisms preserved in the sedimentary record are high-resolution archives that document environmental and ecological changes over time scales ranging from decades to millennia. Microcrustaceans, such as ostracods (Crustacea), are particularly notable in this context for their ability to preserve paleoecological information sensitive to environmental variations through their shells. The present study investigates the potential of ostracods as geoarchives in a small lagoon in southern Brazil, evaluating the processes that favor or limit their preservation in this environment. This research is based on analyzing seasonal collections of bottom sediments and sediment cores collected at six fixed points in the lagoon. Bottom collections were performed with a Van Veen dredge, and sediment cores were collected in 75-mm-diameter PVC tubes.  So far, no preserved shells have been found in the core analyzed, which covers the first 40 cm. However, the ostracod species Cyprideis riograndensis and Perissocytheridea krummelbeini were found in bottom samples from this location. Nevertheless, previous studies from 1984 indicate that C. riograndensis was alive at the same point analyzed in this study. This raises questions because the results of ²¹⁰Pb dating suggest that the initial 40 cm of sediment dates back to the 1920s. This suggests that the species documented in the 1970s was not preserved in the sedimentary record despite its prior documentation. The absence of carapaces may be associated with dissolution caused by increased freshwater input, given that this evidence is closer to the river system. This phenomenon underscores how taphonomic processes can compromise fossil preservation and constitute a type of shifting baseline syndrome. Although the data obtained are partial, they reinforce the importance of taphonomy in paleobiology conservation studies and the integration of the fossil record, modern biota, chronological and sedimentary indicators, and historical data to understand past ecosystem dynamics.

How to cite: Soares de Moura, F. R. and do Nascimento Ritter, M.: How the differential preservation of ostracods (Crustacea) can obliterate records in conservation paleobiology studies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4067, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4067, 2026.

EGU26-4310 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Ammonite suture complexity as a paleoclimate indicator comparable to δ18O stable isotope ratios 

Katherine Marriott, Mai Tran, Eric Zhang, Oryx Stormlance, Allan Chen, and Winson Guo

The exact genesis and function of ammonite sutures have long been sought as a simple answer and debated fiercely for decades. While possible functions of the highly iterative septal fluting, particularly that seen in the Jurassic and Cretaceous, may be complex, multifaceted, and mutually inclusive, the true mechanism for the formation of ammonite sutures almost certainly contraindicates all other possible methods of generation, and as a result, has been particularly unsettled in paleobiological literature. Reasons for ammonite suture complexity have been discussed both formally and informally in the ammonoid community and include capillary maximization of cameral fluid, age-related wrinkling of the rear mantle, branching of soft tissues in the rear mantle that compare with dendronotid sea slugs, survival of bite force or increased water pressure as per the Westermann morphospace, and the famous “tie points” and “viscous fingering” models of the mid-twentieth century. Here, we present evidence of another impetus for high complexity in ammonite sutures: cold seawater. We examine the strengths of ammonite suture complexity as a standalone or auxiliary index of sea-surface temperature and paleoclimate data that follows the same patterns as δ18O ratios, particularly in cool conditions, such that ammonites whose isotopes indicate a cooler climate tend to have high fractal complexity in the adult (and sometimes juvenile) stages. Coldwater ammonite faunas exclusively exhibit septa with fractal dimensions in the highest possible ranges (Df  > 1.6), such as the transition from temperate to cold conditions between the Campanian and Maastrichtian Stages on the Antarctic peninsula. Ammonite sutures also follow clear patterns of increasing fractal complexity descending thermoclines in a single locality, such as the Western Interior Seaway. Although it is impossible to standardize overall sea-surface temperature (SST) through stable isotope ratios, which require context-specific isotope examination, our results suggest that septal organogenesis of Late Mesozoic ammonites is deeply linked to climate-driven physiological inputs such that ammonites may be a functional tool for understanding Cretaceous ocean temperatures. Ammonite sutures simplify paleoclimate analyses in the Cretaceous because their fractal complexity seems to always follow a temperature-driven pattern, helping to reduce the noise around δ18O from locations with complicated isotopic contexts, such as the Western Interior Seaway. We intend to continue this work to further develop and understand the full implications of fractal analysis of ammonite sutures as a novel tool for reconstructing Cretaceous paleoclimate.

How to cite: Marriott, K., Tran, M., Zhang, E., Stormlance, O., Chen, A., and Guo, W.: Ammonite suture complexity as a paleoclimate indicator comparable to δ18O stable isotope ratios, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4310, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4310, 2026.

EGU26-4962 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Effects of long-term climate change on the functional diversity of molluscan assemblages in the Adriatic Sea 

Lukas Schweigl, Rafał Nawrot, Michał Kowalewski, Vaishnavi Pittala, and Daniele Scarponi

Most studies evaluating shifts in community composition in response to environmental change focus on taxonomic diversity, while functional diversity remains underexplored, particularly in marine ecosystems, despite its relevance to ecosystem functioning. We evaluated shifts in the functional diversity of molluscan nearshore communities in the Adriatic Sea (Italy) in response to late Quaternary climate change. We applied biological traits analysis (BTA) based on a broad range of life history, behavioral, and morphological characteristics to assess these changes.

Previous research by Scarponi et al. (2022) has shown that molluscan nearshore metacommunities in the northern and central Adriatic exhibited a resilient response to large-scale climatic and sea-level fluctuations of the late Quaternary. Taxonomic composition was very similar between the last (Thyrrenian) and the present interglacial (Holocene) but shifted to a different state during the last glacial. We studied the same dataset to test whether glacial assemblages also exhibited distinct functional composition compared to their interglacial counterparts. For this purpose, we applied fuzzy correspondence analysis (FCA, Chevenet et al., 1994). Differences in functional composition were further explored using functional beta diversity (Villéger et al., 2013) between assemblages of the different time intervals. Furthermore, we evaluated changes in functional alpha diversity based on multidimensional functional space (Laliberté & Legendre, 2010).

The results of FCA and beta diversity analysis demonstrate that functional composition was different during the last glacial, whereas it was similar for the two interglacials. Traits that differ most strongly between the glacial and interglacials are attachment type and feeding guild. In addition to differences in composition, functional diversity was higher during the last glacial, when accounted for sample size, which confirms expectations based on the higher taxonomic diversity during that time documented by Scarponi et al. (2022). Our results provide valuable insights into the natural range of variability in functional diversity of nearshore communities in the Adriatic Sea during major shifts in climate and sea level, demonstrating that taxonomic turnover also affected functional composition of assemblages.

 

References

Chevenet, Fran., Doléadec, S., & Chessel, D. (1994). A fuzzy coding approach for the analysis of long-term ecological data. Freshwater Biology, 31(3), 295–309. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.1994.tb01742.x

Laliberté, E., & Legendre, P. (2010). A distance‐based framework for measuring functional diversity from multiple traits. Ecology, 91(1), 299–305. DOI: 10.1890/08-2244.1

Scarponi, D., Nawrot, R., Azzarone, M., Pellegrini, C., Gamberi, F., Trincardi, F., & Kowalewski, M. (2022). Resilient biotic response to long-term climate change in the Adriatic Sea. Global Change Biology, 28(13), 4041–4053. DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16168

Villéger, S., Grenouillet, G., & Brosse, S. (2013). Decomposing functional β-diversity reveals that low functional β-diversity is driven by low functional turnover in European fish assemblages: Decomposing functional β-diversity. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 22(6), 671–681. DOI: 10.1111/geb.12021

How to cite: Schweigl, L., Nawrot, R., Kowalewski, M., Pittala, V., and Scarponi, D.: Effects of long-term climate change on the functional diversity of molluscan assemblages in the Adriatic Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4962, 2026.

EGU26-5206 * | Orals | SSP4.4 | Highlight

Determining the correlates of extinction for marine invertebrates 

Erin Saupe, Cooper Malanoski, Benjamin Shipley, Lila Blake, Edward Huang, Conall MacNiocaill, and Seth Finnegan

Identifying the drivers of variation in extinction intensity and selectivity across Earth’s history is essential for explaining past biodiversity patterns and for predicting biological responses to environmental change. Here we investigate the role of coastline geometry and paleogeographic boundary conditions in shaping extinction risk for taxa over the past 540 million years.  Paleogeography significantly influenced extinction risk for shallow-marine-restricted invertebrates over the Phanerozoic. Taxa with dispersal pathways that were disproportionately long compared to the latitudinal range traversed, as seen along east–west–oriented coastlines, islands, or inland seaways, consistently showed higher extinction risk compared to taxa whose dispersal pathways allowed more direct movement across latitudes. This information can be leveraged to study how marine invertebrates are responding to present-day climate change. We find evidence of differential dynamics for shallow marine invertebrates today that is dependent on geographic context.

How to cite: Saupe, E., Malanoski, C., Shipley, B., Blake, L., Huang, E., MacNiocaill, C., and Finnegan, S.: Determining the correlates of extinction for marine invertebrates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5206, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5206, 2026.

EGU26-5321 | Orals | SSP4.4

Environmental shifts revealed by macrofossils and geochemistry in river sediment cores: a high temporal resolution study on the Rhône River (France) 

André-Marie Dendievel, Jérémie Riquier, Brice Mourier, and Thierry Winiarski

River ecosystems have been highly altered and modified since the 1950s for water control, navigation, hydroelectricity, and agriculture, leading to hydro-sedimentary changes, vegetation shifts, and ecosystem degradation. In this context, secondary channels were particularly affected, as demonstrated by geomorphological and pollution studies (reduced inflow, accumulation of contaminated sediments). It is also clear that rapid changes in vegetation have taken place, but very few studies exist on this issue.

To address this gap, we propose to study and quantify macrofossils from sediment cores extracted from two side channels of the Rhône River, France. The goal is to reconstruct the history of riparian habitats and biodiversity since the 1950s, linking ecological trajectories to pollution trends (already published) and to engineering actions. This approach helps to provide insights into past human impacts at a high temporal resolution (one sample every two years) and to provide key features for future management strategies in alluvial wetlands.

Several sediment cores were extracted from two side channels, located 50 km south of Lyon (France), in an area heavily equipped (dams, dykes and groynes). Radionuclides (137Cs and 210Pb) and persistent organic pollutant trends were used to date the sediment accumulation. Fifty-two samples were analyzed at 2.5–4 cm resolution, corresponding to a temporal resolution of approximately two years. Plant and animal macrofossils (>400 µm) were recovered, identified, and standardized, with additional characterization of iron slags. Multivariate regression trees were used to highlight temporal succession patterns among taxa.

Macrofossils, especially forest and aquatic taxa, provide a history of habitats and biodiversity since 1950. Three major hydro-ecological phases were identifed and related to local river developments or management. The first phase, before 1977 (date of the dam construction), highlights a diversified riverine forest marked by black alder scales, strawberry seeds and numerous wood fragments. Abundant macrocharcoals and iron slags, correlated with magnetic susceptibility, suggest industrial inputs during this period. Then, the 1980s-1990s represent a second step with the rapid development of terrestrial vegetation with nettles, after dewatering. Finally, around 1999–2000, both sites returned to lentic conditions, with the expansion of wetland and aquatic taxa.

This research demonstrates the value of the macrofossil analysis in order to reconstruct the ecological history of river ecosystems at a high temporal resolution for the last 70 years. The study successfully linked macrofossil data to engineering and management actions, revealing an alternance of riparian dynamics and terrestrialization. These findings provide crucial feedback on the impacts of development, which can be helpful to define reference conditions and monitor long-term ecological changes.

How to cite: Dendievel, A.-M., Riquier, J., Mourier, B., and Winiarski, T.: Environmental shifts revealed by macrofossils and geochemistry in river sediment cores: a high temporal resolution study on the Rhône River (France), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5321, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5321, 2026.

EGU26-5535 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Integrated sedimentological and palaeoecological analysis of the Upper Pliocene Rio Stramonte section (Emilia-Romagna, Italy) 

Andrea Chiari, Fabrizio Felletti, Maria Marino, Maria Rose Petrizzo, Gianluca Raineri, and Gaia Crippa

Understanding the complex interactions between organisms and their environment is fundamental for palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic reconstructions. Biotic and abiotic components evolve through time and leave imprints in the biosedimentary record, which can be unravelled to trace how ecosystems respond to palaeoenvironmental changes. In this study, we apply an integrated approach combining sedimentological and palaeoecological analyses to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Rio Stramonte section (Lugagnano Val D’Arda, Emilia Romagna, Italy) within a key climatic interval, the Piacenzian, which is the most recent example of prolonged global warming in the deep time record and a possible analogue for the future climate conditions. The Rio Stramonte section is 54 m thick and is assigned to the Late Pliocene (Piacenzian) based on preliminary biostratigraphic analyses (molluscs, foraminifera and nannofossils). Twenty-eight mollusc samples were collected for palaeoecological analysis, and a total of 3147 specimens belonging to more than 120 taxa of bivalves and gastropods were identified and studied. The palaeoecological analysis shows that mollusc assemblages are composed of both infaunal and epifaunal taxa of infralittoral and circalittoral settings. The sedimentological analysis indicates a vertical succession of lithofacies suggesting an overall regressive trend from the bottom to the top of the section, with variations in water depth (from approximately 40–50 m to 5–10 m) and sedimentation rates. In the lower part of the section sandy beds are rich in molluscs. Bivalve specimens mainly occur with disarticulated valves, however without evidence of corrasion, thus reflecting a short-distance transport. In the middle part of the section, composed of fine-grained sediments deposited in a shelf setting, specimens are preserved in life position indicating low-energy muddy bottoms. Finally, the upper part of the section is rich in bivalve and gastropod fragments due to transport processes. Indeed, in this part of the section sedimentological features, as hummocky cross stratification, probably related to storm waves, indicate a shallower environment compared to the lower and middle part of the section, possibly affected by density flows directly related to river floods. Based on sedimentological and palaeoecological analyses, the Rio Stramonte section deposited in a shallow-water marine environment (infralittoral to shallow circalittoral) affected by episodes of salinity reduction due to river discharge. These results contribute to a better understanding and characterisation of the mollusc faunas of the Palaeo-Adriatic Basin during the warm climatic interval of the Piacenzian.

How to cite: Chiari, A., Felletti, F., Marino, M., Petrizzo, M. R., Raineri, G., and Crippa, G.: Integrated sedimentological and palaeoecological analysis of the Upper Pliocene Rio Stramonte section (Emilia-Romagna, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5535, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5535, 2026.

Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions in North America represent a major loss of large-bodied mammals, yet the ecological processes underlying species-specific decline remain unclear. In particular, the role of short-term habitat changes during the last deglaciation has received less attention than climatic or anthropogenic explanations. Palaeoecological studies indicate that mid-latitude North America experienced extensive but short-lived wetland expansion during the Bølling–Allerød interstadial (~14.6–12.8 ka), driven by meltwater discharge from the retreating Laurentide Ice Sheet, followed by rapid wetland contraction around the onset of the Younger Dryas. In this study, we examine how these wetland changes as major habitats are reflected in megafaunal distribution patterns across the Bølling–Allerød to Younger Dryas transition. We compile genus-level fossil occurrence data from publicly available databases and integrate them with spatial reconstructions of deglacial wetland extent. Using time-sliced analyses between approximately 15 and 11 ka, we explore changes in geographic range, spatial clustering, and distributional fragmentation of megafaunal taxa. Our analyses focus on wetland-associated taxa such as Mammut (mastodon), Castoroides (giant beaver), and Cervalces (stag-moose), and compare their spatiotemporal distribution patterns with those of non-wetland-associated megafauna. Preliminary results show that wetland-associated taxa tend to display more spatially clustered and persistent distributions during the Bølling–Allerød, when wetland extent was greatest. Following the onset of the Younger Dryas, these taxa exhibit increased fragmentation and range contraction. In contrast, non-wetland-associated taxa show weaker and less consistent changes through time. These results suggest that transient wetland landscapes were closely linked to short-term distributional stability in certain megafauna prior to rapid decline, and motivate further analyses to better evaluate habitat-related mechanisms during the last deglaciation.

 

 

 

How to cite: Choe, Y. and Byun, E.: Potential Impacts of Transitional Wetland Habitats on Megafaunal Distributions in North America during the Last Deglaciation  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8869, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8869, 2026.

Abstract: The End-Triassic Mass Extinction (ETE) exerted a profound impact on marine ecosystems. It is widely accepted that the primary trigger was the massive volcanic eruptions of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP). While environmental perturbations during this event have been extensively documented in the Western Tethys, high-resolution studies in the Eastern Tethys remain limited. This study presents a continuous Triassic-Jurassic marine succession from the Qiangtang Basin in Tibet, China. A high-precision geochronological framework was established by integrating U-Pb zircon dating with cyclostratigraphic tuning. Based on boron isotope  analysis of brachiopod fossils, we reconstructed the seawater pH, which revealed a prominent negative excursion synchronous with the carbon isotope  shift, providing robust evidence for ocean acidification during the ETE. Furthermore, uranium isotope data exhibit a negative excursion with a longer duration than that of boron isotopes, suggesting that marine anoxia persisted far beyond the interval of acidification. Our findings indicate that both ocean acidification and anoxia were direct drivers of the mass extinction; however, they played distinct roles: acidification primarily triggered the initial biotic crisis, whereas prolonged anoxia hindered the subsequent biotic recovery. The recurrence of coupled ocean acidification and anoxia, linked to global carbon cycle perturbations, represents a recurring mechanism for catastrophic ecological impacts throughout Earth's history.

How to cite: Wen, T., Fu, X., and Lu, T.: Ocean Acidification and Prolonged Anoxia during the End-Triassic Mass Extinction: Insights from the Qiangtang Basin, Eastern Tethys, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8933, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8933, 2026.

EGU26-9149 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Vegetation evolution and its driving mechanism on the Chinese Loess Plateau over the past 34 kyr 

Yang Pang, Bin Zhou, and Michael Meadows

The evolution of vegetation types (herbaceous vs. woody; C₃ vs. C₄ plants) on the Chinese Loess Plateau (CLP) is highly sensitive to regional climate variability and closely linked to changes in solar radiation and the intensity of the East Asian Summer Monsoon (EASM). However, drivers of vegetation change on the CLP, including the timing and nature of human activities as an ecological influence remain subjects of ongoing debate. Here, we reconstruct vegetation evolution over the past ~34 kyr BP using biomarker evidence from a lacustrine sedimentary sequence from Tianjiao Lake in the southern CLP. Multiple proxies, including total organic carbon (TOC), carbon isotopic composition of bulk organic matter (δ¹³Ctoc), n-alkane distribution indices (e.g. C₃₃/(C₂₇+C₃₃)), and carbon isotopes of n-alkanes (δ¹³Cₐₗₖ), are used to infer changes in plant functional types and photosynthetic pathways.

The results indicate that vegetation throughout the last 34 kyr consisted of a mixture of C₃ and C₄ plants, with C₃ herbs remaining dominant. Between 34 and 15 kyr BP, weaker solar radiation and reduced monsoon intensity produced relatively cold and dry conditions, limiting biomass production and suppressing C₄ plant abundance. After ~15 kyr BP, intensified solar radiation and monsoon strength led to warmer and more humid conditions, promoting vegetation expansion and an increased contribution of C₄ plants, although C₃ herbs continued to dominate. From ~2.7 kyr BP onward, signals of human activity increasingly overprint climatic controls, indicating that anthropogenic disturbance became the primary driver of vegetation change on the CLP.

These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of n-alkane biomarkers for reconstructing long-term vegetation dynamics on the Loess Plateau and highlight the increasing role of human activities in reshaping plant communities during the late Holocene. The results provide important context for understanding ecosystem responses to future climate change and anthropogenic pressures in this environmentally sensitive region.

How to cite: Pang, Y., Zhou, B., and Meadows, M.: Vegetation evolution and its driving mechanism on the Chinese Loess Plateau over the past 34 kyr, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9149, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9149, 2026.

EGU26-10238 | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Shells from Panarea vents (Italy): Acidification-driven carbonate loss reshapes benthic communities and the incipient fossil record 

Daniele Scarponi, Valentina dos Santos, Arianna Mancuso, Stefano Goffredo, and Michal Kowalewski

Naturally acidified marine systems, such as volcanic vents, provide natural laboratories for examining ecological and taphonomy processes under conditions analogous to future ocean acidification. The Bottaro hydrothermal vent field off Panarea island in the Aeolian Archipelago (Italy) generates a short, meter-scale pH gradient in shallow waters (8–12 m; Goffredo et al., 2014). This study system provides a suitable setting for assessing how carbonate undersaturation affects macrobenthic community structure, shell production, and post-mortem preservation. We compared live-collected and associated dead-collected assemblages across four stations (four replicates per station) along the pH gradient. In total, ~3200 specimens representing 88 species were collected using a uniform sampling methodology. Diversity patterns were broadly concordant between live and dead assemblages. In both live and dead datasets, species richness declined toward lower pH (e.g., for dead-collected specimens, sample-standardized (n = 80) species richness was 20.9 species (CI 19.0-22.8) at the control site, and 11.9 (CI 6.7-11.7) at the vent site). Beta diversity, measured using the Betapart R package (Baselga & Orme, 2012), was primarily driven by species turnover (e.g., live dataset, β-bal = 0.55) rather than nestedness (β-gra = 0.32), consistent with changes in habitat structure, benthic vegetation cover, and pH decrease along the transect.  Indeed, the most acidified station (pH ≤ 7.7) hosted a distinct, acid-tolerant community dominated by Alvania acida. Shell size, based on 50 randomly selected specimens, decreased significantly along the transect (e.g., dead shell median size 5.00 vs 1.75 mm in the control and most impacted site, respectively; Wilcoxon test < 0.01). This trend is consistent with dwarfism and shortened life spans under low-pH conditions. Multivariate taphonomy revealed intensified dissolution and a lack of encrustation at low-pH sites, and this pattern also affected living specimens, suggesting a very rapid rate of taphonomic processes. In addition, shell density and dead-live shell ratios both declined toward the vent indicating an increase in the rate of shell destruction in low-pH conditions. These results imply rapid carbonate loss and extremely short shell residence times, leading to high dead-live fidelity (i.e., high concordance in faunal composition and body size between live and dead assemblages). By integrating ecological and paleoecological evidence, this study illustrates how ocean acidification can reshape nearshore molluscan communities, alter their preservation pathways (hampering the reconstruction of baselines from paleoecological data), and reduce nearshore carbonate storage.

References:

Baselga, A. and Orme, D. 2012 Betapart: an R package for the study of beta diversity, Methods Ecol. Evol., 3, 808–812

Goffredo, S. et al. 2014. Biomineralization control related to population density under ocean acidification. Nature Climate Change 4, 593-597

How to cite: Scarponi, D., dos Santos, V., Mancuso, A., Goffredo, S., and Kowalewski, M.: Shells from Panarea vents (Italy): Acidification-driven carbonate loss reshapes benthic communities and the incipient fossil record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10238, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10238, 2026.

EGU26-10494 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Provincialism of bivalves across the K/Pg mass extinction boundary 

Arkaprava Mukhopadhyay and Shubhabrata Paul

Mass extinctions have played a crucial role in shaping the biogeographic structure of the marine biota throughout the Phanerozoic. Multiple clades exhibited pronounced cosmopolitanism following the Permian-Triassic (P/T) and Triassic-Jurassic (T/J) mass extinctions, characterized by sharp increases in biogeographic connectedness (BC). Here, we analyze global occurrence data of bivalves to examine their biogeographic dynamics across the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K/Pg) mass extinction boundary. In striking contrast to the patterns observed during the P/T and the T/J events, BC declines significantly from the Maastrichtian (0.049 ± 0.002) to the Danian (0.024 ± 0.002), signaling a shift toward heightened provincialism. Although geographically widespread genera exhibited selective survival through the K/Pg crisis, these survivors underwent substantial range contraction across the boundary, resulting in a fragmented post-extinction bivalve biogeography dominated by geographically narrow-ranging taxa. Quantitative comparisons across the P/T, T/J, and the K/Pg mass extinctions indicate that Maastrichtian genera possessed markedly lower within-genus species richness across the localities, compared to pre-P/T (Changhsingian) or pre-T/J (Rhaetian) levels, which might had limited species-level buffering of geographic ranges of genera, preventing the cosmopolitanism events seen after earlier events. Our findings highlight how taxonomic structure within clades influences biogeographic resilience, with implications for understanding macroevolutionary consequences of mass extinctions. 

How to cite: Mukhopadhyay, A. and Paul, S.: Provincialism of bivalves across the K/Pg mass extinction boundary, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10494, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10494, 2026.

EGU26-11257 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

The pastures were greener over there: Contrasting human management in Pyrenean subalpine ecosystems through sedaDNA  

Cristina Ramos Capon, Penélope González-Sampériz, Irene Julián-Posada, Laura Epp, Sandra Garcés Pastor, Pere Bover, and Graciela Gil Romera

The impacts of current and projected global change on fragile high-altitude mountain ecosystems highlight the need to understand how these systems responded to both past climatic variability and human activities in order to better interpret ongoing changes. Throughout the Holocene, a number of disturbances have produced significant impacts on ecosystem functionality. A paramount example is pastoralism in mountain environments, that may have induced modifications and long-term ecological changes. In the Pyrenees, the first and earliest evidence of unequivocal human landscape management has been identified through sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA), revealing an anthropogenic landscape opening linked to the early presence of domestic animals at the lower subalpine belt (Tramacastilla, 1682 m a.s.l.) ca. 6 ka BP. In this research we present a new record of landscape evolution and human activity presence at the upper subalpine boundary of the Pyrenees by analyzing sedaDNA at Basa de la Mora lake (BSM, 1913 m a.s.l; central Pyrenees).

We recovered a new lacustrine sequence from BSM to reconstruct Holocene plants and animal communities using sedimentary ancient DNA (sedaDNA), together with additional proxies to infer fire activity and temperature variability. These results are compared with the Tramacastilla lacustrine record and its sedaDNA reconstruction in order to identify differences in human land-use practices across subalpine ecosystems at different elevations during the last 9 ka BP.

Our result proves two contrasting cases of landscape management and plant community responses to disturbance in high-altitude environments during the same chronological period: Tramacastilla primarily shaped by human management, where diversity patterns dramatically change with human activity, and Basa de la Mora, mainly responding to natural disturbances such as fire and temperature variability.

How to cite: Ramos Capon, C., González-Sampériz, P., Julián-Posada, I., Epp, L., Garcés Pastor, S., Bover, P., and Gil Romera, G.: The pastures were greener over there: Contrasting human management in Pyrenean subalpine ecosystems through sedaDNA , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11257, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11257, 2026.

EGU26-12480 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Fossil otolith archives reveal changes in mesopelagic fish energetics across the Isthmus of Panama over the last 8 million years 

Sven Pallacks, Erin Dillon, Brigida De Gracia, Javiera Mora, Isabella Leonhard, Amanda Godbold, Jessica Lueders-Dumont, Chien-Hsiang Lin, Seth Finnegan, Adiël A. Klompmaker, and Aaron O’Dea

Mesopelagic ecosystems are vital to the ocean’s health yet face unprecedented threats due to accelerating climate change. Lanternfish (family Myctophidae) are key sentinels of midwater ecosystem health because they dominate mesopelagic fish biomass and mediate energy, nutrient, and carbon transfer across ocean layers. Despite their ecological importance, very little is known about their potential response to climate change stressors due to logistical challenges when studying mesopelagic ecosystems. We use thousands of fossil fish otoliths (calcium carbonate ear stones) recovered from marine surface sediments to reconstruct lanternfish growth, body size and energetic investment across contrasting oceanographic regimes. We compare assemblages from the highly productive, but oxygen-poor Tropical Eastern Pacific (TEP) and the oligotrophic, well-ventilated Caribbean, to test how oxygen availability and food supply shape mesopelagic fish energetics across the Isthmus of Panama. Otoliths from marine sediments serve as a cost-efficient, powerful archive to overcome methodological barriers and allow us to reconstruct long-term changes in lanternfish dynamics. We quantify energetic changes in lanternfish assemblages by reconstructing lanternfish body size estimates and mean per-capita biomass from otolith measurements and growth trajectories derived from increment biochronologies. Our results reveal anomalously small lanternfish in the TEP today, despite the region’s tendency to host larger fishes relative to the Caribbean, providing the first indication that mesopelagic fish size is potentially related to oxygen limitation. We then extend this approach to fossil otoliths to explore changes before the closure of the Isthmus of Panama using the Late Miocene/Pliocene as an analog system for warmer than modern conditions to test how mesopelagic ecosystems might respond to future climate change. We find that lanternfish dominated Panama’s ancient fish assemblages in the Caribbean but declined in relative abundance toward the Isthmus closure, while their mean per-capita biomass remained stable over the past 8 Ma. These results imply higher lanternfish biomass during periods of prolonged warming and lower biomass under less productive, better-oxygenated Caribbean conditions created by the Isthmus uplift. Yet in contrast to Panama’s geological past, our results suggest that oxygen availability exerts a dominant control on lanternfish energetics and production in the modern TEP. By integrating otolith archives from deep time to the recent past, we mapped shifts in lanternfish energetics in response to major environmental changes, revealing their sensitivity to oxygen availability and indicating that projected ocean deoxygenation might constrain the energetic capacity of the mesopelagic zone in a future ocean.

How to cite: Pallacks, S., Dillon, E., De Gracia, B., Mora, J., Leonhard, I., Godbold, A., Lueders-Dumont, J., Lin, C.-H., Finnegan, S., A. Klompmaker, A., and O’Dea, A.: Fossil otolith archives reveal changes in mesopelagic fish energetics across the Isthmus of Panama over the last 8 million years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12480, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12480, 2026.

The Middle Pleistocene locality of Ponte Molle is one of the most important sites of Rome in terms of the number of fossil remains (Iannucci et al., 2023). The locality was exploited for gravel quarrying activities from the 1800s to the early 1900s, resulting in the recovery of a diverse and abundant collection of fossil mammals. Stratigraphic and historical evidence agree in interpreting the Ponte Molle fauna as having been recovered from the lower gravelly level of the Valle Giulia Formation (MIS 13, ca. 500 ka) (Mecozzi et al., 2021). The faunal assemblage includes numerous remains of common species such as Palaeoloxodon antiquus, Bos primigenius, and Cervus elaphus, as well as documenting the presence of more elusive taxa in the early Middle Pleistocene of Europe, such as Sus scrofa, Castor fiber, and Crocuta crocuta (Mecozzi et al., 2021).

This study applies stable isotope analysis (δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O) to the enamel of 29 teeth (12 equids, Equus mosbachensis and 17 cervids, Cervus elaphus and Dama clactoniana), part of the historical collection from Ponte Molle, in order to reconstruct dietary patterns and infer local habitat variability. Carbon isotope ratios (δ¹³C) range from –14.55‰ to –11.61‰ (VPDB), indicating a diet dominated by C3 vegetation and suggesting temperate woodland to open forest environments. The values obtained for cervids indicate a large interspecific overlap, while differences emerge with respect to equids. Equids exhibit slightly higher mean δ¹³C values (–11.06‰; SD = 0.4) than cervids (Cervus elaphus –12.08‰, SD = 1.3; Dama clactoniana –11.69‰, SD = 1.2), consistent with more open foraging areas; the difference between the mean values of Equus mosbachensis and Cervus elaphus is statistically significant (p<0.05). Oxygen isotope values (δ¹⁸O) range from –6.51‰ and –4.01‰ (VPDB), suggesting variability in water sources. In this case, the difference between mean values is not statistically significant suggesting that the relatively wide range of oxygen isotope values may be related to local hydrological conditions. These results contribute to refining palaeoecological models for central Italy during MIS 13 and highlight the potential of herbivore isotopic signatures as proxies for reconstructing Middle Pleistocene ecosystems. This work has been supported by the Italian Ministry of University and Research, PRIN 2022 scorrimento – Prot. 2022JWFEKE “The evolution of mammals in changing ecosystems of the Middle Pleistocene of Italy”.

References

Iannucci A., Conti J., Curcio F., Iurini D.A., Mancini M., Mecozzi B., Strani F., Sardella R. (2023). Middle Pleistocene mammal faunas of the area of Rome: recent results and ongoing work on the MUST collection. Journal of Mediterranean Earth Sciences 15, 19–37.

Mecozzi B., Iannucci A., Mancini M., Sardella R. (2021). Redefining Ponte Molle (Rome, central Italy): an important locality for Middle Pleistocene mammal assemblages of Europe. Alpine and Mediterranean Quaternary, 34, 131–154.

How to cite: Giustini, F., Brilli, M., Iannucci, A., and Sardella, R.: Stable isotope analysis of cervids and equids teeth enamel as a proxy for paleoenvironmental reconstruction at the early Middle Pleistocene site of Ponte Molle (Rome, central Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13051, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13051, 2026.

EGU26-13327 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Testing the biomineral archive: microstructural patterns of modern brachiopod shells 

Matilde Cervellieri, Gaia Crippa, and Lucia Angiolini

Biominerals, such as marine macroinvertebrate shells, represent valuable archives for the reconstruction of recent and past environmental conditions. Brachiopod shells are among the most reliable high-resolution biomineral archives of climate and environmental change, as they resist diagenetic alteration due to their low-Mg calcite composition, are abundant and widespread in the fossil record, and precipitate shell material close to isotopic equilibrium with ambient seawater, with limited vital effects. Studying modern brachiopod shells is therefore key to assessing their potential as reliable archives to reconstruct past dynamics of species and ecosystem changes at different scales from decades to millions of years.

Previous research has focused extensively on the micro- and nanostructure of modern brachiopod shells, yet our understanding of their mesoscale structural patterns remains limited.  Moreover, few studies have investigated the relationship between shell microstructure and geochemical variation, and existing results are often contradictory; in this context, mesoscale patterns may provide a means to assess potential microstructural control on geochemical signatures. This study examines the organization, arrangement, and thickness of different shell fabrics (i.e., primary dendritic, secondary fibrous, and tertiary columnar) to identify systematic patterns of variation at interspecific, intraspecific, and intra-shell levels and how these relate to geochemical variation. A microstructural analysis of several two- and three-layered modern brachiopod shells was performed using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Specimens belong to eight terebratulid and rhynchonellid species from different settings and water depths.

Results reveal differences between the three-layered species: G. vitreus exhibit a more regular and well-organized microstructure, whereas L. neozelanica has frequent intercalations of fibrous and columnar fabrics. The two species differ in their posterior shell region, where G. vitreus is dominated by the tertiary layer, whereas L. neozelanica is composed almost entirely of fibers. In both species, the tertiary layer is thickest in the central portion of the shell and progressively thins toward the anterior margin, where it eventually disappears. These results suggest that microstructure does not exert a primary control on geochemistry, as similar isotopic patterns reported by Crippa et al. (2025) are observed in both species despite their microstructural differences. Two-layered species exhibit interspecific variation while maintaining the typical shell architecture composed of an external thin primary layer and an inner fibrous fabric. Although L. uva is typically classified as a two-layered species, small prism-like elements resembling tertiary columnar structures were observed intercalated with fibers, particularly toward the interior of the shell. Layers of calcitic pads were observed at the anterior margin of L. uva, forming when a rapid mantle retraction temporarily halted secretion, after which carbonate deposition resumed at new sites.

Future research should integrate these mesoscale structural patterns of modern brachiopod shells with high-resolution geochemical analyses to advance our understanding of brachiopod biomineralization and further assess their reliability as environmental proxy archives.

 

References:

Crippa, G. et al. (2025). Brachiopods as archives of intrannual, annual, and interannual environmental variations. Limnology and Oceanography Letters, 10(3), 390-402.

How to cite: Cervellieri, M., Crippa, G., and Angiolini, L.: Testing the biomineral archive: microstructural patterns of modern brachiopod shells, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13327, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13327, 2026.

EGU26-13535 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Stacking coral δ13C records: spatial and temporal variability of the Pacific ocean’s carbon pump along the Anthropocene 

Aitu Raufauore, Bruno Malaizé, Laetitia Hédouin, and Émilie Pauline Dassié

            Oceans absorb atmospheric CO2 depending on physicochemical exchanges and can act as sink or source for the atmospheric CO2. On a global scale, these source and sink zones vary both spatially and temporally. In the Pacific Ocean, the tropical zone is a strong source of CO2, whereas north and south subtropical zones are strong sinks. Atmospheric δ13C values (δ13Catm) have decreased over the last decades in response to the increase of the anthropogenic CO2 influx, also known as the Suess effect. The temporal reduction in δ13Catm has also been observed in dissolved inorganic carbon (δ13CDIC) due to the oceanic pump activity. Corals record environmental conditions by incorporating the ambient water trace elements and isotopes such as the δ13CDIC. Therefore, coral δ13C (δ13CC) can be used as an indicator of the past oceanic pump activity. In this study, we used previous temporal records of δ13CC Porites spp. corals, distributed across eighteen locations spread over subtropical and tropical areas of the Pacific Ocean. We added to this dataset a new record of δ13CC from Clipperton Island, a zone observed as a source zone. We created composite δ13CC record at Clipperton Island. We focused on long-term variability and investigated trends. Long-term trends are compared with the long-term trends of the sea-air CO2 fluxes from instrumental data period and with the long-term trend of reconstructed δ13Catm record from ice cores. General trends observed in all our selected records seems to follow the δ13Catm decreasing trend observed from ice core record. Meanwhile, we distinguished time breakpoint on each of our composites with different slopes at different timing. Time breakpoints seem to occur earlier, in records located within actual sink zones, whereas the change in slope occurred more recently in records originating from source zones. This study provides new insights into the spatial and temporal variability of the past oceanic pump activity.

How to cite: Raufauore, A., Malaizé, B., Hédouin, L., and Dassié, É. P.: Stacking coral δ13C records: spatial and temporal variability of the Pacific ocean’s carbon pump along the Anthropocene, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13535, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13535, 2026.

EGU26-13784 | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Evaluating the decline in size of brachiopod assemblages during the Pliensbachian/Toarcian boundary event (Eastern Morocco) 

Adam Tomašových, Labhib Boudchiche, Rachid Chennouf, Driss Sadki, and Jan Schlögl

The size structure of macrobenthic assemblages exhibits a major shift across the Pliensbachian/Toarcian boundary event on the NW European shelf, with the appearance of common micromorphic brachiopods (Koninckella community). This community type then abruptly disappears near the base of the main negative carbon isotope excursion associated with the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event. Several studies documented that micromorphic brachiopods become common already in the Spinatum Zone in the NW Algeria (Traras Mountains) or in Tunisia (Jebel Zaghouan), indicating that the community shift took place earlier on the southern Tethyan margin. Therefore, to assess temporal changes in the composition and size structure of macrofaunal community on the southern Tethyan margin, we investigated a Pliensbachian-Toarcian succession in the Beni Snassen Mountains. New chemostratigraphic data document the presence of the initial negative carbon isotope excursion at the Pliensbachian/Toarcian boundary, with δ13C declining from -24.5 to‰ -26‰ just at the base of a marl that overlies the Beni Hammad Formation. δ13C values decline to -23.5‰ in the middle part of the Beni Amyir Formation, and abruptly decline to -26‰  and -27‰ just in the uppermost part of the Beni Amyir Formation, documenting the onset of the main negative carbon isotope excursion. We find that koninckinid brachiopods and Nannirhynchia become common and appear already in the Spinatum Zone where they co-occur with larger brachiopods (Prionorhynchia, Phymatothyris, Cisnerospira), similarly as in Algeria and Tunisia. Interestingly, in the lowermost Toarcian (Polymorphum Zone), the assemblage of micromorphic brachiopods is more diverse than in the Lusitanian Basin. With the exception of Nannirhynchia, all micromorphic genera went extinct near the onset of the main carbon isotope excursion. This work was supported by the Slovak Research and Development Agency (APVV22-0523).

How to cite: Tomašových, A., Boudchiche, L., Chennouf, R., Sadki, D., and Schlögl, J.: Evaluating the decline in size of brachiopod assemblages during the Pliensbachian/Toarcian boundary event (Eastern Morocco), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13784, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13784, 2026.

The preservation of soft tissue–like structures in fossil vertebrate bones has been increasingly reported over the past two decades, yet their origin and preservation mechanisms remain debated. In this study, we investigated a fragment of theropod dinosaur bone using a multi-method microscopic and analytical approach to assess the nature, composition, and taphonomic context of structures morphologically resembling original soft tissues.

Optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed abundant vessel-like structures characterized by tubular morphologies and fibrous wall architectures, as well as osteocyte-shaped lacunae with preserved canalicular networks. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) demonstrated that many of these structures are permineralized predominantly by iron oxides, consistent with models proposing iron-mediated stabilization of organic substrates through early diagenetic mineral coatings. In addition, localized calcium fluoride mineralization was identified within some vascular casts, indicating chemically heterogeneous microenvironments and suggesting post-depositional fluid interactions. The occurrence of framboidal pyrite further points to transient anoxic conditions associated with organic-rich microdomains during early fossilization.

Histochemical staining revealed the presence of fungal hyphae and spores within some amorphous, gelatinous structures, indicating secondary microbial colonization of the bone. Two distinct fungal morphotypes were observed; however, not all translucent and elastic structures exhibited fungal staining. Importantly, confocal laser scanning microscopy combined with protein-specific fluorescent probes detected proteinaceous material selectively associated with vessel-like structures, while fungal elements showed distinct staining patterns. This spatially resolved signal supports the presence of endogenous protein remnants, likely representing degraded collagen or collagen-derived compounds, rather than purely microbial biofilms.

Together, these results demonstrate that fossil bone can preserve a complex assemblage of original biological residues, diagenetic mineral phases, and later microbial overprints. Iron-rich mineralization appears to play a critical role in the long-term stabilization of soft tissue–derived structures, while localized geochemical conditions govern the diversity of preservation pathways. Our findings contribute to a growing framework of molecular taphonomy and highlight the importance of integrated morphological, chemical, and biochemical analyses in evaluating claims of soft tissue preservation in deep time.

How to cite: Staniek, A. and Surmik, D.: Iron-mediated mineralization and microbial overprints in soft tissue–like structures from a theropod dinosaur bone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14592, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14592, 2026.

EGU26-15318 | Orals | SSP4.4

Combining phenotypic functional traits and metabolic theory to reconstruct Miocene equatorial palaeoclimates from the reptile fossil record. 

Jason Head, Jenny McGuire, Fredrick Kyalo Manthi, Daniel Peppe, Susanne Cote, Kieran McNulty, and A. Michelle Lawing

Understanding the relationship between palaeoenvironmental change and vertebrate evolution and ecology through deep time has historically been examined in the context of faunal responses to climate parameters estimated from lithologic, palaeobotanical and stable isotopic proxies. Conversely, recent advances in the application of ecometrics, trait-environmental relationship models rooted in functional factors such as mechanical performance and metabolic tolerance, provide taxon-free estimates of palaeoclimate that can be applied across multiple temporal and spatial scales. The Miocene sedimentary sequences of the Nyanza Rift in Western Kenya includes a temporally-constrained and dense vertebrate fossil record as well as climate proxies that can be combined to examine equatorial palaeoenvironments during globally warm intervals. We reconstructed body size distributions and quantified axial skeletal morphologies for fossil reptile communities at multiple localities to constrain minimum ambient temperatures necessary for efficient metabolism based on metabolic theory as well as infer palaeoprecipitation values based on locomotory modes reconstructed from skeletal morphometrics. Estimates based on the reptile record are consistent with values derived from local palaeobotanical data and demonstrate warmer, wetter climates in the Early Miocene, with shifts toward slightly drier climates by the early Middle Miocene. These results demonstrate the utility of the vertebrate fossil record for reconstructing palaeoclimates and provide new proxies for non-analog environments of the past.

How to cite: Head, J., McGuire, J., Manthi, F. K., Peppe, D., Cote, S., McNulty, K., and Lawing, A. M.: Combining phenotypic functional traits and metabolic theory to reconstruct Miocene equatorial palaeoclimates from the reptile fossil record., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15318, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15318, 2026.

EGU26-17160 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Turtle tracks morphology: A neoichnological approach to fossil interpretation 

Hang Yin and Lida Xing

Tetrapod tracks record not only the morphological features of autopods but also critical insights into locomotion, behavior, and paleoecology. Since the behavior of extinct trackmakers cannot be observed directly, neoichnological experiments using extant analogues are essential for interpreting the fossil record.

In this study, we investigate the relationship between gait, substrate conditions, and track morphology, employing the red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta elegans) as a model organism. Controlled experiments were conducted across three size classes of trackmakers on various substrates with differing grain sizes and moisture levels. Tracks and trackways produced during distinct behaviors—including steady locomotion, pausing, climbing, and paddling—were documented and analyzed via high-resolution 3D digitization to extract quantitative morphological parameters.

Our results demonstrate that substrate moisture is the primary determinant of overall track morphology and preservation potential, with preservation quality exhibiting a hump-shaped relationship with increasing moisture content. While grain size primarily influences the resolution of fine anatomical details (e.g., digit and claw marks), dry or near-saturated substrates are prone to collapse or flow, resulting in shallow, poorly defined impressions. In contrast, moderately moist, fine-grained, and cohesive substrates are optimal for preserving clear outlines. Notably, very high-moisture or subaqueous tracks may partially recover detail upon drying. While track size correlates positively with body size on similar substrates, preservation quality is not strictly size-dependent: larger individuals produce clearer tracks on firm ground but may yield inconsistent results on loose sediments. Furthermore, behavioral variations induce distinct morphological signatures even under identical substrate conditions.

Comparison with fossil records suggests that Chelonipus parvus is inconsistent with turtle locomotion and should likely be reassigned to a non-turtle trackmaker, whereas Chelonipus liui shows greater affinity with Emydhipus. These findings provide experimental benchmarks for identifying turtle tracks and underscore the utility of neoichnological experiments in reconstructing ancient environments and vertebrate communities.

How to cite: Yin, H. and Xing, L.: Turtle tracks morphology: A neoichnological approach to fossil interpretation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17160, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17160, 2026.

EGU26-18109 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Polar temperature seasonality from the Early Jurassic 

Barbora Krizova, Thomas Letulle, Mathieu Daëron, Arnauld Vinçon-Laugier, Mikhail A. Rogov, Oleg A. Lutikov, Yannick Donnadieu, and Guillaume Suan

The phenomenon of polar amplification causes high-latitude warming to exceed the global mean and enhances seasonal variations in temperature and precipitation. As such, it complicates the understanding of both modern and past global warming impacts in polar regions. Characterizing the climate change in polar regions is further hampered by limited data coverage and persistent challenges in interpreting local paleoenvironmental archives.

To help address these knowledge gaps, we present bulk and seasonally resolved stable oxygen (δ¹⁸O) and clumped isotope (Δ₄₇) data from exceptionally well-preserved bivalves from the Early Jurassic North Pole (eastern Siberia), spanning the late Pliensbachian icehouse-Toarcian hothouse transition. Upper Pliensbachian Harpax specimens show pronounced seasonal δ¹⁸O variability of 1.5-6 ‰, corresponding to apparent temperature ranges of 6-26 °C assuming invariant seawater δ¹⁸O. In contrast, seasonally resolved clumped isotope data do not yield a statistically significant seasonal temperature difference (1.4 ± 1 °C). Together with a low mean Δ₄₇ temperature of ~3.5 ± 1 °C, this discrepancy implies that the large δ¹⁸O amplitude reflects strong seasonal variability in seawater δ¹⁸O, likely driven by enhanced precipitation, and/or meltwater input in a relatively proximal sedimentary setting with near-freezing mean annual temperatures.

By contrast, Toarcian Dacryomya jacutica specimens show reduced δ¹⁸O variability of 1-2 ‰ (~4-8 °C) and a larger, statistically significant seasonal Δ₄₇ temperature difference of 5.9 ± 1.3 °C, with a mean Δ₄₇ temperature of ~10.3 °C. The agreement between δ¹⁸O and Δ₄₇-derived seasonality indicates a limited contribution of seawater δ¹⁸O variability during the Toarcian and points to a shift toward more distal sedimentary conditions. Collectively, these results provide one of the first quantitative constraints on Arctic temperature seasonality under greenhouse climate conditions in deep time.

How to cite: Krizova, B., Letulle, T., Daëron, M., Vinçon-Laugier, A., Rogov, M. A., Lutikov, O. A., Donnadieu, Y., and Suan, G.: Polar temperature seasonality from the Early Jurassic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18109, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18109, 2026.

EGU26-18799 | Orals | SSP4.4

 Stable isotopes and trace element profiles of modern giant clams Tridacna squamosa from the Karimata Strait : a calibration study. 

Mary Elliot, Clara Boutreux, Sri Yudawati Cahyarini, Laurence Vidal, Carole La, and Li Lo

Fossil shells of marine bivalves such as giant Tridacna provide unique information on past environments with seasonal to daily resolutions. Changes in mean seasonal cycles and inter-annual variability can be reconstructed by sequentially analyzing the composition of the annual layers of calcium carbonate. We present a new calibration study of 5 modern Tridacna squamosa which have been collected in Belitung Island, Indonesia, on the path of the Karimata Strait during different years 2016-2025. At this locality, the seasonal cycle is characterized by a double seasonal peak in sea surface temperature due to the inversion of surface currents associated with the SE and NW monsoons. We analyzed both the stable isotope (del-18O, del-13C) and trace element profiles (Mg/Ca, Ba/Ca). The aim of this study was to demonstrate the reproducibility of the trace elements between samples collected on different dates in the same site. The lifespan of the specimen collected were 2 to 5 years long and geochemical profiles showed significant overlap between modern dead-collected specimen. The results show that Ba/Ca records are highly reproducible between samples exhibiting a single seasonal peak during the period May-June. Mg/Ca show a good reproducibility between samples exhibiting a double seasonal peak. We compared our records to local hydrology: sea surface temperature, rainfall and productivity. Mg/Ca shows a clear relationship with SST. Ba/Ca has previously been shown to reflect both productivity and/or riverine sources of Barium. At Belitung site there are 2 seasonal increases in productivity, and the shell Ba/Ca only increases during the may-june period highlighting a more complex relationship than previously observed

How to cite: Elliot, M., Boutreux, C., Cahyarini, S. Y., Vidal, L., La, C., and Lo, L.:  Stable isotopes and trace element profiles of modern giant clams Tridacna squamosa from the Karimata Strait : a calibration study., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18799, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18799, 2026.

EGU26-19018 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

Preliminary palaeoecological reconstruction of the Ruidera site (Middle Pleistocene, Southern Iberian sub-plateau). 

Paula Sanz-Henche, Daniel García-Martínez, Miriam Pérez de los Ríos, Carlos A. Palancar, Sara Díaz-Pérez, Josu Aranbarri, Lucía Bermejo, Isidoro Campaña Lozano, Óscar Cambra-Moo, Gabriel Cifuentes-Alcobendas, Almudena Estalrrich, Anna Rufà, and Darío Fidalgo

The palaeoanthropological site of Ruidera [1], discovered in 2018, provides a unique high-resolution window into the ecosystem dynamics of the Iberian Peninsula during the late Middle Pleistocene (ca. 300 kyr). Characterized by remarkable abundance and preservation of human and macro-mammal fossils, the assemblage includes a diverse suite of taxa, including European tahr, deer, horses, and a dense guild of carnivores such as lions, leopards, lynxes and wolves, as well as some mesofauna remains such as rabbits and birds. This study presents a preliminary palaeoecological reconstruction of the site through stable isotope analysis (δ13C, δ18O) of tooth enamel across six different taxa, including carnivores, herbivores and hominins.

This study’s purpose is to make a first approximation to the ecosystem present in Ruidera during this period, focusing on the hypothesis that it could present a Mediterranean landscape similar to the current one and typical of the Iberian Peninsula, but not discarding some potentially small variations in comparison to other Iberian records, given its more southern latitude. The isotopic data available from other Middle Pleistocene Iberian sites (Punta Lucero, northern Spain [2]; and Sierra de Atapuerca complex: Trinchera Dolina (TD10+TD11) [3], Sima de los Huesos [3,4] and Trinchera Galería (GII+GIII) [3]) will be compared to that obtained for Ruidera.

The Ruidera isotopic data infer a Mediterranean ecosystem defined by a degree of aridity previously unrecorded in the Iberian Middle Pleistocene, at least through stable isotope analysis. The significantly positive δ13C values suggest a water-stressed environment, likely representing one of the most xeric records for this chronology in the Iberian Peninsula. Furthermore, δ18O values align closely with those from the coastal site of Punta Lucero; yet diverge considerably from the more continental inland records of the Sierra de Atapuerca complex. This could suggest a distinct regional climatic pocket for Ruidera, influenced by both Mediterranean aridity and specific topographic effects.

Taphonomic analysis and the faunal list indicate an environment characterized by the ecological biases of mountainous terrain, with a strong signal of accumulation by carnivores. Within this framework, the trophic position of the Ruidera hominin was evaluated. The results indicate that the hominin occupied an isotopic niche closely similar to that of the leopard (Panthera pardus) at the same site. This suggests a specialized, high-protein diet consistent with other European Middle Pleistocene records [5].

In conclusion, the Ruidera site stands out as a unique climatic outlier within the Middle Pleistocene Iberian record. The inferred environment is one of a quite arid Mediterranean landscape where hominins habited within a carnivore-dominated community. These preliminary results underscore the environmental heterogeneity of the Iberian Peninsula and the capacity of Middle Pleistocene fauna and human populations to adapt to different paleoclimatic conditions.

References:

[1] García-Martínez et al. 2022. Cuaternario y Geomorfología. 36, 7–35. https://doi.org/10.17735/cyg.v36i1-2.90422 

[2] Domingo et al. 2017. Quaternary Science Reviews. 169, 243–262. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.06.008

[3] García García et al. (2009). Journal of Archaeological Science. 36, 1142–1151. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2008.12.018

[4] García García et al. (2015). PLOS ONE. 10, e0142895. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0142895

[5] Ecker et al. (2013). Journal of Human Evolution. 65, 363–373. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhevol.2013.06.013

How to cite: Sanz-Henche, P., García-Martínez, D., Pérez de los Ríos, M., Palancar, C. A., Díaz-Pérez, S., Aranbarri, J., Bermejo, L., Campaña Lozano, I., Cambra-Moo, Ó., Cifuentes-Alcobendas, G., Estalrrich, A., Rufà, A., and Fidalgo, D.: Preliminary palaeoecological reconstruction of the Ruidera site (Middle Pleistocene, Southern Iberian sub-plateau)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19018, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19018, 2026.

EGU26-19030 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Prevalence of trematode-induced traces in Donax hanleyanus from a near-pristine coastal region in southern Brazil 

Valentina Silva dos Santos, Daniele Scarponi, and Matias do Nascimento Ritter

Parasitism is one of the most successful life strategies among animals. The study of these interactions in the fossil record examines relationships between organisms and their environments, revealing how they are integrated into ecosystems and how they respond to climatic shifts and geological events. The late Quaternary is marked by pronounced climatic and ecological changes, and parasitism traces provide a means to investigate how these changes have influenced parasite-host interactions. The fossil record of parasites indicates an increase in occurrence and prevalence throughout the Phanerozoic, reaching its highest values in the Quaternary. In this context, studying such traces is essential for reconstructing parasite-host interactions in the fossil record. Despite its relevance and considerable interpretive potential, research on this interaction in the fossil record predominantly focuses on the Northern Hemisphere. This leaves a knowledge gap in the Southern Hemisphere, where quantitative studies integrating parasitism traces into their environmental context are scarce. The southern portion of the Coastal Plain of Rio Grande do Sul is one of the least-impacted coastal regions in Brazil, retaining near-pristine conditions. This area provides a valuable analogue for developing baseline scenarios. This study aims to assess the prevalence of parasitism using traces preserved in bivalves collected along the northern coast of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. To this end, we analyzed 744 mollusk shells collected from the foreshore, grouped into 27 samples and representing 15 bivalve species. Donax hanleyanus exhibited the highest relative frequency (88.7%) and was the only species bearing traces of a trematode parasite. The sampling universe for D. hanleyanus consists of at least 436 individuals, of which 261 display parasitic traces. The overall prevalence of parasitism in D. hanleyanus was 0.599 (CI 0.55–0.64), with a range of 0.238-0.800 across samples. The mean trace abundance per valve across samples was also estimated, ranging from 0.250 to 8.375. This overall prevalence is high compared with estimates for the nearshore setting of the highly anthropized Adriatic Sea coastal system (Italy), but it derives from a coastal sector that retains near-pristine conditions. Therefore, our estimates should be considered a baseline prevalence and trace-abundance range under low human impact. These results provide a quantitative basis for future comparisons to detect environmental degradation driven by coastal change, climate forcing, or increasing anthropogenic pressure, as indicated by shifts in parasite–host dynamics.

How to cite: Silva dos Santos, V., Scarponi, D., and do Nascimento Ritter, M.: Prevalence of trematode-induced traces in Donax hanleyanus from a near-pristine coastal region in southern Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19030, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19030, 2026.

EGU26-19067 | Orals | SSP4.4

Two generations of Late Glacial palaeolakes: insights from multiproxy analyses (Suwałki Lake District, Poland) 

Monika Niska, Joanna Rychel, Robert Sokołowski, Joanna Miroslaw-Grabowska, Milena Obremska, and Mateusz Kramkowski

Two generations of palaeolakes (Lipowo I, Lipowo II), associated with the termination of the Last Glacial, were documented in the Suwałki Lake District, northeastern Poland. Multiproxy analyses and radiocarbon (14C) and OSL dating were performed on lacustrine sediments. The older generation of basins developed among gradually melting dead-ice blocks and was eventually buried under mineral deposits at the end of the Allerød. The younger generation formed after the complete melting of dead-ice blocks and reflects environmental changes from the late Allerød to the Holocene. Observed changes in sedimentation style during the Late Glacial and early Holocene were linked to significant climatic shifts and their consequences. These changes were also recorded in palynological analyses, fossil Cladocera, geochemical data, and stable isotope results.

The vegetation composition during the Younger Dryas shows distinct regional features, including the strong development of Juniperus shrubs and herbaceous and grassy plants at the beginning of this stage, as well as the appearance of Picea abies in its later part. Northeastern Poland was more similar to northeastern Europe than to the rest of the Polish Lowlands, reflecting the paleoclimatic gradient that occurred in Poland during the Younger Dryas. The Holocene section of the Lipowo II profile also documents the first cold Holocene event at 11.4 ka.

Cladocera analysis for the studied lakes revealed remains of only 10 species in Lake “Lipowo I,” belonging to three families: Chydoridae, Bosminidae, and Daphniidae, with most remains attributed to Chydoridae. These species were mainly cold-water tolerant, and their frequency was low (max. 2200 ind./cm³). In Lipowo II, 25 Cladocera species were identified, representing various ecological zones, including open-water taxa requiring higher water temperatures. The number of individuals increased to a maximum of 6000 ind./cm³, indicating more favorable conditions for Cladocera development. Environmental changes recorded in vegetation and zooplankton are further supported by stable isotope analyses. Total organic carbon (TOC) and total nitrogen (TN) increased from approximately 2% to 53% and from 0% to 3.8%, respectively. Multiproxy analyses enabled the reconstruction of significant environmental changes associated with the transition from glacial to interglacial conditions in northeastern Poland.

How to cite: Niska, M., Rychel, J., Sokołowski, R., Miroslaw-Grabowska, J., Obremska, M., and Kramkowski, M.: Two generations of Late Glacial palaeolakes: insights from multiproxy analyses (Suwałki Lake District, Poland), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19067, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19067, 2026.

EGU26-19458 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Condensed shellbeds record drastic ecological shifts during the late Holocene; A multiproxy study from Galway Bay, Western Ireland.  

Rachel Healy, Patrick Orr, Sara Benetti, Peter Haughton, Francis O'Beirn, Louise Healy, and Anna Holmes

Shallow-marine shellfish communities in coastal regions are increasingly facing threats posed by ongoing environmental change, largely as a result of anthropogenic activities. The near-time geohistorical record offers opportunities to identify how these communities have responded in the past to episodes of environmental change that may have been triggered by similar ecological stressors, albeit of non-anthropogenic origin, thus providing longer term context  to understanding the ecological health of modern ecosystems. 

Shellbeds, high-density accumulations of shell remains, in a sedimentary sequence often represent perturbations of the “usual” environmental conditions under which sediments accumulated. Shellbeds can vary in thickness, spatial geometry, species composition, internal structure, and fidelity of shell preservation reflecting the complex processes that are often involved in their formation, for example via sedimentological processes including storm events and current winnowing. Alternatively, shellbeds can form as in situ biogenic accumulations. Identifying the processes responsible for the formation of shellbeds offers insight into the local ecological, physical, and environmental conditions at the time of their formation.

The results of a study of Holocene, (~9-3kyr) shellbeds that occur in the subsurface of Galway Bay, Western Ireland are presented. X-ray imaging of the cores indicates the spatial extent of the shellbeds extends across most of Galway Bay, ~450km2. Regional-scale observations suggest a variation in the shellbed biofacies from easterly bivalve-dominated shellbeds to westerly near mono-specific Turritella-dominated shellbeds. A chronostratigraphic framework using radiocarbon dating reveals the bivalve-dominated shellbeds predate the Turritella-dominated shellbeds by ~1500 years, with formation of the Turritella-dominated shellbeds occurring ~7-4kyr. Vertical stacking of the latter on the former locally is consistent with this and is attributed as a response to a Holocene transgression in Galway Bay.  

The bivalve-dominated shellbeds are similar in composition and taphonomy to extant populations identifiable from samples currently collected from Galway Bay.  Various taphonomic criteria identify the Turritella-dominated shellbeds as in situ communities, contemporaneous across Galway Bay, for which no modern analogue has been identified in the bay.  These near monospecific populations represent a  widespread event lasting ~3000 years, that developed rapidly and simultaneously across Galway Bay for a sustained period before terminating abruptly. This event was followed by re-establishment of the bivalve-dominated communities typical of nearshore modern Galway Bay.

Holocene in age Turritella-dominated shellbeds in NE Europe have been attributed as a response to the 8.2kyr event. Their being younger excludes this origin for the Galway Bay Turritella shellbeds suggesting they are an ecological response to a different episode of environmental change. Formation of these Turritella shellbeds is attributed to a set of environmental conditions that favoured development of an opportunistic community during the very Late Holocene transgression of Galway Bay.  

Future lipid biomarker and trace element analysis will elucidate these subtle changes in environmental conditions under which the shellbeds formed . This will confirm the potential of shellbeds as an indicator of the sensitivity of these shallow-marine ecosystems to environmental variations, and a predictor of the future for these shell communities as their ecosystems continue to come under increasing environmental stress from anthropogenic activities. 

How to cite: Healy, R., Orr, P., Benetti, S., Haughton, P., O'Beirn, F., Healy, L., and Holmes, A.: Condensed shellbeds record drastic ecological shifts during the late Holocene; A multiproxy study from Galway Bay, Western Ireland. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19458, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19458, 2026.

EGU26-19836 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Cladocora caespitosa and Pinna nobilis: useful climatic archives to reconstruct Last Interglacial paleotemperatures 

Alessia Logrieco, Eleonora Regattieri, Irene Cornacchia, Paolo Montagna, Eric Douville, Salvatore Causio, Massimo Angelo Caldara, Giovanni Chimienti, and Vincenzo De Santis

The Mediterranean Sea is a semi-enclosed basin hosting more than 7% of global marine biodiversity. It is among the areas most exposed to human pressure and climate change. The study of the pristine status of ecosystems and marine shallow habitats can be used as a reference for evaluating current human-derived impacts. The Last Interglacial (LIG, ~129 to 116 ka ago) was a warm time interval that could be considered a modern analogue lacking an anthropogenic fingerprint and represents a useful scenario for future climate change. It can be used to reconstruct key environmental variables sustaining non-anthropically modified Mediterranean shallow-water ecosystems under warm climate. Traces of past climatic features are indeed recorded in some biotic archives, whose geochemical properties record seawater parameters. For instance, the bivalve Pinna nobilis (Linnaeus, 1758) and the coral Cladocora caespitosa (Linnaeus, 1767) are endemic to the Mediterranean Sea and their stable oxygen isotope and trace element compositions are useful proxies to reconstruct the paleoclimate, potentially tracing the history of the Mediterranean Sea from the Pliocene to the present. In this study, we investigated climatic proxies in fossil specimens of C. caespitosa and P. nobilis from Last Interglacial (LIG) marine-terrace deposits in the Taranto area (Puglia, Italy), in order to reconstruct paleo–seawater temperatures during the organisms’ lifetimes. We performed X-ray imaging on the coral to investigate the alternation of annual density bands. The annual growth pattern was used as a guide to cut corallites with a dental drill, allowing the preparation of samples at sub-annual resolution for geochemical analyses. A drill was used to collect calcite powder sub-samples from fossils of P. nobilis at ~1 mm resolution following the correct growth sequence. Subsequently, geochemical analyses were carried out on trace elements in the C. caespitosa aragonite and on the oxygen stable isotope ratio (δ18O) in the P. nobilis calcite. The aim of this work was to reconstruct paleotemperatures of the Last Interglacial period with an annual or sub-annual resolution, comparing our results with present-day temperature records to better define a LIG climate scenario.

How to cite: Logrieco, A., Regattieri, E., Cornacchia, I., Montagna, P., Douville, E., Causio, S., Caldara, M. A., Chimienti, G., and De Santis, V.: Cladocora caespitosa and Pinna nobilis: useful climatic archives to reconstruct Last Interglacial paleotemperatures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19836, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19836, 2026.

EGU26-20354 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.4

 High-elevation climatic and environmental variability during the early hominin occupations at Melka Kunture (Upper Awash, Ethiopia) 

Giuseppe Briatico, Rita T. Melis, Denis Geraads, Giuseppina Mutri, Haregwine Hailu, and Margherita Mussi

For more than 30 years, stable carbon and oxygen isotopic analyses of herbivore skeletal tissues have been widely used to reconstruct animal life history and behavior, including diet, physiology, mobility, and past climate and environmental conditions. Tooth enamel is particularly well-suited for such investigations because its high crystallinity and low organic content confer exceptional resistance to diagenetic alteration, preserving primary isotopic signals over geological timescales. Moreover, because enamel forms incrementally, it enables the extraction of isotopic time-series information that reflects the period of tooth mineralization.

Here, we explore the potential of stable isotope analysis to maximize paleoecological data retrieval from Paleolithic faunal assemblages, using the archaeological site complex of Melka Kunture (Upper Awash, Ethiopia) as a case study. Melka Kunture is a dense cluster of Pleistocene and Holocene sites located in the Ethiopian highlands at elevations of 2000-2200 m above sea level, and it is inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Its geoarchaeological sequence, dated between 2,000,000 and ~5,000 years ago, provides a rare opportunity to investigate high-elevation past ecosystems in the tropics, where collagen preservation is often poor and enamel-based approaches are particularly valuable. By combining bulk and intra-tooth isotope analyses of herbivore tooth enamel with faunal, pollen, and phytolith evidence, we assess the complementarity of proxies to detect climatic and environmental variability over time and its implications for human and mammalian evolution. The results demonstrate how stable isotope analysis can substantially enhance the interpretation of Paleolithic records, particularly in ecologically marginal settings. Finally, we highlight the value of integrated, multi-proxy approaches when reconstructing past ecosystems

How to cite: Briatico, G., Melis, R. T., Geraads, D., Mutri, G., Hailu, H., and Mussi, M.:  High-elevation climatic and environmental variability during the early hominin occupations at Melka Kunture (Upper Awash, Ethiopia), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20354, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20354, 2026.

EGU26-20971 | Orals | SSP4.4

Reconstructing ecosystem baselines using Pleistocene data: insights from an Egyptian coral reef 

Martin Zuschin, Angelina Ivkić, Lewis A. Jones, Andreas Kroh, Abbas Mansour, Mohamed Osman, and Mohamed Hassan

Worldwide, coral reefs are declining due to a combination of local and global stressors. In the Red Sea, these pressures have affected hard coral cover, altered community composition, and reduced coral colony size. However, the lack of long-term historical data in this region makes it difficult to accurately quantify the extent of reef degradation. Establishing regional baselines that represent pre-anthropogenic, pristine reef conditions is therefore essential. Pleistocene reefs provide a unique opportunity in this regard, offering insights into reef community structure and composition in the absence of recent anthropogenic disturbance. In this study, we conduct, for the first time, a quantitative comparison between a Pleistocene (Marine Isotope Stage 5e; ~125,000 years ago) fossil reef and an adjacent modern reef in northern Egypt to assess the current state of the modern reef. Our results show that the fossil reef had larger colony size in four of the five most abundant genera and the overall community composition differed significantly between the fossil and modern reef. Our findings also suggest that massive corals may be more suitable than branching corals for comparisons of coral colony size distributions due to their better preservation potential in the fossil record. While some observed differences may stem from taphonomic processes, time-averaging and environmental differences, we argue that most of the disparity reflects genuine degradation in the modern reef.

How to cite: Zuschin, M., Ivkić, A., Jones, L. A., Kroh, A., Mansour, A., Osman, M., and Hassan, M.: Reconstructing ecosystem baselines using Pleistocene data: insights from an Egyptian coral reef, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20971, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20971, 2026.

EGU26-21825 | Posters on site | SSP4.4

StripesCounter: A new image software for increment measurement in paleoclimate archives  

Patrick Brockmann, Clara Boutreux, Mary Elliot, Matthieu Carré, and Marc Gosselin

Most natural paleoclimate archives are accretionary material presenting periodic structures that bear environmental and chronological information. Growth patterns of shells of marine bivalves also known as sclerochronology reflect changes in both biological and environmental factors and can potentially provide unique daily-resolved records of past environmental variability. Traditional methods of analyzing growth bands are time consuming and often face challenges in terms of accuracy and efficiency. To address these limitations, we introduce StripesCounter, an open access Python software designed for semi-automated banding detection and measurement. To test its effectiveness and determine whether shells of marine bivalves (Tridacna gigas) respond to rapid climate change, we analyzed daily growth variations in a modern specimen from Papua New Guinea (Hu-04-MT7), which experienced three major ENSO events during the 20th century. By using a laser scanning confocal microscope (LSCM) and the StripesCounter software, we counted and measured daily increments of shell growth. The results demonstrate a high degree of reproducibility and consistency compare to traditional manual counting methods. We used several detrending methods to subtract biological trends. Results show that, shell growth is sensitive to seasonal climatic variability caused by ENSO in this region. This can be observed in the semi-annual variability of the growth rate through a disturbance that can be attributed to a disruption in the semi-annual cycle of sea surface productivity and temperature. Our findings not only validate the method’s reliability for high temporal resolution studies but also enable the detection of subtle growth variations linked to environmental changes. This automated growth increment analysis can be extended to other archives with cyclic structures, including tree rings, corals, and other biogenic or abiotic laminated materials. StripesCounter offers a powerful and accessible tool for generating long high-resolution, temporally explicit datasets, opening new perspectives for investigating rapid environmental changes across diverse ecosystems and geological timescales.

How to cite: Brockmann, P., Boutreux, C., Elliot, M., Carré, M., and Gosselin, M.: StripesCounter: A new image software for increment measurement in paleoclimate archives , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21825, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21825, 2026.

EGU26-23018 | Posters on site | SSP4.4

Quantifying the limits of paleontological resolution using a global compilation of individually-dated skeletal remains 

Rafał Nawrot, Michał Kowalewski, Adam Tomašových, Daniele Scarponi, Martin Zuschin, and Matthew A. Kosnik

Marine fossil assemblages typically include remains of non-contemporaneous organisms that accumulated over time or were subsequently mixed by bioturbation or reworking. The resulting time averaging (temporal mixing) imposes the fundamental limit on the temporal resolution of paleontological samples and thus restricts the range of processes that can be studied in the fossil record. Over the last decades, numerous case studies have estimated time averaging based on post-mortem age distributions of individually-dated skeletal remains preserved in late Quaternary sediments. However, the limited scope of previous studies constrains our understanding of the variation in temporal resolution of paleontological samples across different taxa and depositional settings, and factors controlling it.

Here, we present a global compilation of data from multiple projects focused on age-dating of marine invertebrate remains sampled from present-day seabeds and Quaternary sediment cores. The dataset aggregates radiocarbon and amino-acid racemization ages of skeletal elements and links them to a broad range of standardized variables describing sampling methodology, intrinsic characteristics of skeletal producers, as well as stratigraphic, sedimentary and environmental context. Currently, the dataset includes postmortem age estimates for over 7,500 specimens representing 383 monospecific collections of 10 or more individually dated specimens coming from 291 sampling units (core increments, grabs, dredges, hand collections or suction samples). The sampling locations range from nearshore to continental slope settings in seven warm-temperate, subtropical, and tropical regions.

Preliminary analyses suggest that the majority of the analyzed samples underwent multi-centennial to supra-millennial time averaging, although a significant portion of them (14-23% depending on the age dispersion measure) was time-averaged to less than 100 years. The dataset is strongly dominated by aragonitic bivalves (>80% of samples and dated specimens), with much more limited data available for other mollusk taxa, brachiopods and echinoids. Outer shelf and slope environments are also poorly represented with only 7% of the sampling sites coming from water depths below 100 m. Our compilation highlights the lack or relative paucity of quantitative time-averaging estimates from deep-water and high-latitude settings, as well as for taxa with low durability or multi-elemental skeletons (such as echinoderms and arthropods). Increasing the taxonomic and environmental coverage of the data is thus crucial for improving our current understanding of the temporal resolution of the fossil record.

How to cite: Nawrot, R., Kowalewski, M., Tomašových, A., Scarponi, D., Zuschin, M., and Kosnik, M. A.: Quantifying the limits of paleontological resolution using a global compilation of individually-dated skeletal remains, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23018, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23018, 2026.

EGU26-427 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Tracing Anthropogenic Impacts in an Urban Environment: Ostracod Evidence From Lake Müggelsee and Other Water Bodies of Berlin, Germany 

Nele Wagner, Olga Schmitz, Arezoo Enayati, Patrick Roberts, Kristina von Rintelen, Diego Volosky, and Peter Frenzel

Rapid urbanization and industrialization have left a persistent imprint on freshwater ecosystems, particularly in metropolitan regions where lakes act as both sinks and archives of anthropogenic pollution. The present study investigates the potential of ostracods as proxies of anthropogenic impacts by studying several surface water sites for an actualistic calibration and by applying a multi-proxy approach to a short core from lake Müggelsee for testing ostracod performance in paleoenvironmental reconstruction of pollution history.

The 26 surface water sites investigated are situated in the east, center and west of the city and reflect different kinds and degrees of anthropogenic impacts. Water types sampled comprise lakes, ponds, rivers and artificial canals. Almost all samples contain ostracods, proving their general availability for analyses in these contexts. One exception is the artificial, concrete covered canals with high turbulence caused by currents and whirling due to ship traffic, where fine-grained sediments and ostracods are broadly lacking. Opportunistic species tolerating oxygen deficiency dominate within the ostracod fauna. The other fossils the >125 µm size fraction are primarily molluscs.

Müggelsee is the largest lake within the Berlin urban region and is fed and drained by the river Spree entering the Berlin area here. The 70 cm long sediment core B25-MS1, taken from Müggelsee in 2025, allows us to study ostracods through time. The core records transitions from massive black muds to laminated black-greenish muds and surficial blackish muds, reflecting varying redox conditions linked to changing organic matter contents. The ostracod assemblages are dominated by candonids, Darwinula stevensoni, Limnocytherina sanctipatricii and Physocypria kraepelini . Their distribution shows marked stratigraphic shifts: The lowermost section below 56 cm sediment depth is characterised by taxa typical for a dense cover of submerged macrophytes. Afterwards and up to the limit between the black and the black-greenish mud at 22 cm, phytal species decrease in proportion, but cold-water taxa are still abundant pointing to a moderate pollution level and cooler conditions probably associated with the end of the Little Ice Age. The black-greenish mud between 22 cm and 7 cm yields the highest ostracod densities and a maximum of Neglecandona neglecta pointing to high organic pollution. Phytal ostracods decrease considerably with the vanishing of submerged macrophytes due to plankton blooms during the second half of the 20th century when not properly treated and increasing sewage water outfalls caused rising trophic conditions in water bodies in and around Berlin. The last phase shows similar ostracod distributions as before the maximum pollution but phytal taxa do not recover and Darwinula stevensoni becomes even more abundant.

Overall, our study shows the potential of ostracod data from water body sediments to reveal increasing anthropogenic impact in the vicinity of Berlin, corresponding to phases of city’s industrial development, post-war and 1990s changes in wastewater management, and modern water quality status. Müggelsee thus exemplifies how urban freshwater archives record the Great Acceleration in local ecological systems. These findings provide crucial baselines for restoration strategies in alignment with the EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2030 and the EU Water Framework Directive.

How to cite: Wagner, N., Schmitz, O., Enayati, A., Roberts, P., von Rintelen, K., Volosky, D., and Frenzel, P.: Tracing Anthropogenic Impacts in an Urban Environment: Ostracod Evidence From Lake Müggelsee and Other Water Bodies of Berlin, Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-427, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-427, 2026.

The Plio-Pleistocene Transition (PPT, 2.7-2.4 Ma) marks a major climatic reorganization with the onset of Northern Hemisphere glaciation. While the western Mediterranean1 has served as a standard for biostratigraphic and paleoceanographic reconstructions during this period, the eastern Mediterranean, remains less explored. This study (3.7–2.3 Ma) provides the first quantitative planktonic foraminiferal data from ODP Leg 160 Site 967 (Eratosthenes Seamount, 2554 mbsf, well-developed sapropel), aiming to elucidate regional similarities and differences in faunal dynamics and bioevents across the two basins.

The Mediterranean biostratigraphy1 for studied time interval is mainly based on genus Globorotalia, but the eastern record shows low abundance respect to the western ones.

Despite astronomically tuned sapropel records, the biostratigraphic correlation is very difficult.

When compared the eastern Mediterranean Site 967 to western planktonic foraminiferal biozones, key bioevents, including the Last Occurrence (LO) of Globorotalia puncticulata dated at 3.57 Ma, and First Occurrences (FO) of Globorotalia bononiensis and Globorotalia crassaformis, show approximately synchronous timings but contrast in relative abundances. Notably, the LCO of G. bononiensis at 2.46 Ma in the western Mediterranean appears inconsistent in the eastern record, whereas G. crassaformis provides a more reliable marker, suggesting a need for revised regional biozonation schemes.

An outstanding feature is the temporal disappearance of Globorotalids (G. bononiensis and G. crassaformis) at ca. 2.4 Ma, an event not observed in western records where these taxa continued to persist beyond this interval. 

The Neogloboquadrina atlantica signature, although resemble the western Mediterranean cooling signal, is minimally expressed in the eastern Mediterranean, emphasizing limited Atlantic water influence and distinct oceanographic control. Also, the Sphaereodinellopsis signal seems to mimic very well the western record with a synchronous LO at ca. 3.2 Ma.

As expected from the palaeoceanography of the eastern Mediterranean, micropaleontological analyses reveals a warm-water and oligotrophic assemblages including Globigerinoides ruber white (morphotypes Type b-platys, c-elongate, d-kummerform), Globoturborotalita rubescens, Globigerinoides obliquus, the Trilobatus sacculifer gr., Orbulina universa, and Globigerinella spp. Conversely, nutrient-dependent and cooler-tolerant species, such as Turborotalita quinqueloba, Globigerinita glutinata, and Globigerina bulloides, peak in abundance near sapropels, marking episodic productivity increases.

High Globigerinoides abundances underscore sustained warm, salty, and stratified water conditions, punctuated by clear paleoenvironmental shifts from red-to-black sapropel phases (~3.2 Ma). This shift is characterized by an acme end of Neogloboquadrinids and incipient warming and increased humidity, shown in oxygen stable isotope G. ruber signal. Another outstanding change is the G. ruber white morphotype faunal turnover and reductions in Globigerinoides obliquus around 3.0 Ma.

As final remarks, the acme end of Trilobatus sacculifer gr., the LO of total Globorotalids and LRO of Globigerinoides obliquus seem to approximate the Gelasian boundary (~2.6 Ma), with important paleoenvironmental and ecological reorganization marked by the decline of warm taxa and an expansion of cooler and productive waters.

Correlation reveals similarities and differences in planktonic foraminiferal abundance highlighting complex basin-specific responses to global climate forcing. These findings advance understanding in paleoceanography and biostratigraphic correlation frameworks crucial for reconstructing PPT climate evolution.

1Lirer, F. et al. (2019). Earth-Science Reviews, 196, 102869

How to cite: Raimondi, M., Margaritelli, G., Foresi, L. M., and Lirer, F.: Differences and similarities in Plio-Pleistocene Planktonic Foraminifera through the western and eastern Mediterranean basins: Insights from ODP Site 967 (3.7–2.3 Ma), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-460, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-460, 2026.

EGU26-1871 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Síðumúlaskógur: the saga of an Icelandic birchwood narrated by pollen 

Scott Riddell and Egill Erlendsson

Quasi-historical narratives describe extensive birch (Betula pubescens) woodland in Iceland “milli fjalls og fjöru” (lit. between the mountains and the shore) when humans first colonised it in the late 9th century. It has been estimated that prior to human settlement up to 25% of the island supported woodland; today, only c. 1% of Iceland supports woodland. Kjarardalur in western Iceland is home to a surviving birchwood known as Síðumúlaskógur (c. 1 km2). A small wetland hollow (c. 5 m2) is located within Síðumúlaskógur, exceptional for Iceland in terms of the environmental and ecological context. The pollen preserved within the sediments of this hollow provide a unique opportunity to examine the history of an Icelandic birchwood from just before human settlement down to the present. Therefore, a 30 cm core was extracted from the wetland hollow which was sub-sampled for pollen analysis. In all, there were 24 sub-samples, with a resolution of one sample per centimetre between 877 CE and 1693 CE, the chronological framework defined by tephrochronology and supplemented by radiocarbon dating. This research considers why Síðumúlaskógur was able to survive into the present when so much woodland was lost elsewhere in Iceland; including areas immediately adjacent to Síðumúlaskógur that should, in theory, also continue to support birch woodland.

How to cite: Riddell, S. and Erlendsson, E.: Síðumúlaskógur: the saga of an Icelandic birchwood narrated by pollen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1871, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1871, 2026.

EGU26-2156 | Orals | SSP4.5

Understanding changing Indonesian Throughflow dynamics during the Early Pliocene using differences between TEX86 and foraminiferal Mg/Ca 

Benjamin Petrick, Ann Holbourn, Janika Jöhnck, Wolfgang Kuhnt, and Felix Elling

The Indonesian Throughflow (ITF) is a critical conduit for the inflow of Pacific waters into the Indian Ocean. It has long been considered a potential switch in controlling global climate events. Previous work has primarily focused on Pleistocene glacial-interglacial variability, and there have been few records of ITF variability from the highly dynamic Late Miocene period.  In this study, we present two new high-resolution sea surface temperature (SST) records from Site U1482 spanning the Late Miocene Cooling (LMC) to investigate the changing dynamics in the ITF between 8-4 Ma. The two records we have used are based on Mg/Ca analysis of Trilobatus sacculifer and on TEX86.  One limitation of many studies is that Mg/Ca analysis has been performed at much higher resolution than TEX86. However, here, owing to the high preservation of glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGTs), we were able to reconstruct TEX86-derived temperatures at about 21 ka resolution high enough to match cycles in Mg/Ca-derived SST.  Before the LMC, there is a strong connection between the two records. Both records show the major cooling event around 6.5 Ma associated with the LMC as well as prominent transient cooling events between 6.5-5.5 Ma. However, in the early Pliocene at 5.2 Ma, the two records diverge markedly, with the Mg/Ca-based record recording several cooling episodes that are not reflected in the TEX86 data.  Based on previous work, the TEX86H proxy, which employs a nonlinear fit to better reflect SSTs above those of the modern era, matches Austral Summer SSTs in this region. Interestingly, the TEX86H data at this point aligns more closely with temperature trends in the West Pacific Warm Pool (WPWP) than local Mg/Ca.  Given that the TEX86H data have been interpreted as Austral summer SSTs, this suggests that in the Early Pliocene, there was a shift in the ITF, allowing seasonal throughflow directly from the WPWP.  Given that the WPWP currently exerts little influence, this shift has critical implications for ocean circulation and for the impact of the end of the LMC and the onset of the very warm Early Pliocene. This may help explain the rapid warming at the end of the LMC.  It also demonstrates the importance of multi-proxy analysis being done at a similar resolution.

How to cite: Petrick, B., Holbourn, A., Jöhnck, J., Kuhnt, W., and Elling, F.: Understanding changing Indonesian Throughflow dynamics during the Early Pliocene using differences between TEX86 and foraminiferal Mg/Ca, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2156, 2026.

EGU26-2887 | Posters on site | SSP4.5

The Paleocene to Eocene calcareous nannofossil assemblage from Kurgan-Tyube West section in the Tajik Basin 

Tian Jiang, Qianyu Zhou, and Wenxin Cao

The Tajik Basin, located in southern Tajikistan, is a Cenozoic foreland basin preserving relatively complete marine sedimentary sequences. This study conducts a quantitative biostratigraphic analysis of calcareous nannofossils from a Paleocene to Eocene section West to the Kurgan-Tyube (Qurghonteppa) of the northeastern Tajik Basin. The investigated interval comprises mudstone, marl, sandstone, silty mudstone, gypsum, and clay interbeds. Calcareous nannofossil assemblages, including 31 genera and 75 species, were identified. With the analysis of calcareous nannofossil data, the section was constrained to the latest Paleocene through the end of the Eocene. Within the bottom unit of the section (the Ganjina Unit), index fossils for the Paleocene-Eocene boundary, including Discoaster backmanii, Tribrachiatus orthostylus, and Discoaster diastypus, were identified. Alongside these, characteristic taxa of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), namely Rhomboaster bramlettei and Discoaster araneus (collectively referred to as the R-D assemblage), were also recorded. The fossil assemblage within this interval is predominantly composed of long-ranging species such as Prinsius martinii and Coccolithus pelagicus, indicating a warm, shallow marine environment with high productivity. The early Eocene in the study section was characterized by a significant increase in the diversity and abundance of Discoaster and the thriving of Coccolithus pelagicus, during which fossil abundance and diversity reached a peak, reflecting a comprehensive recovery of the marine ecosystem during this period. The middle to late Eocene was marked by the continued prosperity of the genus Discoaster, albeit with changes in species composition, and the emergence of Reticulofenestra as the dominant taxon. During this period, fossil abundance declined, and the community structure underwent significant turnover, directly responding to global temperature changes and nutrient fluctuations. These characteristics of biotic succession show consistency with the manifestations of the biostratigraphic patterns from the late Paleocene to the end of the Eocene in shallow marine deposits.

Acknowledgements: This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 42072001, 41930218), National Key R&D Program of China (Grant No. 2023YFF0804000).

How to cite: Jiang, T., Zhou, Q., and Cao, W.: The Paleocene to Eocene calcareous nannofossil assemblage from Kurgan-Tyube West section in the Tajik Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2887, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2887, 2026.

EGU26-3103 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Distribution, Diversity and Preservation of Shallow-Water Foraminifera in the Extremely Organic-Rich Mud Flats of French Guiana 

Jasper Lendla, Martin Langer, Olugbenga Temitope Fajemila, and Pierre Olivier Antoine

This study investigates the modern distribution, diversity, composition, and extreme preservation challenges of shallow-water benthic foraminifera along the nearshore marine mud flats of French Guiana. This coastal environment is overwhelmingly controlled by the vast, high-flux discharge of sediment and organic matter (OM) from the Amazon River system, creating a highly stressed habitat for calcifying organisms. Quantitative analysis reveals a severely constrained and moderately diverse fauna. The community structure is heavily skewed towards extremely small species (e.g., Ammonia, Elphidium), and a few robust calcareous taxa (e.g., Eponides). The dominance of stress-tolerant genera is consistent with a highly turbid, high-organic, and potentially low-oxygen environment.

The primary finding is the exceptionally poor preservation of calcareous foraminiferal shells, acting as a powerful taphonomic filter. This dissolution is a direct consequence of the extremely high rates of OM decomposition within the muddy sediments. Microbial breakdown (remineralization) of the abundant Amazon-derived OM rapidly consumes oxygen and generates large quantities of carbon dioxide (CO2). This CO2 increases the concentration of carbonic acid (H2CO3) in the sediment pore waters, leading to a significant pH decrease. The resulting undersaturation (Ω < 1) with respect to CaCO3 minerals (calcite and aragonite) triggers the rapid chemical dissolution of the foraminiferal tests. The poor buffering capacity of the fine-grained, terrigenous muds exacerbates this effect. In addition to the completely preserved foraminifera, almost all samples contain an impressive number of hardened, brown molds (ˈSteinkerneˈ) that capture the original shape of the foraminifera's chamber arrangement, as well as the space once occupied by the living cell. Here, the original calcium carbonate shell is dissolved by acidic waters over time. What remains is a three-dimensional "negative" of the shell's interior.

The sedimentary environment of the French Guiana mud flats represents an end-member environment where near-complete post-mortem dissolution of the calcareous fraction severely biases the fossil record and acts as an effective taphonomic filter. The observed foraminiferal census, dominated by Ammonia, Elphidium and a very few robust taxa, therefore represents a highly-biased reflection of the original living community. This has significant implications for paleoenvironmental reconstructions based on foraminifera in similar high-organic-flux, tropical deltaic systems, highlighting the need to account for dissolution-driven loss of the calcareous fraction.

How to cite: Lendla, J., Langer, M., Fajemila, O. T., and Antoine, P. O.: Distribution, Diversity and Preservation of Shallow-Water Foraminifera in the Extremely Organic-Rich Mud Flats of French Guiana, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3103, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3103, 2026.

EGU26-4257 | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Calcareous nannoplankton response to Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 on the southern Tethyan margin (Bahloul Formation, Tunisia) 

Paula Granero Ordóñez, Michael Wagreich, Erik Wolfgring, and Theobald Hazod

Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE2; latest Cenomanian–earliest Turonian) represents a major perturbation of the global carbon cycle and marine ecosystems, yet its expression along the southern Tethyan margin remains incompletely constrained. We present new quantitative calcareous nannofossil data from the Oued Kharroub section (central Tunisia), integrated with carbon-isotope stratigraphy (δ¹³C), carbonate content, and total organic carbon (TOC), to investigate surface-water environmental changes across OAE2. The Oued Kharroub section spans nannofossil zones UC3 to UC8 and records a positive δ¹³C excursion that allows identification of the main phases of OAE2. Calcareous nannofossil assemblages display pronounced variations in abundance, diversity, and composition through the event. Species richness and Shannon diversity index values decrease significantly during the main build-up and plateau of the δ¹³C excursion, coinciding with reduced CaCO₃ content and increased TOC. Assemblages during this interval are dominated by the opportunistic taxon Watznaueria barnesiae, whereas meso- to eutrophic indicators such as Biscutum constans and Zeugrhabdotus erectus show strong short-term fluctuations, suggesting unstable surface-water conditions. Morphometric analyses of W. barnesiae reveal a statistically significant reduction in coccolith size during the core of OAE2, with minimum values coinciding with peak TOC levels, followed by partial size recovery in the post-OAE2 interval. This pattern indicates subtle but detectable calcification stress affecting even ecologically tolerant taxa under peak anoxic conditions. A short-lived increase in Eprolithus floralis near the onset of the event, together with the decline of warm-water taxa, may reflect a weakly expressed cooling episode tentatively linked with the Plenus Cold Event.

How to cite: Granero Ordóñez, P., Wagreich, M., Wolfgring, E., and Hazod, T.: Calcareous nannoplankton response to Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 on the southern Tethyan margin (Bahloul Formation, Tunisia), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4257, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4257, 2026.

EGU26-4316 | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Calcification without Strong Proton Extrusion in the Pearl Oyster Pinctada fucata 

Takashi Toyofuku, Yukiko Nagaia, Yue Horikawa, Yugo Kato, Satsuki Nagao, Takashi Atsumi, Jun Kawano, and Michio Suzuki

Biomineralization in marine calcifying organisms has traditionally been regarded as a process that involves proton release associated with calcium carbonate precipitation, which may lead to localized acidification. In several taxa, including foraminifera, pronounced pH gradients have been reported between calcification sites and the surrounding environment. However, it remains unclear whether strong proton extrusion into the external environment is universally required for shell formation.

In this study, we re-evaluated pH distributions during shell formation in juvenile pearl oysters (Pinctada fucata) using improved HPTS ratiometric fluorescence calibration combined with spatial analysis. We found that regions involved in shell formation, corresponding to extrapallial fluid domains inferred to represent calcification sites, consistently showed relatively higher pH values than internal soft tissues. The pH in these regions was approximately 7.8, which is slightly lower than that of the surrounding seawater (~8.0). At the spatial scale examined, no pronounced acidification was detected in the external environment outside the shell. By contrast, strongly acidic regions reaching pH ~6.0 were observed in internal tissues, which are likely associated with digestive organs. In addition, within or adjacent to the inferred calcification sites, moderately lower-pH regions (approximately pH ~7.0) were observed as ribbon-like distributions composed of small, discrete spots.

These observations indicate that shell formation in P. fucata does not depend on strong proton extrusion into the surrounding seawater, nor on extreme alkalization of the calcification site. Instead, pH regulation in this species appears to occur in a manner that is spatially separated from the surrounding seawater. This suggests that elevation of pH alone may not be the primary factor controlling calcification. Alternative mechanisms may therefore contribute to shell formation, including regulation of calcium concentration, modulation of ionic composition that inhibits calcification (e.g., Mg²⁺ and sulfate ions), and intracellular proton processing mediated by organic components.

Although acidification driven by carbon dioxide production is theoretically expected to accompany calcium carbonate precipitation, such changes could not be directly resolved under the imaging conditions employed in this study. Taken together, our results highlight diversity in proton regulation strategies among marine calcifying organisms and provide a basis for comparative discussions of shell formation mechanisms.

How to cite: Toyofuku, T., Nagaia, Y., Horikawa, Y., Kato, Y., Nagao, S., Atsumi, T., Kawano, J., and Suzuki, M.: Calcification without Strong Proton Extrusion in the Pearl Oyster Pinctada fucata, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4316, 2026.

EGU26-4899 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Foraminiferal Records of Pollution and Environmental Resilience in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea 

Yaroslav Trubin, Revital Bookman, and Orit Hyams-Kaphzan

The shallow marine environment of the Eastern Mediterranean Sea is an ultra-oligotrophic system that provides essential ecosystem services, yet it is increasingly exposed to anthropogenic pressures, including fish farming, desalination activities, and municipal and industrial pollution. Understanding ecosystem responses to disturbance and subsequent recovery is therefore critical for sustainable marine management.

For three decades (1987-2017), the primary source of anthropogenic pollution along the Israeli coast was the Shafdan sewage outfall, which enriched the surrounding environment with nutrients, organic matter, and heavy metals. This long-term pollution history, followed by recent recovery, offers a unique natural laboratory to investigate benthic foraminiferal responses to sustained anthropogenic stress and post-impact recovery.

Two sediment gravity cores were collected at ~36 m water depth near the Shafdan outfall: one from a formerly polluted site (PL3; 0.2 km north of the outfall) and one from a more distal reference site (PL29; 5.5 km north). Sedimentological and geochemical analyses included total organic carbon, grain-size distribution, and mineral and elemental composition. Micropaleontological analyses focused on down-core dead benthic foraminiferal assemblages, complemented by living (Rose-Bengal stained) foraminifera from surface sediments. We assessed changes in species composition, community structure, dominant taxa, and diversity patterns. Ecological status was evaluated using three biotic indices (Foram-AMBI, TSI-Med, FSI) and two diversity indices (ES100 and Exp(H’bc)).

Distinct assemblage shifts corresponding to pre-pollution, pollution, and post-pollution phases were identified at the Shafdan site. Pre-pollution sediments (20-6 cm in core-depth) were characterized by predominance of sensitive taxa such as Ammonia parkinsoniana and Adelosina species whereas the polluted interval (6-2 cm) was characterized by a marked decline in sensitive species and dominance of opportunistic taxa as foraminifera from Ammonia tepida group. During the post-pollution phase (2-0 cm), sensitive taxa recolonized the sediments; however, opportunistic species remain abundant, indicating that recovery is ongoing and not yet complete. Foram-AMBI values clearly increased during the pollution interval, while TSI-Med fluctuations were strongly influenced by grain-size variability. In contrast, FSI and diversity indices showed limited down-core variation.

These results highlight the value of benthic foraminifera as sensitive tracers of both anthropogenic impact and recovery, and demonstrate the robustness of Foram-AMBI for reconstructing historical environmental conditions. Incorporating down-core foraminiferal records into monitoring frameworks can substantially improve long-term assessments of ecological status and inform marine conservation and management strategies in ultra-oligotrophic systems.

This research was conducted as part of the project no. 0005817 «REFORM – REFerence conditions based on historical FORaminiferal Monitoring» funded by the Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology (2024–2026) and the University of Haifa Institutional Postdoctoral Scholarship funded by Graduate Studies Authority – Bloom Graduate School (2024–2025).

How to cite: Trubin, Y., Bookman, R., and Hyams-Kaphzan, O.: Foraminiferal Records of Pollution and Environmental Resilience in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4899, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4899, 2026.

EGU26-5310 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Reconstruction of environmental and climatic dynamics during the Eemian (MIS 5e, 130-115 ka) in temperate Europe through malacological and isotopic analysis of calcareous tufas  

Eva Sambourg, Nicole Limondin-Lozouet, Julie Dabkowski, David Herisson, and Valentine Flichet

Reconstruction of the Eemian interglacial environmental dynamics (MIS 5e, 130-115 ka) is essentially based on the study of long palynological sequences but remains limited in Western Europe due to the scarcity of lacustrine deposits. Therefore, calcareous tufas have been favoured in recent years as they are widely distributed on the continent and are particularly useful for the study of Pleistocene interglacials. These carbonate deposits identified in alluvial valleys with calcareous substratum are formed in temperate climates and in waters at ambient temperature. An approach combining malacology and isotopic geochemistry (δ18O and δ13C of tufa calcite) used on several Pleistocene calcareous tufas has demonstrated its effectiveness for the detailed reconstruction of environments and climates of past interglacials.

This study mainly focuses on the malacological contribution. Mollusc carbonated shells are particularly well-preserved in calcareous sediments such as tufas and are powerful bioindicators for palaeoenvironmental studies. Indeed, these small organisms are very dependent on their environment and have reduced mobility and thus provide a strong local signal of plant cover. In addition, identification to the species rank allows deeper palaeoenvironmental interpretations.

This study of Eemian calcareous tufas along an east-west transect in temperate Europe aims to report on the evolution of malacofaunas and associated environments during this period. Similar data obtained for the Holocene show a decrease in biodiversity towards the west, linked to a distancing from the main European refuge area, the Carpathian Mountains. Since the current distributions of species on the continent are intrinsically linked to Quaternary climate fluctuations, the existence of a similar gradient remains to be demonstrated for Pleistocene interglacials. This study will ultimately improve knowledge on the chronology of the Eemian interglacial in Europe (palaeoenvironmental axis), on the current and fossil distribution of molluscs (biodiversity/palaeobiogeography axis) and will establish the palaeoenvironmental context of associated archaeological sites. Two Eemian tufas form the core of this project: Resson (France) and Burgtonna (Germany). This communication will present the preliminary results obtained at both sites.

At Resson, the malacological analysis highlights the importance of this site as a new reference sequence of the Eemian in northwestern Europe by uncovering several diagnostic species of the period and identifying the maximum forest development at the top of the sequence, in agreement with the results of isotopic geochemistry for the climatic optimum.

Burgtonna tufa, formerly known through the work of Mania (1978), has been selected for its impressive malacological content (more than 50 species and 8 phases of forest cover development) and the accuracy of the chronological attribution to the Eemian. Field observations and preliminary results confirm the excellent preservation of shells and the richness of the malacological cortege.

How to cite: Sambourg, E., Limondin-Lozouet, N., Dabkowski, J., Herisson, D., and Flichet, V.: Reconstruction of environmental and climatic dynamics during the Eemian (MIS 5e, 130-115 ka) in temperate Europe through malacological and isotopic analysis of calcareous tufas , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5310, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5310, 2026.

EGU26-5313 | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Integrated stratigraphy and new radiolaria bioevent constraints of Late Pliocene to Holocene sediments from the subpolar North Atlantic (IODP Site U1314) 

Iván Hernández-Almeida, Kentaro Hatakeda, Brendan Reilly, and Kjell Bjørklund

Radiolarian biozonations constitute an important tool in Cenozoic stratigraphic studies in polar regions. Neogene-Quaternary radiolarian biostratigraphical schemes have been established mainly in low latitude regions, but only a few attempts have been carried out in the high-latitude North Atlantic. In this study, we quantitatively analyze a radiolarian zonation for the Late Pliocene-Holocene (3 Myr to present) at IODP Site U1314 (Gardar Drift, 56.36°N, -27.88°E, 2820 m water depth). The present study focuses on taxa of both stratigraphic importance and of limited occurrence. Specifically, we determined several radiolarian bioevents, some of which are the first time that they are found in the North Atlantic, such as the last occurrences of Druppatractus irregularis Popofsky and Cycladophora sakaii, and first occurrence of Cycladophora davisiana Ehrenberg. In addition, we described two new radiolarian species; Pseudocubus abruptus n.sp. and Spongasteriscus chiasmos n.sp., whose biostratigraphic ranges are also defined and have the potential to be used as biomarkers across the high-latitude North Atlantic Ocean.

In addition to the new radiolarian biostratigraphic record, on-board bio and magnetostratigraphy, refined relative paleointensity and physical property records, and published isotope stratigraphy and radiocarbon ages were used to construct an integrated chronostratigraphic framework at Site U1314 to constraint the new radiolarian bioevents. The stratigraphic distributions of these marker species indicates that the radiolarian scheme proposed herein has a potential to be applied in a broader region, from the mid-latitude North Atlantic, north of about 40°N to the Norwegian Sea. Furthermore, comparison of the radiolarian bioevents with other northern hemisphere datasets provides novel perspectives on the evolutionary dynamics, ecological adaptation and origins of radiolarian lineages.

 

 
 

 

 

How to cite: Hernández-Almeida, I., Hatakeda, K., Reilly, B., and Bjørklund, K.: Integrated stratigraphy and new radiolaria bioevent constraints of Late Pliocene to Holocene sediments from the subpolar North Atlantic (IODP Site U1314), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5313, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5313, 2026.

EGU26-5485 | Orals | SSP4.5

Benthic Foraminifera as Indicators of Oil-Induced Stress in the Imo River Estuary (Niger Delta, Nigeria) 

Olugbenga Temitope Fajemila, Michael Martínez-Colón, Moshood Adegboyega Olayiwola, and Martin Langer

The Niger Delta is one of the most polluted deltaic ecosystems globally, with decades of oil spills and leakages severely impacting aquaculture, local flora, and water quality. This study investigates the environmental health of the Imo River estuary, a primary sink for regional pollutants. Benthic foraminifera were utilized as environmental proxies due to their high abundance, rapid reproduction rates, and sensitivity to physicochemical shifts. Analysis of benthic assemblages, stable isotopes, and heavy metal concentrations revealed an ecosystem under extreme physiological stress, characterized by significantly low species diversity and a dominance of stress-tolerant taxa. The presence of negative δ13C values indicates significant deterioration in the quality of organic matter, alongside a notable increase in acidity. This has a detrimental effect on calcareous benthic foraminifera due to lower pH levels. Our findings provide a critical baseline for evaluating the long-term impact of oil contamination and offer a quantitative metric to assess the efficacy of ongoing remediation and clean-up efforts in the region.

How to cite: Fajemila, O. T., Martínez-Colón, M., Olayiwola, M. A., and Langer, M.: Benthic Foraminifera as Indicators of Oil-Induced Stress in the Imo River Estuary (Niger Delta, Nigeria), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5485, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5485, 2026.

EGU26-5502 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Palaeoclimatic influence on the evolution of a lower Priabonian mixed carbonate-siliciclastic system in the Ebro Basin (NE Spain) 

Laura Camila Acosta Fernández, Carles Ferràndez Cañadell, and Telm Bover Arnal

This study presents a detailed facies analysis of the lower Priabonian La Tossa Formation, a mixed carbonate-siliciclastic succession deposited in the eastern sector of the Ebro basin (South-Pyrenean foreland basin). Through integrated macro- and micro-facies interpretations, we reconstruct the palaeoecological evolution of a shallow-water carbonate ramp system and asses its response to environmental and climatic shifts during the lower late Eocene. Sedimentation was strongly influenced by coeval fan-delta systems along the basin margins, which directly influenced the facies belt distribution and composition. A total of 13 different facies were identified, arranged along a transect from proximal to distal ramp settings. Their spatial and stratigraphic organisation reflects the interplay of global climatic trends, regional tectonics and local environmental controls.

The facies model for the lower interval of the succession is characterized by proximal ramp facies consisting of siliciclastic-influenced packstones, dominated by Campanile and acervulinid-gypsinid foraminifera. These deposits transition laterally into Nummulites packstones, with localized Nummulites banks. Basinwards, the facies grade into coral frame- and cluster-reefs, which in some sections exhibit coralline algal crusts, and rhodoliths associated with encrusting foraminifera facies. The distal ramp facies are distinguished by the presence of orthophragminids and bryozoan-rich limestones, interbedded with marls devoid of macrofossils, as well as bryozoan and hexactinellid sponge’s marls.  Interspersed with this facies belt pattern are two episodes of coralline algal maërl environment. The two maërl levels extend from proximal zones, where they overlie the Campanile sandstones, to distal zones, where they overlie the orthophragminid facies. The upper interval reflects a distinct evolution into a purely carbonate-dominated system. The low-energy proximal ramp setting, consists of porcelaneous foraminifera-rich grainstones with abundant Nummulites, bivalves and echinoids. These units grade into coral frame reef facies with encrusting foraminifera, which in the distal ramp settings transition into marls and orthophragminid-rich limestones.

The changes in facies indicate that climatic oscillations influenced the distribution of benthic communities in this region of the western Tethys. The development of maërl environments and the stabilization of the platform into a purely carbonate system in the upper interval of the succession, suggest cooler climatic periods. This evolution of facies thus reflects the climatic shift from greenhouse to icehouse conditions during the onset of the late Eocene, which led to the Antarctic glaciation in the earliest Oligocene.

 

Keywords: Ebro basin, Tossa Formation, palaeoecology, late Eocene, facies analysis

How to cite: Acosta Fernández, L. C., Ferràndez Cañadell, C., and Bover Arnal, T.: Palaeoclimatic influence on the evolution of a lower Priabonian mixed carbonate-siliciclastic system in the Ebro Basin (NE Spain), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5502, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5502, 2026.

EGU26-5671 | Orals | SSP4.5

Foraminiferal assemblage as environmental indicators: A case study from  Ebrie (Cöte d'Ivoire) and Densu (Ghana) Estuaries, West Africa. 

N'goran Jean-Paul Yao, Lailah Gifty Akita, Edgard Allanne Michael Gnakabi, and Bamba Kader

In order to assess and monitor the health of West African ecosystems, a vast biomarker-based BEACON program has been initiated. This study presents preliminary and partial results comparing two sectors of the Ebrié (Jacqueville bridge) and Densu (Gahna) lagoons. It is based on the analysis of benthic foraminifera from thirty-three (33) samples of surface sediments from these lagoon beds, including fifteen (15) from Ghana and eighteen (18) from Côte d'Ivoire. On the whole, the foraminifera identified fall into ten genera left in open nomenclature. These are the genera Ammotium, Ammobaculites, Ammonia, Amphistegina, Quinqueloculina, Cribloelphidium, Nonion, Miliammina, with a few rare planktonic individuals in the genera Globigerina, Globorotalia (cultrata). A qualitative analysis of these benthic individuals was carried out. The genera Amphistegina, Ammonia, Cribloelphidium and Nonion were found to have calcareous haline tests coiled in a planispiral or trochospiral mode. We also find the Quinqueloculina genus, with a porcelain test in an elongated and milioline mode. The living conditions of these foraminifera are closely linked to the existence of an aerated environment favoring the permanent renewal of oxygen in the bottom sediments. They are abundant in the Densu lagoon and in very low proportions in the Ebrié lagoon. In contrast, benthic forms with elongated, agglutinated testes, such as Ammotium, Ammobaculites and Miliammina, characterize poorly oxygenated waters, i.e. oxic to anoxic or eutrophic waters. They are very well represented in the Ebrié lagoon and rare in the Densu lagoon. From the above, this distribution of benthic foraminifera shows that the Ebrié lagoon (Jacqueville bridge) is very confined and disoxic compared with the Densu lagoon.  The presence of planktonic foraminifera such as the genera Globigerina, Globorotalia suggests a marine influence in both lagoons.

Keywords : Ebrié lagoon, Densu lagoon, foraminifera, biomarkers, anoxia

How to cite: Yao, N. J.-P., Akita, L. G., Gnakabi, E. A. M., and Kader, B.: Foraminiferal assemblage as environmental indicators: A case study from  Ebrie (Cöte d'Ivoire) and Densu (Ghana) Estuaries, West Africa., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5671, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5671, 2026.

The 4.2 ka event is widely recognized as a major cooling and aridity episode across the Northern Hemisphere. However, its specific impact on the Korean Peninsula remains under-researched compared to neighboring China. In this study, we present a 9,000-year hydroclimatic reconstruction from the subalpine Sara-oreum wetland on Jeju Island, using diatom assemblages and monitoring data. Contrary to the typical "drought" narrative of the 4.2 ka event, our findings reveal prevailing humid conditions on Jeju, evidenced by an increase in summer-associated tychoplanktonic species. This moisture pattern aligns with records from Southern China, suggesting a southward shift of the westerly jet that anchored the monsoonal rain belt over the region. Furthermore, strong correlations between lake-level indicators (PC1 and sand content) and the δ¹⁸O  records from Xianglong Cave and the Westerlies Effect Index highlight the sensitivity of Jeju’s diatom records to large-scale atmospheric circulation. This study underscores the complex spatial heterogeneity of the 4.2 ka event and its linkages to westerly jet variability.

How to cite: Cho, A.: Holocene Hydroclimatic Variability on Jeju Island, Korea: Reassessing the 4.2 ka Event via Diatom Records and Westerly Jet Dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6209, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6209, 2026.

EGU26-6343 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Testing the applicability of automated size and shape analyses in non-marine ostracods-A case study from the Tibetan Plateau 

Marlene Höhle, Peter Frenzel, Antje Schwalb, Torsten Haberzettl, Junbo Wang, Liping Zhu, and Claudia Wrozyna

Evolutionary developmental biology seeks to elucidate the developmental mechanisms underlying phenotypic evolution. Central to this endeavour is the quantitative analysis of morphological variation, for which morphometric approaches have become indispensable tools across micropaleontology.

The suitability of ostracods (bivalved microcrustaceans) for evolutionary, developmental, and paleoecological investigations stems from several key attributes: near-ubiquitous distribution across marine and freshwater habitats, remarkable taxonomic and morphological diversity, sensitivity to environmental parameters, and an exceptional fossil record with calcified carapace valves that preserve fine morphological details across geological time scales. These characteristics make ostracods powerful proxies for paleoenvironmental reconstruction and biostratigraphy. While morphometric methods are widely applied to other microfossil groups, their use in ostracods remains comparatively limited, largely because the labor-intensive nature of manual data acquisition constrains dataset size, scalability, and reproducibility despite their considerable potential.

To address this bottleneck, we evaluate the efficacy of AutoMorph (Hsiang et al. 2016), a high-throughput imaging pipeline, for automated extraction of size and shape data from ostracod valves. We apply this approach to two lacustrine ostracod species, Leucocythere dorsotuberosa and Leucocytherella sinensis, sampled from four lakes across the Tibetan Plateau—a region offering both exceptional ecological diversity and significant paleoclimatic archives.

Our findings demonstrate that AutoMorph successfully extracts morphometric measurements and coordinate data from ostracod valves, reducing processing time by approximately 90% compared to traditional manual methods while minimizing subjective bias inherent in landmark placement.

This methodological advancement facilitates the generation of large-scale spatial and temporal datasets from both modern and fossil assemblages, which enables more comprehensive investigations of ecological responses to environmental change and evolutionary processes. The utilization of tools like AutoMorph can, thus, fundamentally expand existing micropaleontological methodologies, enabling robust, high-throughput quantitative analyses and opening new avenues for comparative and integrative research not only for ostracods.

How to cite: Höhle, M., Frenzel, P., Schwalb, A., Haberzettl, T., Wang, J., Zhu, L., and Wrozyna, C.: Testing the applicability of automated size and shape analyses in non-marine ostracods-A case study from the Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6343, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6343, 2026.

EGU26-6519 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Integrating Environmental Proxies and Benthic Foraminifera to Assess Desalination Outflow Impacts in the Western Arabian Gulf 

Sinatrya Diko Prayudi, Bassam S. Tawabini, Abduljamiu O. Amao, Thomas F. Garrison, Fabrizio Frontalini, and Michael A. Kaminski

While desalination is indispensable for freshwater security in arid regions, the ecological consequences of hypersaline brine discharge remain a concern. This study assesses the environmental conditions and benthic foraminiferal response near the Al-Dur Power and Desalination Plant in Bahrain, western Arabian Gulf. By analyzing physico-chemical parameters in water and sediment along a spatial gradient, we utilized foraminiferal community composition, diversity indices, and test preservation as proxies for environmental stress. Proximal to the discharge, we observed extreme hypersalinity (above 40 psu), reduced pH, and elevated concentrations of total organic carbon and heavy metals. These conditions correspond to a significant decline in biological status: living assemblages near the outflow exhibited reduced abundance and lower Shannon diversity (less than 2) compared to reference sites (above 2). Additionally, test discoloration, a key stress indicator, affected more than 50% of specimens near the discharge, versus lower than 50% at downstream sites. Our results delineate a localized impact zone where, despite the persistence of stress-tolerant taxa such as Ammonia, Elphidium, and Peneroplis, overall biodiversity is markedly reduced. As the first record of desalination-driven impacts on foraminifera in the western Arabian Gulf, this research provides a vital baseline and emphasizes the need for targeted mitigation strategies to protect vulnerable marine ecosystems amidst expanding desalination infrastructure.

How to cite: Prayudi, S. D., Tawabini, B. S., Amao, A. O., Garrison, T. F., Frontalini, F., and Kaminski, M. A.: Integrating Environmental Proxies and Benthic Foraminifera to Assess Desalination Outflow Impacts in the Western Arabian Gulf, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6519, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6519, 2026.

EGU26-7515 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

First Record of Hantkenina from Saudi Arabia and its Paleoclimatic Significance across the Bartonian–Priabonian Transition 

Asmaa Korin, Sherif Allam, Syouma Hikmahtiar, and Kaminski Michael

The middle to late Eocene represents a critical interval of global climatic transition following the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum, yet its expression across the Arabian Plate remains poorly constrained due to limited deep-marine records and long-standing assumptions of regional stratigraphic hiatuses. Here, we present the first comprehensive documentation of the planktonic foraminiferal genus Hantkenina from Saudi Arabia, based on integrated micropaleontological and geochemical analyses of the Rashrashiyah Formation in the Sirhan–Turayf Basin, northwestern Saudi Arabia. Seven species (Hantkenina dumblei, H. australis, H. longispina, H. compressa, H. primitiva, H. alabamensis, and H. nanggulanensis) are identified and calibrated to planktonic foraminiferal biozones E13–E14 and calcareous nannoplankton zones NP17–NP18, confirming the presence of both Bartonian and Priabonian marine sediments and challenging previous interpretations of a middle–late Eocene depositional hiatus in the region. There is a clear bimodal pattern to the stratigraphic distribution of Hantkenina, with occurrences concentrated in the upper and lower portions of the succession and a period of diminished abundance or disappearance in between. Stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses (δ18O and δ13C) derived from benthic foraminifera (Uvigerina) reveal alternating intervals of warming and cooling, with reconstructed bottom-water temperatures ranging from approximately 23°C to 30°C. The presence of Hantkenina is closely linked to milder intervals, highlighting the genus's noticeable sensitivity to temperature and confirming its significance as a dependable indicator in paleoclimatic and paleoecological studies. An unconformity at the top of the Rashrashiyah Formation indicates the erosion of the uppermost Eocene and Oligocene sediments, attributed to the combined influence of global eustatic sea-level fall during the Eocene–Oligocene transition and regional tectonic uplift associated with Red Sea rifting. These findings refine the Eocene stratigraphic framework of the Arabian Plate and highlight the valuable application of planktonic foraminifera in reconstructing paleoclimate conditions and marine ecosystem responses during major climate transitions.

How to cite: Korin, A., Allam, S., Hikmahtiar, S., and Michael, K.: First Record of Hantkenina from Saudi Arabia and its Paleoclimatic Significance across the Bartonian–Priabonian Transition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7515, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7515, 2026.

EGU26-8107 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Seasonal succession of diatoms in the coastal Baltic Sea: insights into diatom-based proxy for past environmental change 

Sohvi Railo, Kaarina Weckström, Maija Heikkilä, and Saija Saarni

Diatoms are excellent environmental proxies due to their often species-specific, narrow environmental tolerances, but the annual succession of diatom communities in coastal seas remains deficiently known. This knowledge gap constrains our ability to reconstruct past seasonal changes in marine systems, as variation in seasonal conditions strongly impacts the composition of diatom species assemblages, and consequently assemblages preserved in the sediments. In particular species dynamics related to sea ice are still underexplored, as ice-cover restricts undisturbed access. Automated sequencing sediment traps offer an effective solution to overcome these challenges, even during the ice-cover period.

 

In this PhD project, the seasonal succession of coastal diatom communities, as well as their contribution to vertical particulate organic matter fluxes and sedimentation are studied over multiple years in Tvärminne Storfjärden, Gulf of Finland. The aim is to enhance our understanding of the seasonal patterns of diatom species succession and sedimentation at a high temporal resolution, with a focus on understanding seasonal environmental drivers of species assemblage composition and the development of paleoenvironmental reconstruction methods. The data is collected with automated sequencing sediment traps, moored to the sea floor to continuously collect vertical material fluxes settling from the sea surface at a two-week temporal resolution. Two sediment traps are deployed at depths of 15 m and 27m (approximately 3 meters above the seabed) to assess how processes like decomposition and predation impact the vertical sediment flux. Diatom assemblages are analysed by microscopic identification and compared to simultaneous environmental measurements of e.g., sea-surface temperature, salinity and sea-ice cover to assess species-specific seasonal ecologies and deposition patterns. In addition, bulk organic geochemical analysis renders information about carbon flux and sources to the seafloor. Enhanced seasonal ecological information will improve diatom-based methods, enabling more accurate reconstructions of past and predictions of future coastal environments. Also, the advancement provides valuable insights into the impacts of ongoing environmental change and anthropogenic pressure on aquatic systems and, ultimately human well-being.

How to cite: Railo, S., Weckström, K., Heikkilä, M., and Saarni, S.: Seasonal succession of diatoms in the coastal Baltic Sea: insights into diatom-based proxy for past environmental change, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8107, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8107, 2026.

EGU26-8443 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

New Caledonian Large Benthic Foraminiferal S/Ca signatures as sulfate seawater proxies: Results from controlled growth experiments 

Tobias Walla, Delphine Dissard, Thierry Jauffrais, Lennart de Nooijer, Cyril Marchand, and Gert-Jan Reichart

Sulfate (SO42-) is the second most abundant anion in seawater. Nevertheless, its long-term accumulation and variability throughout Earth's history remains largely uncertain. Considering the preservation potential of benthic foraminifera in the fossil record, geochemical signatures of large tropical benthic foraminifera (LBF) are an important tool for paleoclimatic proxies. Considering their significant deposit of high-magnesium calcite within fragile tropical ecosystems largely threatened by climate change, an improved understanding of both their calcification processes and geochemical signatures in the face of climate change environmental variables, is of main interest, particularly as LBF have not been as intensively studied as planktonic - and smaller benthic foraminifera. The study of Marginopora sp., an ubiquitous LBF in tropical regions of the Pacific Ocean, provides a unique opportunity to reconstruct changes in environmental parameters in seawater over time. Cultures of Marginopora sp. from New Caledonian environments were performed with modern and decreased seawater pH values and modern and increased [SO42-]sw to calibrate impact of seawater sulfate concentration on both S/Ca concentrations and δ34S composition of the S incorporated in the shells of Marginopora sp.. Here, we present S/Ca data and other Element/Calcium ratios derived from LA-Q-ICP-MS (NWR193UC & Thermo Fisher Scientific iCAP-Q) and solution SF-ICP-MS (Thermo Fisher Scientific Element-2) analyses, as well as sulfur isotope data acquired from Isotope Ratio Mass Spectromety (IRMS with Elementar vario EL cube). As already described in previous studies looking at the geochemical signatures of small benthic foraminifera, S/Ca ratios within Marginopora sp. test, increased with increasing seawater S/Ca concentration. However, and contrarily to what was reported previously, the Mg/Ca content of Marginopora was observed to decrease with increasing S/Ca calcite content, highlighting potential differences in calcification disruption between low-Mg and high-Mg calcitic foraminifers when exposed to an increase in seawater sulfate concentrations. 

How to cite: Walla, T., Dissard, D., Jauffrais, T., de Nooijer, L., Marchand, C., and Reichart, G.-J.: New Caledonian Large Benthic Foraminiferal S/Ca signatures as sulfate seawater proxies: Results from controlled growth experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8443, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8443, 2026.

Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (OAE 2; Cenomanian–Turonian) is an interval of environmental perturbation associated with elevated CO₂, linked to the activity of the Caribbean Large Igneous Province. It represents a natural experiment for investigating the response of marine organisms, including calcareous nannoplankton, to extreme oceanic disruption. This study focuses on Eprolithus floralis, a nannolith with cooler surface water affinity. Previous morphometric analyses documented size and morphological changes of E. floralis across OAE 2 in the Eastbourne section (UK). To assess whether this signal is global and to explore the drivers, we investigated the size, morphology, and abundance of E. floralis across: Clot Chevalier (France), Novara di Sicilia (Italy) -up to peak B- and Tarfaya (Morocco). Our results indicate that the morphometric and morphological response of E. floralis to OAE 2 consist of reproducible signals, although modulated by local paleoceanographic conditions. A reduction in mean total diameter during OAE 2 is observed in all sections, with minimum values at peak B of the δ13C, or slightly later at Tarfaya. Only at Novara di Sicilia E. floralis displays reduced dimensions prior to OAE 2. A post-OAE 2 size increase is observed in all records. Two morphotypes, spiky and rounded previously identified at Eastbourne, occur in all studied sections and show broadly similar patterns thus excluding a diagenetic control on nannolith morphology. Rounded E. floralis increases in abundance immediately prior to the onset of OAE 2 and dominates throughout the event (>50%), whereas spiky forms prevail in pre- and post-OAE 2 intervals. The spiky morphotype is larger than the rounded morphotype and, consequently, variations in total mean size reflect changes in morphotype dominance. Interestingly, the size offset between morphotypes varies geographically, being smaller at Eastbourne and Clot Chevalier (ca.0.2 μm) and larger at Novara di Sicilia and Tarfaya (ca.0.5 μm). No correspondence is observed between E. floralis size or abundance with the Plenus Cold Event, suggesting that temperature was not a primary control. Notably E. floralis is more common at Novara di Sicilia and Tarfaya possibly due to different oceanographic settings, being the two sections located in upwelling areas. We conclude that E. floralis responded globally to OAE 2 with size reduction and change in dominance of morphotype abundance. Size variation is comparable to that documented in Biscutum constans coccoliths. This correspondence suggests a common sensitivity to peak environmental stress, potentially linked to elevated CO₂ levels and increased concentrations of toxic trace metals. Importantly, regional variability provides insights into the adaptive strategies of E. floralis. The predominance of smaller, rounded morphotypes at Novara di Sicilia and Tarfaya suggests a preference for unstable conditions, such as those of upwelling. We speculate that the rounded morphotype may reflect a r-like strategy whereas the larger spiky were better adapted to more stable conditions.

How to cite: Bottini, C., Erba, E., and Tungo, E.:  The response of calcareous nannofossil Eprolithus floralis to Oceanic Anoxic Event 2 (Cenomanian-Turonian, Late Cretaceous), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9070, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9070, 2026.

EGU26-9480 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Bayesian astrochronology and radioisotope geochronology reveal contrasting carbon-isotope and biotic turnovers across the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary in Tethys and Boreal realms 

Jihede Haj messaoud, Nicolas Thibault, Nicholas Boehm, Thomas Finkbeiner, and Frans van Buchem

The Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary, conventionally placed at the base of the Berriasian, remains one of the most contentious horizons in the Phanerozoic timescale because the basal Berriasian is difficult to correlate consistently across Austral, Tethyan, and Boreal realms. Recent refinements in calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy, notably the zonation proposed by Casellato and Erba (2021), together with emerging high-resolution carbon-isotope records from multiple basins, promise more robust global constraints on this transition. Although not tied to a single global event, the Jurassic–Cretaceous interval registers evolutionary turnover and reorganization of marine ecosystems, including shifts in carbonate production, ocean circulation, and floral assemblages, yet efforts to resolve their timing and drivers are hampered by fossil preservation/provincialism, stratigraphic discontinuities, and limited high‑precision geochronology.

The BH-02 well (207 m thick, Tithonian–Berriasian, Manifa and Sulaiy formations) in central Saudi Arabia offers a suitable archive to address these issues. High‑resolution calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy/counting, integrated with correlations to calpionellid and calcareous nannofossil biozonations in Kuwait, enables recognition of key bioevents across the Jurassic–Cretaceous transition, while complementary strontium isotope geochronology, detailed cyclostratigraphy, and Bayesian astrochronology refine the temporal resolution to less than 100 kyr. Within this integrated scheme, the δ¹³Ccarb record captures both the early Tithonian and Late Berriasian carbon‑isotope excursions, which are placed in a high‑resolution age model together with Nannofossil Calcification Events I and II and the Late Berriasian Nannoconus Event, thereby constraining the coupling of biotic and isotopic change along the southern Tethyan margin.

Cyclostratigraphic analysis of high-resolution gamma-ray and potassium logs (~20,000 data points) using multitaper spectral methods, evolutive harmonic analysis, correlation coefficient spectra, band-pass filtering, and wavelet analysis reveals a pervasive ~7 m cycle interpreted as long eccentricity (405 kyr). Extraction of 30 E405 cycles implies a duration of ~12.1 Myr for the studied interval, in close agreement with independent Sr-isotope estimates of ~11.9 Myr (137.9–149.8 Ma). Age–depth modelling is achieved using astroBayes, a Bayesian inversion framework that jointly assimilates astrochronologic and radioisotopic constraints to reduce interpolation uncertainties between dated horizons and to resolve subtle changes in sedimentation rate while considering prior information on sedimentation and potential hiatuses.

This integrated stratigraphic, geochemical, and astrochronologic framework provides a precisely constrained, orbitally calibrated reference section for the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary on the Arabian Plate. Comparison with coeval successions reveals contrasting carbon-isotope trends between the Tethyan and Boreal realms, reflecting a decoupling of oceanographic conditions through the J/K transition with recoupling during the Weissert Event, signaling a renewed phase of oceanic connectivity.

How to cite: Haj messaoud, J., Thibault, N., Boehm, N., Finkbeiner, T., and van Buchem, F.: Bayesian astrochronology and radioisotope geochronology reveal contrasting carbon-isotope and biotic turnovers across the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary in Tethys and Boreal realms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9480, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9480, 2026.

EGU26-10513 | Orals | SSP4.5

Revision of Amazonian Perissocytheridea Species (Ostracoda, Crustacea) from the Pebas Formation (Middle Miocene) 

Maria Belen Zamudio, Martin Gross, Andres Salazar-Rios, and Werner E. Piller

During the Miocene (c. 23–10 Ma), a large wetland with shallow lakes and swamps developed in Western Amazonia (Hoorn et al., 2010). This predominantly aquatic environment – the ‘Pebas system’ – was colonized by rapidly evolving endemic invertebrate faunas, with mollusks and ostracods being the best documented (e.g., Wesselingh, 2006; Purper, 1979).

Over the last four decades, ‘Pebasian’ ostracods have been thoroughly studied. However, most research has focused on the genus Cyprideis Jones, which typically constitutes the bulk of the ostracod fauna (Purper, 1979; Muñoz-Torres et al., 1998; Gross et al., 2014).

In this study, we focus on the genus Perissocytheridea Stephenson (Cytheridae). The material examined consists of approximately 1,400 mostly well-preserved valves and carapaces. These specimens come from 14 fertile samples, collected from eight outcrops in the Iquitos region (Peru), which cover the Middle Miocene mollusk biozones MZ4–MZ8 (Wesselingh et al., 2006).

Eight taxa were identified. The most abundant are Perissocytheridea ornellasae and Perissocytheridea? elongata, followed by Perissocytheridea sp. 1, Perissocytheridea sp. 2 and fewer specimens of P. acuminata and Perissocytheridea sp. 3. All taxa appear to be endemic to the Pebas system. Notably, the specimens assigned to Perissocytheridea sp. 2 and Perissocytheridea sp. 3 display ‘inverse’ hinges. Perissocytheridea sp. 2 is recorded only in the stratigraphically oldest sections (mollusk zone MZ4; Boca Napo and Santa Teresa localities), together with Perissocytheridea sp. 1. In contrast, P. ornellasae occurs in samples from several localities and biozones (MZ5, MZ7 and MZ8), and is associated with P.? elongata in MZ7 (Puerto Almendras) and with P. acuminata in MZ8 (Palo Seco). The later was only recorded from one sample in the youngest biozone (MZ8). Unfortunately, in the samples analysed from MZ6 we not recorded Perissocytheridea.

Several intraspecific variations were observed. For example, specimens assigned to P.? elongata from MZ7 (Puerto Almendras and Tamshiyacu) exhibit smooth, reticulated, or strongly ornate surfaces, as well as the presence of nodes, which appear to have an ecophenotypic origin. Additionally, analyses of the ontogeny of P. ornellasae, Perissocytheridea sp. 1 and Perissocytheridea sp. 2, suggests that it is possible to distinguish a form of incipient sexual dimorphism in the final instars.

Although numerous references exist to ‘Pebasian’ ostracods with ‘inverse’ hinges, all previously documented cases correspond to the genus Cyprideis (Purper & Pinto, 1983, 1985; Whatley et al., 1998; Gross et al., 2013, 2014). The presence of such ‘inverse’ forms may indicate reproductive isolation and, consequently, sympatric speciation, as suggested for the ‘Cyprideis species flock’ (Gross et al., 2014). Nevertheless, the trigger for the occurrence of these ‘inverse’ forms in ‘Pebasian’ ostracods remains unknown.

How to cite: Zamudio, M. B., Gross, M., Salazar-Rios, A., and Piller, W. E.: Revision of Amazonian Perissocytheridea Species (Ostracoda, Crustacea) from the Pebas Formation (Middle Miocene), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10513, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10513, 2026.

The uplift of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is considered a major driver of the Cenozoic environmental evolution in Asia. The paleoenvironment reconstruction of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau provides valuable insights into the study of uplift history and environmental evolution of the plateau. The continuous Cenozoic sediments preserved in the Lunpola Basin, northern Tibet, make it an ideal area for investigating the paleoenvironment of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. However, there is still no consensus on the reconstructions of paleoelevation and paleoclimate or on the chronological assignment of their corresponding results. This study focuses on the lacustrine strata of the Dingqinghu Formation in the Lunpola Basin. We combine U-Pb zircon dating with biostratigraphic evidence to place the study section within the Late Oligocene, providing a well-constrained chronological framework. The sporopollen data reveal a paleovegetation landscape consisting of coniferous forest in high-midlands, mixed coniferous and broad-leaved forests in mid-lowlands, and shrubs and herbs distributed within forests. This indicates an obvious vertical vegetation zonation in the Lunpola area. On the basis of sporopollen records, we defined three sporopollen zones and identified a paleoclimatic change characterized by an initial humid phase, a subsequent shift to relatively arid condition, and a final return to a humid climate. The paleoelevation reconstruction carried out on this basis enables us to exclude plateau uplift as a primary driver of the climate change in this period. Furthermore, the observed coupling between the arid trend and contemporaneous global temperature change might suggest that this aridification is linked to the global climate change associated with Antarctic ice-sheet expansion.

How to cite: Deng, J. and Fu, X.: Paleoenvironment of Late Oligocene in the central Qinghai-Tibet Plateau: Insights from Sporopollen Fossils, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10890, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10890, 2026.

The genus Coccolithus includes some of the most widespread and abundant coccolithophore species during the early Eocene. While the early Eocene saw major evolutionary turnover within the calcareous nannoplankton, in particular during the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum (EECO; ~53–49 Ma), Coccolithus remained consistently common throughout the extremely warm EECO and the subsequent cooling interval. Notably, early Eocene Coccolithus exhibited substantially broader morphological variability than its modern representatives, spanning wide ranges in coccolith size and shape. This high intrageneric diversity may in part explain why this taxon remained ecologically prominent. Different Coccolithus species/morphotypes and their specific traits could reveal what selective pressures favoured this group across climatic extremes. Here, we quantify intrageneric morphological variability by combining species-level assemblage counts with coccolith biometry in 53 deep-sea sediment samples from ODP Site 1258 (Demerara Rise, equatorial Atlantic). This dataset provides an opportunity to better understand the adaptive flexibility and resilience of the Coccolithus lineage during the early Eocene. For example, preliminary data reveal that small species were more common (C. pauxillus and C. pelagicus <5 μm) during the EECO, while a shift towards larger species and morphotypes (e.g., C. formosus and C. pelagicus >5 μm) is observed afterwards. Supported by biometric analysis, these patterns indicate long-term community shifts in mean cell size and associated physiological strategies under prolonged greenhouse conditions.

How to cite: Asanbe, J. and Henderiks, J.: Quantifying intrageneric morphological variability and evolution in Coccolithus across the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum in the equatorial Atlantic (ODP Site 1258), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12330, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12330, 2026.

EGU26-12898 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Non-linear ecological responses of Ostracod communities to multi-metal pollution based on tolerance-weighted indices from the Vedaranyam shelf, Bay of Bengal, India. 

Prakasheswar Palanichamy, Sivapriya Vimal Kanth, Sabari Nathan Chellamuthu, Ramya Subramani, and Shaik Mohammad Hussain

Benthic ostracods serve as effective bioindicators of sediment quality and metal enrichment in coastal systems, but quantitative tools linking their community structure to multi-metal contamination are limited. This study develops and validates two ostracod-based biotic indices, the Ostracoda Assemblage Pollution Index (OAPI) and its reduced form, Mini-OAPI, to evaluate benthic ecological responses to metal contamination on the Vedaranyam shelf, Bay of Bengal. Twenty-eight surface sediment samples were analysed for Fe, Mn, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Zn concentrations along with ostracod assemblage data. The indices integrate species diversity, functional guild composition, and normalized pollution load to produce a tolerance-weighted ecological deviation measure. The OAPI includes diversity, evenness, guild shift, and pollution load, performs best in data-rich settings, while Mini-OAPI shows stable diagnostic behaviour under data-limited conditions and consistently captures ecological responses along contamination gradients. Normalization to a 0-1 scale and the use of standardized disturbance classes (Low = 0.00-0.33; Moderate = 0.34-0.66; High = 0.67-1.00) ensure comparability across marine and estuarine systems. A unimodal diversity-pollution pattern consistent with the Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis and weak Cu-organic associations indicate complex metal-biota interactions. These indices provide transferable, tolerance-weighted tools for ecological assessment and understanding ecosystem responses to environmental change.

Keywords: Ostracoda Assemblage Pollution Index (OAPI); Mini-OAPI; benthic bioindicators; non-linear ecological modelling; Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis (IDH); copper paradox; marine pollution assessment.

 

How to cite: Palanichamy, P., Vimal Kanth, S., Chellamuthu, S. N., Subramani, R., and Hussain, S. M.: Non-linear ecological responses of Ostracod communities to multi-metal pollution based on tolerance-weighted indices from the Vedaranyam shelf, Bay of Bengal, India., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12898, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12898, 2026.

EGU26-14021 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Impact of temperature and salinity on the morphological variability of lab-grown Cyprideis torosa (Jones, 1850) (Ostracoda) 

Paulina Kukacka, Christopher Berndt, Isolde Berger, Matthias Nagy, Romana Melis, Gianguido Salvi, and Petra Heinz

Keywords: Culture experiment, Size, Proxy development, Phenotypic adaptation

The carapace of ostracods (small crustaceans) protects their soft body from harsh conditions. Its size can vary distinctly within one species but major causes for this variability remain uncertain. Cyprideis torosa is a widespread brackish water ostracod-species with high morphological variability, making it a well-suited study object relating environmental conditions quantitatively to its morphology. Since this species lives in habitats with great spatio-temporal variability, lab-cultures are highly valuable for studying its phenotypic adaptation to different conditions.

In June 2024 location water and sediment samples were collected from the Marano Lagoon (North Italy). The samples provided three levels of salinity (PSU 7.7, 16.1 and 29.6) which were used to start experimental cultures (sediment from PSU 7.7 served as origin of all ostracod specimens). All three levels of salinity were incubated at four different constant temperature conditions ranging from 15 to 35°C. One set of cultures was placed outside the building, being exposed to fluctuating temperatures. Size and other morphological features were analysed to identify specific environmental influences on its morphological characteristics.

Our study reveals that temperature and salinity play an important role on size variability and variance of the carapace. Individuals living in higher salinities and cooler temperatures grow bigger. The opposite is true for extreme conditions (high temperatures) or low salinities. While high temperatures cause significantly smaller carapaces at high salinities, they lead only to higher variances in lower salinities without affecting the average size. The average size of one outside culture (PSU 7.7) reveals that size may be unaffected by diurnal changes. The results were compared to C. torosa valves collected from ostracods grown in the lagoon (PSU 22.7). The length of the individuals of this sample correlates best with rather extreme conditions in our cultures. The length/height ratio of left valves of natural environments (such as lagoon sample, permanent culture and naturally grown ostracod culture starters) are similarly low to each other, corresponding only to the experimental grown ostracods in high mesohaline salinity at 30°C, while other experimental grown individuals show a higher ratio in average.

Our results indicate that salinity as well as temperature influence the size of C. torosa simultaneously and requires further morphological analysis to separate these factors.

How to cite: Kukacka, P., Berndt, C., Berger, I., Nagy, M., Melis, R., Salvi, G., and Heinz, P.: Impact of temperature and salinity on the morphological variability of lab-grown Cyprideis torosa (Jones, 1850) (Ostracoda), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14021, 2026.

EGU26-14225 | Orals | SSP4.5

Deeper-water gypsum formation constrained by micropaleontology and stable isotopes in the Burdigalian, northern Tethyan Seaway (Qom Formation) 

Masoud Sharifi-Yazdi, Iuliana Vasiliev, Kateřina Schӧpfer, and Michael Wagreich

The Qom Formation was deposited in the Central Basin of Iran, representing the northern part of the Tethyan Seaway during the Burdigalian (Lower Miocene). This study focuses on the deep marine marls of member e of the Qom succession in the Dochah section. This study integrates lithostratigraphy, calcareous nannofossils, oxygen and carbon isotopes of planktonic foraminifera, and oxygen isotopes measured on gypsum crystals. Deposition of evaporites started in the lower Burdiglian in the basin, increasing upwards. During middle to late Burdigalian, salinity increased in the basin due to tectonic activity and a relatively warm and definitely arid climate. The negative water budget resulted in precipitation and sedimentation of gypsum and halite. The oxygen isotope data measured on gypsum crystals indicate a primary, syn-depositional origin for these evaporite minerals. In addition, the oxygen measured on the planktonic foraminifera (average: -4.18‰ VPDB) indicate that the biota lived in a surface water with relatively normal salinity. We concluded that the evaporites were formed on the sea-bottom due to an increasing bottom water salinity under increased water column stratification. The Qom Basin shows similarities to the deep Mediterranean basin during the Messinian Salinity Crisis, where largest part of the evaporites precipitated under water from a deeper-water brine with increasing salinity in a stratified water column. However, the high diversity of calcareous nannoplankton coexistent with planktic foraminifera observed in the Qom succession is interpreted as reflecting high-frequency, low-amplitude sea-level fluctuations within the Milankovitch band with establishment of a temporary connection to the open-marine realm. These oscillations alternated between more open-marine conditions and short-lived stressed intervals, during which basin restriction, enhanced evaporation and episodic evaporite deposition occurred. Subsequently, thin evaporite layers that formed on the seafloor, were later fragmented and dispersed within the marls during diagenesis. Overall, this study provides new insights into the detailed paleoenvironmental evolution of the northern part of Tethyan seaway.

Keywords: Qom Formation, Paleosalinity, Tethyan Seaway, Evaporites, Nannoplankton

How to cite: Sharifi-Yazdi, M., Vasiliev, I., Schӧpfer, K., and Wagreich, M.: Deeper-water gypsum formation constrained by micropaleontology and stable isotopes in the Burdigalian, northern Tethyan Seaway (Qom Formation), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14225, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14225, 2026.

EGU26-14640 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Planktic foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes across the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO, ~40 Ma): implications for photosymbiosis and community change in the Atlantic Ocean 

Silvia Sigismondi, Alexandra Auderset, Michael Henehan, Alfredo Martínez-García, and Valeria Luciani

The Cenozoic Era provides a key framework for investigating how ocean oxygenation and marine productivity responded to past global warming events, offering valuable analogues for ongoing and future climate change. Here, we integrate foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes (FB-δ¹⁵N) with stable carbon and oxygen isotopes (δ¹³C, δ¹⁸O) to reconstruct nitrogen-cycle dynamics, water-column oxygenation, and photosymbiotic behaviour in planktic foraminifera across the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO; ~40 Ma), a major greenhouse interval lasting ~500–600 kyr. The dataset is based on planktic foraminifera from two Atlantic sites spanning contrasting latitudes: subtropical ODP Site 1051 and subantarctic ODP Site 702. FB-δ¹⁵N records from both sites show a marked and coherent decrease during the MECO, reaching minimum values at peak warming. This trend indicates a general reduction in water-column denitrification, a process that generally occurs under extremely low oxygen conditions, suggesting that prolonged warming was not associated with widespread deoxygenation  in the global ocean .  These results are consistent with patterns observed during other Cenozoic hyperthermals (e.g. PETM, EECO, MCO) and imply that enhanced deep-water ventilation and/or reduced biological productivity counteracted warming-driven oxygen loss. Paired δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O data confirm persistent vertical habitat partitioning among planktic foraminiferal taxa, despite partial convergence in δ¹⁸O values during the MECO, indicating upper-ocean thermal homogenization and temporary niche compression. This preservation of depth-related ecological structure supports the interpretation of interspecific FB-δ¹⁵N offsets as reflecting distinct symbiotic strategies. Lower δ¹⁵N values in Acarinina and Globigerinatheka relative to Subbotina confirm their photosymbiotic nature, while systematic differences between the two symbiotic genera suggest dinoflagellate symbionts in Acarinina and non-dinoflagellate algae (e.g. diatoms or coccolithophorids) in Globigerinatheka. The contrasting evolutionary trajectories of these taxa, recording a decline for Acarinina and expansion for Globigerinatheka during and after the MECO, likely reflect differences in symbiont flexibility and sensitivity to photic-zone environmental change. Overall, this study provides the first reconstruction of the nitrogen cycle across the MECO and demonstrates the value of FB-δ¹⁵N, combined with δ¹³C–δ¹⁸O constraints, as a dual proxy for local and global denitrification and planktic foraminiferal ecology during sustained greenhouse warming.

How to cite: Sigismondi, S., Auderset, A., Henehan, M., Martínez-García, A., and Luciani, V.: Planktic foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes across the Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO, ~40 Ma): implications for photosymbiosis and community change in the Atlantic Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14640, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14640, 2026.

EGU26-14963 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Effects of heavy metal pollution (Fe, Mn, Ni) on the large benthic foraminifera Amphistegina lobifera: implications for metabolic function and coevolved host-endosymbiont interactions 

Leon Plakolm, Matthias Nagy, Tina Palme, Wolfgang Wanek, Michael Schagerl, Jarosław Tyszka, and Michael Lintner

Foraminifera are remarkably diverse unicellular eukaryotes that inhabit almost all marginal marine environments and perform crucial functions for a multitude of biotic and abiotic processes. Large benthic foraminifera (LBF) such as Amphistegina lobifera are essential contributors to marine carbon and nitrogen cycling, carbon sequestration, and overall biomass in their corresponding ecosystems. Furthermore, many LBF - including A. lobifera – have obligate photosymbiotic relationships with microalgae (predominantly diatoms of the family Fragilariaceae), which assist in the formation of the foraminifera’s calcareous shell.

Shallow marine habitats are often severely impacted by anthropogenic activities due to the introduction of multiple organic and inorganic pollutants by agricultural, domestic, and industrial sources. Among these pollutants, heavy metals are particularly problematic because of their toxicity and long-lasting impact on affected environments. We exposed 140 A. lobifera individuals to various concentrations of selected metals (Fe, Mn, Ni) to evaluate possible effects on their metabolism. During incubation, the cultures were provided with 13C- and 15N-labeled microalgae as a food source, which allows for the quantification of food uptake and metabolic activity via isotope-ratio mass spectrometry. For assessing the health of the photobionts, both the maximum quantum efficiency of photosystem II and photoactive area were measured via pulse-amplitude modulation fluorescence imaging. This novel combination of analytical methods allowed us to examine the complex host-endosymbiont reactions to heavy metal pollution in detail.

Within the first 10 days of contaminant exposure, almost all incubated individuals exhibited a reduction in C and N ingestion, as well as a decline in photosynthetic area and maximum quantum yield. Conversely, after 15 days of incubation an increase in food C and especially N uptake was noticeable in certain cultures, while the activity and health of the photobionts further declined. This metal-specific decoupling between host and photosymbiont implies differential stress tolerance of the partners towards environmental pollutants and exemplifies the necessity for further research in order to fully understand the implications of anthropogenic pollution in coastal marine areas for marine microbial communities.

How to cite: Plakolm, L., Nagy, M., Palme, T., Wanek, W., Schagerl, M., Tyszka, J., and Lintner, M.: Effects of heavy metal pollution (Fe, Mn, Ni) on the large benthic foraminifera Amphistegina lobifera: implications for metabolic function and coevolved host-endosymbiont interactions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14963, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14963, 2026.

EGU26-14993 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Species- and size-dependent δ¹¹B signatures of abrupt climate events in the Equatorial Atlantic 

Allana Azevedo, Michael J. Henehan, Francisco J. Jiménez-Espejo, and Luigi Jovane

Boron isotopes (δ¹¹B) measured in planktonic foraminifera are widely used to reconstruct past surface ocean pH and atmospheric pCO₂, yet their application in tropical regions relied on understanding of species-specific ecology and size-dependent vital effects. Here we present new data from Globigerinoides ruber (sensu stricto) and Trilobatus sacculifer spanning the last ~60 kyr from Tropical Atlantic Ocean. Our dataset comprises paired analyses of multiple size fractions (200–250 µm, 250–300 µm, 300–355 µm, and ≥355–400 µm), which enabled an assessment of species’ vital effects and how they vary with size. During the Younger Dryas, Heinrich Stadial 1 and Heinrich Stadial 4, G. ruber varied from ~19.0–19.5‰ (200–250 µm), increased to ~19.0–20.0‰ (250–300 µm) and reached values up to ~20–21‰ in the largest studied size fraction (300-350 µm). This positive relationship between δ¹¹B and test size demonstrates a pronounced size-dependent enrichment, consistent with strong biological control and near-surface calcification. In contrast, T. sacculifer exhibits lower δ¹¹B values during the same intervals, ranging from ~18.5–19‰ (200–250 µm), 18.25-17.80 ‰ (250-300 µm), 18.2-19‰ (300-355 µm). Paired species analyses from identical depth horizons reveal persistent interspecific offsets, with G. ruber recording higher δ¹¹B values than T. sacculifer across all size fractions. These offsets are maintained throughout YD, HS1, and HS4. The magnitude of size-related offsets within each species (up to ~1‰) is comparable to the expected glacial–interglacial δ¹¹B signal, underscoring the first-order importance of size fraction. We conclude that robust δ¹¹B-based reconstructions in the Equatorial Atlantic require strict size-fraction control and species-specific ecological interpretation. These findings highlight that different planktonic foraminifera record distinct levels of the upper ocean carbonate system during periods of rapid climate change, providing new constraints on tropical ocean buffering during abrupt climate events.

Keywords: Boron Isotopes, Globigerinoides ruber, Trilobatus sacculifer, Tropical Atlantic Ocean

How to cite: Azevedo, A., J. Henehan, M., J. Jiménez-Espejo, F., and Jovane, L.: Species- and size-dependent δ¹¹B signatures of abrupt climate events in the Equatorial Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14993, 2026.

EGU26-15249 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Thrombolite reefs with archaeocyaths from the Fouanou syncline, Anti Atlas, Morocco: implications for early Paleozoic bioconstruction 

Asmaa El Bakhouch, Abdelfattah Azizi, Adeline Kerner, and Khadija El Hariri

The Cambrian microbial-dominated reefs, associated with archeocyaths, are considered to exhibit a style of bioconstruction similar to the Late Paleozoic microbial-sponge consortiums (James and Gravestock, 1990; Wood et al., 1993; Zhuravlev, 1996).

Microbial reefs from the Early Cambrian containing archeocyaths have been reported globally (Debrenne et al., 1989; Gandin & Debrenne, 2010). In the Anti-Atlas, stromatolite-dominated microbial reefs remained relatively stable until the Atdabanian (Lower Cambrian), after which they were replaced by thrombolitic reefs with archeocyaths that became widespread during this period (Álvaro & Debrenne, 2010). In the Fouanou syncline of the Western Anti-Atlas, thrombolite reefs with archeocyaths are more common in the subtidal limestones of the Igoudine Formation (the basal formation of the Tata Group), characterized by successive phases of reef growth, and separated by growth interruption surfaces (Azizi et al., 2022). These calcareous microbial thrombolites are tabular to dome-shaped, with dark micritic mesoclots of various sizes and shapes, with a maximum diameter of up to 20 mm, forming upward-growing dendritic structures. They contain numerous calcimicrobes, including Renalcis, aggregates of Epiphyton, and, to a lesser extent, tubes of Girvanella (Zhang et al., 2015). These calcimicrobes are associated with archeocyaths of irregular (more abundant) and regular (less abundant), small, dispersed inside and around these thrombolite reefs. Three genera of irregular archeocyaths, preserved in their growth position, have been identified: Dictyocyathus, Erismacoscinus, and Agastrocyathus.

The Cambrian reefs of the Western Anti-Atlas provide fascinating examples of early bioconstructions that illustrate the evolution of reef ecosystems and the interactions between microbial organisms and metazoans, showing significant morphological diversity influenced by environmental factors such as depth, hydrodynamics, as well as sedimentation and microbial influence (Gandin and Debrenne, 2010).

Keywords: Cambrian reef, thrombolites, archaeocyaths, microbial consortia, paleoenvironment, Western Anti-Atlas, Morocoo.

How to cite: El Bakhouch, A., Azizi, A., Kerner, A., and El Hariri, K.: Thrombolite reefs with archaeocyaths from the Fouanou syncline, Anti Atlas, Morocco: implications for early Paleozoic bioconstruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15249, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15249, 2026.

EGU26-15385 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Variability of oxygenation index in the Southwestern South Atlantic Ocean during Heinrich Stadial I based on geochemical proxies 

Maria Eduarda Santana, Allana Queiroz Azevedo, Fabrizio Frontalini, Francisco J. Jiménez-Espejo, Babette A. A. Hoogakker, Thauana R. Gonçalves, Jhulia Mulato, and Luigi Jovane

Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZ) are water layers characterized by low oxygen saturation state in response to a complex interplay of biological, chemical, and physical processes. Modern OMZs are typically found along the western side of continents (i.e., Arabian Sea, Eastern Pacific Ocean, Eastern Tropical Atlantic Ocean, and the Southeast South Atlantic Ocean). Low oxygen conditions can however be more widely prevalent in shallower, continental shelf environments. Here, we study the evolution of bottom water oxygen conditions of Brazil’s continental shelf Santos Basin from the Southeast Atlantic. The Santos Basin which is located near the Cabo Frio upwelling system. We reconstructed bottom water oxygen conditions using the enhanced Benthic Foraminifera Oxygen Index (EBFOI) using samples from the Santos Basin Slope core C4-GC-2 ( 25°51.519’S/ 45°30.685’W, 395 m water depth). These data are integrated with mineralogical analysis and oxygen and carbon stable isotope data from the benthic foraminifera Cibicidoides spp. The age model was constructed based on four radiocarbon dating samples, which covers most part of the Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1, 17.8–15.7 kyr). From 16.8 kyr to 16 kyr the continental shelf of Santos Basin was characterized by low oxic conditions as revealed by relatively low EBFOI values (1.9-5.3). The mineralogical analysis from the studied core revealed the presence of pyrite during this time interval, which together with geochemical proxy signatures, indicates low oxygenation of bottom-water conditions, with the development of localized anoxic microenvironments within the sediments. Notably, at 15.8 kyr marine oxygenation decreased to suboxic conditions (EBFOI = -20.3). Elevated δ¹⁸O values indicate cold conditions during HS1, likely associated with intensified upwelling, while low δ¹³C values are comparable to those recorded in Eastern Pacific intermediate waters during the same interval. The dominance of low-oxygen tolerant benthic foraminifera suggests reduced bottom-water oxygenation at ~395 m depth, consistent with a shoaling or expansion of the regional OMZ rather than methane seepage. These conditions were likely sustained by poor ventilation during HS1, limiting benthic foraminiferal diversity.

Keywords: Benthic Foraminifera Assemblage, Isotope Geochemistry, Oxygen Minimum Zone

How to cite: Santana, M. E., Queiroz Azevedo, A., Frontalini, F., J. Jiménez-Espejo, F., A. A. Hoogakker, B., R. Gonçalves, T., Mulato, J., and Jovane, L.: Variability of oxygenation index in the Southwestern South Atlantic Ocean during Heinrich Stadial I based on geochemical proxies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15385, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15385, 2026.

EGU26-15793 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

A closer look at benthic foraminifera shells – implications for biomineralization mechanisms 

Kushani Jayasoma, Dorrit Jacob, Laura Otter, Luiz Morales, Richard Wirth, and Anja Schreiber

The detailed biomineralization mechanisms of planktic and benthic foraminifera is still enigmatic
and a topic of active research. Much progress has been achieved in developing biomineralization
models for some benthic hyaline species (e.g. Erez, 2009; de Nooijer, 2014) and in discovering that
the original phase composition of planktic Orbulina universa (d’Orbigny, 1839) is metastable
vaterite and not calcite, supporting a non-classical crystallization pathway for this important
species (Jacob et al. 2017). It is, however, less clear to date whether these results can be replicated
in other foraminifera species and models for their formation can be generalized.

To extend our earlier studies on planktic species, we studied four species of benthic foraminifera
from the Australian Great Barrier Reef, namely Amphistegina lobifera (Larsen, 1976),
Baculogypsina sphaerulata (Parker and Jones, 1860), Calcarina capricornia (Mamo, 2016) and
Marginopora vertebralis (Quoy and Gaimard, 1830). Samples were collected alive and pulse
chase labelled with Sr in aquaculture before carrying out a detailed, multi-scale study of their
architecture. We used Electron Backscatter Diffraction, Nano-SIMS, Focussed Ion Beam assisted
Transmission Electron Microscopy, Micro-Raman Spectroscopy and Photo-induced Force
Microscopy (Otter et al. 2021) to elucidate and compare phase compositions, micro-architecture
and organic chemistry of the shells. Our results contribute to understand the details of
foraminiferal biomineralization and to develop a general model for shell formation across all
foraminifera species.

de Nooijer , L.J. et al. (2014). Biomineralization in perforate foraminifera. Earth-Science Reviews
135, 48-58.

Erez, J. (2003). The source of ions for biomineralization in foraminifera and their implications for
paleoceanographic proxies. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 54, 115-149.

Jacob, D.E. et al. (2017). Planktic foraminifera form their shells via metastable carbonate phases.
Nature Communications, 8, 1265

Otter, L.M. et al. (2021) Nanoscale Chemical Imaging by Photo‐Induced Force Microscopy:
Technical Aspects and Application to the Geosciences. Geostandards and Geoanalytical Research
45, 5-27.

How to cite: Jayasoma, K., Jacob, D., Otter, L., Morales, L., Wirth, R., and Schreiber, A.: A closer look at benthic foraminifera shells – implications for biomineralization mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15793, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15793, 2026.

EGU26-16070 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Large variability in planktic foraminiferal Mg/Ca and δ18O revealed by nearby surface sediments 

Ru-Yun Tung, Sze Ling Ho, Andrew M. Dolman, Thomas Laepple, Lukas Jonkers, Pei-Ting Lee, Chuan-Chou Shen, Pei-Ling Wang, and Takuya Itaki

Foraminiferal Mg/Ca and δ¹⁸O are widely used to reconstruct ocean temperatures. Comparisons between proxy-derived temperatures from surface sediments and modern gridded climatologies are commonly used to infer the recording season and habitat depth of planktic foraminifera, while down-core proxy variations are typically interpreted as reflecting past oceanographic changes at the site or region. Using these approaches requires the assumption that proxy-derived temperatures from a single site represent the mean hydrographic conditions of the corresponding spatial grid used in proxy–model or proxy–proxy comparisons. However, the extent to which this assumption holds across spatially distributed surface sediments remains poorly constrained. Sediment heterogeneity, sampling, and foraminiferal ecological processes could introduce additional variability into foraminiferal proxy data. To address these issues, here we estimated upper-ocean temperatures from the Mg/Ca ratio and δ18O of both surface and subsurface-dwelling foraminifera from multiple surface sediments within seven 1°×1° grids, which correspond to the typical spatial resolution of gridded climate fields, around the Okinawa Islands in the Northwest Pacific. The results suggest that the spread of Mg/Ca- and δ¹⁸O-derived temperatures within individual grid cells reaches up to ~4 °C, which is comparable to the typical glacial–interglacial temperature range in this region, despite the nearshore setting and lack of strong dynamic ocean processes. The Mg/Ca and δ¹⁸O-derived temperature variability differ among species, with subsurface dwellers exhibiting larger variability (~1.1 ºC, 1σ) than surface dwellers (~0.6 ºC, 1σ). To further characterize the contributions of individual processes to observed proxy variability, we used the forward model Sedproxy to simulate the variability induced by seasonal and depth occurrence of foraminifera. This variability is largely attributable to seasonal occurrence in surface-dwelling species, whereas in subsurface-dwelling species it cannot be explained by seasonality alone and likely also reflects variability in calcification depth within the upper thermocline, where temperatures change most rapidly with depth. In summary, our results attempt to quantify the contributions of ecological and sampling-related processes to proxy variability within a grid of nearby surface sediments. We therefore suggest that such variability provides an estimate of proxy uncertainty that should be taken into account in paleoceanographic reconstructions. While the magnitude may depend on regional setting, systematic assessments across regions and species are needed to better constrain proxy uncertainty and avoid over-interpreting proxy-derived temperature differences.

How to cite: Tung, R.-Y., Ho, S. L., Dolman, A. M., Laepple, T., Jonkers, L., Lee, P.-T., Shen, C.-C., Wang, P.-L., and Itaki, T.: Large variability in planktic foraminiferal Mg/Ca and δ18O revealed by nearby surface sediments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16070, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16070, 2026.

EGU26-16135 | Posters on site | SSP4.5

A 12,000-year record of dinoflagellate cysts from the Vancouver Island margin (NE Pacific): tracing past climatic, primary productivity, and oceanographic changes. 

Vera Pospelova, Zhen Li, Kenneth Neil Mertens, Alice Chang, and Yongsheng Wu

This study is the first to examine dinoflagellate cyst sedimentary records (core MD02–2496) from the latest Pleistocene to the late Holocene along the Vancouver Island margin (Li et al., 2025). We identified 14 autotrophic and 26 heterotrophic taxa and defined four dinoflagellate cyst zones related to paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic conditions. Zone I (~14–~11.6 cal kyr BP) showed the lowest marine primary productivity (PP), evidenced by the lowest total cyst concentrations and fluxes, with Brigantedinium spp. dominating the assemblages. This was likely a result of cooler conditions associated with glacial meltwater input and weak coastal upwelling. Zone II (~11.6–~10.6 cal kyr BP) displayed a slight increase in both total cyst concentrations and fluxes, alongside a rapid rise in Operculodinium centrocarpum sensu Wall and Dale 1966 and the highest abundances of Nematosphaeropsis labyrinthus. This zone was likely linked to reduced meltwater input and enhanced coastal upwelling, which promoted nearshore PP. Zone III (~10.6–~8.2 cal kyr BP) exhibited a rapid increase in PP, demonstrated by maximum total cyst concentrations and fluxes, as well as higher abundances of autotrophic taxa. This zone was interpreted to reflect a strengthened California Undercurrent and increased upwelling, coinciding with the highest insolation intensity. High abundances of Impagidinium during this time indicated more open ocean conditions. A sharp increase in Operculodinium centrocarpum with short processes around 9–8.2 cal kyr BP may relate to the 8.2 ka event and a deceleration in sea-level rise. Zone IV (~8.2–2.3 cal kyr BP) suggested gentle fluctuations in PP, with overall declines in total cyst concentrations and fluxes, reaching their lowest point around 8.0 cal kyr BP. This was followed by a slight increase at approximately 6.5 cal kyr BP, before stabilizing. After incorporating geochemical proxies from the same sediment core (Chang et al., 2008, 2014), we compared our findings with previously published reconstructions of climatic and oceanographic conditions along the western margin of North America. This comparison revealed spatial and temporal differences in marine PP and sea surface temperatures, especially between the northern and southern regions.

 

Li, Z., Pospelova, V., Mertens, K.N., Chang, A.S., We, Y. 2025. A 12,000-year dinoflagellate cyst record on the Vancouver Island margin, Canada: tracing past climatic, primary productivity and oceanographic conditions. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 667: 112876, 18 p. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2025.112876.

Chang, A.S., Pedersen, T.F., Hendy, I.L. 2008. Late Quaternary paleoproductivity history on the Vancouver Island margin, western Canada: a multiproxy geochemical study. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 45: 1283–1297. https://doi.org/10.1139/E08-038.

Chang, A.S., Pedersen, T.F., Hendy, I.L. 2014. Effects of productivity, glaciation, and ventilation on late Quaternary sedimentary redox and trace element accumulation on the Vancouver Island margin, western Canada. Paleoceanography, 29: 730–746. https://doi.org/10.1002/2013PA002581.

How to cite: Pospelova, V., Li, Z., Mertens, K. N., Chang, A., and Wu, Y.: A 12,000-year record of dinoflagellate cysts from the Vancouver Island margin (NE Pacific): tracing past climatic, primary productivity, and oceanographic changes., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16135, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16135, 2026.

BENTHONIC FORAMINIFERA AND GEOCHEMICAL TRACERS AS INDICATORS OF THE ENVIROMENTAL HEALTH OF LA PAZ LAGOON, B.C.S.

 

Geological Oceanography.

Magallanes Cordova Karla Grisel¹, Sánchez González Alberto².

¹ Faculty of Marine Biology, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, La Paz, B.C.S., ²Centro Interdisciplinario De Ciencias Marinas del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, La Paz, B.C.S.

Kama_22@alu.uabcs.mx, alsanchezg@ipn.mx

 

Abstract. The health of transitional marine environments can often be compromised by inputs of particulate and dissolved material from runoff originating in urban settlements adjacent to coastal zones. In the present study, the abundance of benthic foraminifera was analyzed, the mean grain size was determined, and the contents of organic carbon and calcium carbonate were quantified in two sediment cores collected from the La Paz Lagoon, with the aim of inferring the environmental health conditions of the area. The absence of benthic foraminifera in both sediment cores may be associated with unfavorable environmental conditions. Organic carbon content ranged from 0.2 to 1.1%, showing a decrease with increasing sediment depth. Calcium carbonate content ranged from 0.3% to 0.9%, with variations of approximately 0.20% throughout the core depth. Mean grain size showed a predominance of fine sands (60%–80%). Mean grain size exhibited a decrease from the base to the upper part of both cores. The absence of benthic foraminifera suggests unfavorable environmental conditions and is associated with the decrease in organic carbon and calcium carbonate values, indicating that their availability may not be sufficient to support benthic fauna. A significant reduction is evident compared to the results obtained in 2024 by Sánchez and Gómez. The predominant sediments are fine sand with little silt, which have a reduced capacity to retain organic matter, thereby affecting the feeding of these organisms and confirming the low sedimentary quality. The current absence of foraminifera indicates that conditions have worsened beyond the tolerance of stress-related species such as the genera Ammonia and Elphidium, which previously accounted for more than 80% of dominance.

 

Keywords: Organic carbon, Calcium carbonate, Sediment, Cores, Isotopes.

How to cite: Magallanes, K.: Benthonic foraminifera and geochemical tracers as indicators of the enviromental health of La Paz lagoon, B.C.S., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16595, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16595, 2026.

EGU26-17237 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Revisiting Holocene North Pacific Intermediate Water ventilation through the lens of radiolarian morphometric analysis 

Zhi Dong, Xuefa Shi, Jianjun Zou, and Yanguang Liu

Understanding intermediate-depth ventilation processes in the North Pacific during past warm periods is essential for assessing the climatic role of ocean circulation dynamics, which significantly influence global climate change and the carbon cycle. Over the last two decades, considerable efforts have focused on understanding the evolution of North Pacific Intermediate Water (NPIW) during the Holocene (~11,700 years to present), providing the background climate state for modern anthropogenic global warming. While modern NPIW primarily ventilates from the Okhotsk Sea, the Holocene ventilation history of Okhotsk Sea Intermediate Water (OSIW) still remains unresolved: epibenthic δ13C records suggest a 30–50% reduction in oxygenation during the Holocene optimum, whereas most benthic foraminiferal-based oxygen concentrations and radiolarian assemblages indicate well-ventilated conditions in the mid-Holocene. To resolve this discrepancy, this study reconstructs the OSIW evolution pattern from its source region (the Okhotsk Sea northern shelf) using the radiolarian assemblages, revealing an evolution pattern consistent with prior radiolarian reconstructions. Meanwhile, we introduce a novel quantitative approach—Cycladophora davisiana morphometric parameters—providing, to our knowledge, the first time series of C. davisiana size distributions. New radiolarian size data demonstrate that mid-Holocene peaks in C. davisiana abundance are not primarily driven by food supply (vital effects), supporting the hypothesis of well-ventilated OSIW due to reduced freshwater input and saltier surface water. These findings not only advance quantitative methods in radiolarian-based micropaleontology but also help reconcile the intermediate-water ventilation conundrum in the Okhotsk Sea since the Holocene.

How to cite: Dong, Z., Shi, X., Zou, J., and Liu, Y.: Revisiting Holocene North Pacific Intermediate Water ventilation through the lens of radiolarian morphometric analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17237, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17237, 2026.

EGU26-17585 | Orals | SSP4.5

Middle to Late Miocene paleoceanographic evolution of the southern Indian Ocean (ODP Site 752) inferred from nannofossil assemblages and carbon isotopes  

Xabier Puentes Jorge, Arianna V. Del Gaudio, Werner E. Piller, David De Vleeschouwer, Tamara Hechemer, and Gerald Auer

The Middle to Late Miocene constitutes a critical time interval on a global scale. The continental reorganization that occurred during this time caused the establishment of a near-modern monsoonal wind system in the Indian Ocean (IO). Furthermore, this period is characterised by the succession of climatic scenarios linked to the Middle Miocene Climatic Transition (MMCT) and the subsequent northward shift of the Westerlies region during the Late Miocene. How these processes affected and interactedi with the surface ocean dynamics in the southern IO remains poorly understood. In this regard, Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 752, located on the west flank of Broken Ridge (30° 53.475ˈS/93° 34.652ˈE), constitutes a key location to investigate how the aforementioned processes interacted with the surface current in the eastern sector of the southern IO across the Middle to Late Miocene.

Changes in the nannofossil assemblage between 7.31 and 16.06 Ma at Site 752 were evaluated to ascertain variations in the surface ocean conditions. A total of 122 samples (temporal resolution of ~60 kyr) were analysed for this purpose. The clustering ordination method UPGMA (Bray-Curtis) revealed a total of 5 clusters (Cluster 1-5). Cluster 5 was additionally divided into two sub-clusters (Cluster 5a-5b). The oceanographic conditions were inferred based on the abundance of the main nannofossil species constituting the clusters: Reticulofenestra minuta, Calcidiscus leptoporus, Coccolithus pelagicus, Reticulofenestra haqii, Reticulofenestra producta, Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilicus, and Reticulofenestra perplexa. Subsequently, the assemblage data were compared with a set of global climatic and geochemical data to ascertain the effect of global processes on the regional oceanographic configuration across the Middle to Late Miocene.

Total organic carbon (TOC) and Total Inorganic Carbon (TIC) were measured to ascertain variation in the carbon flux to the ocean floor. Additionally, bulk, organic, and benthic foraminiferal δ13C analyses were performed in order to track productivity changes and variations in the nutrient cycle during the studied time interval in the southern IO and compared with the observed variations in the nannofossil assemblage. Benthic δ13C was measured on two foraminifera species (Lobatula wuellerstorfi and Cibicidoides mundulus).

Our data indicate that the surface water of the southern IO was characterised by low nutrient availability and high temperature conditions during the Middle Miocene. After the MMCT, the surface ocean experienced an increase in nutrient availability, which was concomitant with a decrease in δ18O. Maximum surface ocean nutrient conditions were recorded after ~9.9 Ma, coeval with the establishment of the Late Miocene Cooling. A comparison between the nannofossil assemblage data at Site 752 and eNd records available in the literature confirmed the hypothesis that warm water input from the Pacific Ocean into the southern IO increased between ~10.7 – 9.9 Ma. Furthermore, the comparison of the assemblage data against δ13C, TOC, and TIC measured at ODP Site 752 allowed us to disentangle the local processes driving changes in the IO surface water conditions.

How to cite: Puentes Jorge, X., Del Gaudio, A. V., Piller, W. E., De Vleeschouwer, D., Hechemer, T., and Auer, G.: Middle to Late Miocene paleoceanographic evolution of the southern Indian Ocean (ODP Site 752) inferred from nannofossil assemblages and carbon isotopes , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17585, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17585, 2026.

EGU26-17972 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Diffusion-reaction modelling to predict the boron isotope composition of photosymbiont species O. universa from observed physiological fluxes 

Guy F. Morley, Gavin L. Foster, David Evans, Tali L. Babila, Charles B. Kaplan, Thomas B. Chalk, Julie Meilland, and Amy E. Maas

The boron isotope composition (δ11B) of planktic foraminifera tests is primarily controlled by ambient seawater pH and is therefore a well-established proxy for reconstructing surface ocean carbonate chemistry in the geological past. Reconstructions of past seawater pH from planktic foraminifera underpin estimates of atmospheric pCO2 over geological time and have driven recent advances in using past climate states to improve projections of Earth’s future climate. However, biological “vital effects” necessitate empirical, species-specific, δ11B-pH proxy calibrations for accurate pH (and pCO2) palaeo-reconstructions. Specifically, physiological processes including respiration, photosynthesis and calcification alter the pH of the diffusive boundary layer (DBL) surrounding living foraminifera. Given it is this pH that is thought to be recorded by foraminferal calcite δ11B, shell composition typically deviates from what is predicted based upon equilibrium seawater borate δ11B. This can be mechanically understood using diffusion-reaction modelling, which predicts pH and associated boron systematics within the DBL, and thus the expected δ11B at the shell surface, if respiration, photsynthesis and calcification fluxes are known. Here we report modelled pH and δ11B of individual O. universa specimens using respiration and photosynthesis rates calculated from direct observations using light-dark microelectrode and respiration chamber measurements of [O2] within the DBL. Together with modelled DBL pH/δ11B, these provide valuable insight into the drivers of species-specific and inter-specimen offsets between δ11B of foraminiferal calcite δ11B and seawater borate, addressing a critical limitation in reconstructing past seawater pH, particularly during greenhouse high-CO2 intervals, when vital effects and metabolic behaviour may have differed from the present. Ultimately, this work opens avenues to reconstruct past changes in seawater pH using single shell δ11B analysis, providing a methodology to significantly improve the temporal resolution of palaeo-pH and CO2 records relative to traditional, monospecific, bulk population analyses.

How to cite: Morley, G. F., Foster, G. L., Evans, D., Babila, T. L., Kaplan, C. B., Chalk, T. B., Meilland, J., and Maas, A. E.: Diffusion-reaction modelling to predict the boron isotope composition of photosymbiont species O. universa from observed physiological fluxes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17972, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17972, 2026.

EGU26-18014 | Orals | SSP4.5

Temporal and spatial sensitivity of foraminifera-based paleobathymetry proxies: an Early-Middle Pleistocene Transition case 

Anna Arrigoni, Werner E. Piller, Matthias Kranner, Briony Mamo, and Gerald Auer

The study of sedimentary basins´ evolution, ocean circulation patterns, inter-basin connectivity and past marine ecosystems´ spatial distribution often relies on paleobathymetric reconstructions. Foraminiferal abundance and assemblage data can be powerful proxies to unravel the paleodepth history of a given location. In this study, we compare different routinely-used foraminifera-based paleodepth proxies, including the ratio between planktic and benthic foraminifera (P/B ratio), as well as habitat depth ranges of benthic foraminiferal taxa. The respective transfer functions were subsequently applied on a ~100 m sedimentary sequence, at International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Site U1460. The targeted IODP Site is situated near the shelf break of the Southwestern Australian continental margin and the selected interval recorded approximately ~450 kyr of glacial-interglacial sea-level variability spanning the Early-Middle Pleistocene Transition (EMPT; 1.25-0.6 Ma). The EMPT, characterized by the transition from a 41-kyr to a 100-kyr glacial-interglacial cyclicity and amplified glacio-eustatic fluctuations, provided the ideal framework for determining: i) the paleodepth evolution of the continental shelf; ii) the temporal and spatial sensitivity of these proxies to the glacial-interglacial forcing. Collectively, the analyzed proxies revealed a deepening of the continental shelf before the onset of Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 24, followed by a progressive, step-wise shallowing trend. Our research also highlighted the effectiveness and limitations of foraminifera-based paleodepth proxies in a shallow-water setting, where ecological variability exerts a dominant role on foraminiferal assemblages. We observed that the ratio of planktic to benthic foraminifera and its derived paleodepth curves consistently track the global glacial-interglacial sea-level variability. Nevertheless, the calculated absolute depth values are unrealistically high for a continental shelf setting, likely implying the overlapping of an ecological signal dominating the P/B ratio. Conversely, absolute paleodepth values derived solely from the benthic foraminifera depth ranges reflected more realistic bathymetric estimates for a carbonate ramp than those provided by the P/B ratio. However, this approach failed to resolve the glacial-interglacial cyclicity due to a too broad depth zonation of the total benthic assemblage. For a better depth resolution, a more specific selection of benthic taxa is necessary.

How to cite: Arrigoni, A., Piller, W. E., Kranner, M., Mamo, B., and Auer, G.: Temporal and spatial sensitivity of foraminifera-based paleobathymetry proxies: an Early-Middle Pleistocene Transition case, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18014, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18014, 2026.

EGU26-18462 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Linking surface and deep-ocean ecosystem dynamics across the mid-Brunhes at the Iberian Margin 

Alba Gonzalez-Lanchas, Javier Dorador, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, and José-Abel Flores

How paleoceanographic changes modulated the influence of surface primary production on deep-ocean settings at the Iberian Margin remains a matter of debate. Here, we address this question for the mid-Brunhes interval by integrating high-resolution micropaleontological records of calcifying phytoplankton with a suite of surface and deep-ocean geochemical proxies, as well as a detailed assessment of ichnological content, sediment colour, and bioturbation. These analyses are based on the Atlantic Iberian Margin sedimentary core IODP Site U1385. Our data indicate that the transfer of organic matter from the surface ocean to the seafloor was strongly modulated by both orbital- and suborbital-scale paleoclimate variability during Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 12 to 9 (~450–339 ka). Variations in assemblage composition and abundance of calcareous nannofossil and ichnological characterization, together with changes in sediment composition, suggest that surface ocean conditions and production patterns were not always recorded in the deep-ocean environment. The sensitive response of macrobenthic tracemaker communities, coupled with variable sedimentary characteristics, highlights the influence of bottom-water conditions and ventilation on organic matter preservation and benthic ecosystem dynamics. These findings underscore the importance of integrating multiproxy records to achieve a more comprehensive understanding of paleoclimate and paleoceanographically-driven surface to deep-ocean coupling.

How to cite: Gonzalez-Lanchas, A., Dorador, J., Rodríguez-Tovar, F. J., and Flores, J.-A.: Linking surface and deep-ocean ecosystem dynamics across the mid-Brunhes at the Iberian Margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18462, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18462, 2026.

EGU26-18781 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

Rainfall Reconstruction through Isotope Signatures of Mollusc Micro-fossils from a Late Holocene Archaeological Site in North West India 

Ritvik Chaturvedi, Narender Parmar, Anil Kumar Pokharia, Pankaj Baghel, Rajveer Sharma, Kaustubh Thirumalai, and Prosenjit Ghosh

Mollusc shells, though often microscopic in size, are preserved ubiquitously in archaeological sites due to their robust calcareous composition that withstands post-depositional stresses. Invariably, ‘flotation’ – a method used conventionally to retrieve botanical remains in archaeological sites – also usually recovers tiny but intact mollusc shells. In archaeological research practice, morphometry-based species identification of mollusc shells has, over the past few decades, proven to be an accessible tool to reconstruct locale-specific past environments at ancient human settlements. Broadening the ambit of the utility of mollusc microfossils, isotopic studies have further allowed us to tap into the chemical composition of these shells to yield insights into the environments in which they lived and formed.

In particular, the stable oxygen isotope composition of the shells (δ¹⁸Oshell) of freshwater and terrestrial mollusc is directly contingent on the oxygen isotope composition of the water body (δ¹⁸Owater) in which the organism lived. The latter, in turn, is driven primarily by the rainfall received, the evaporation dynamics vis-à-vis precipitation as well as the ambient temperature. Therefore, δ¹⁸Oshell in archaeological contexts – and otherwise – has been used extensively in recent decades to retrieve information about past hydrological conditions. That said, however, their immense potential as palaeo-environmental proxies has remained under-utilised in Indian and South Asian archaeological contexts, where most mollusc recoveries rarely find mention in archaeological literature or, if they do, are limited solely to morphology-based species identification.

Here, we present a high-resolution record of δ¹⁸Oshell from the Neolithic/Chalcolithic site of Tigrana, Haryana, a site that falls in the wider network of other Mature Indus Valley Civilisation sites (~5200-3900 BP). Shells under examination here were recovered from well-marked stratums during the excavation seasons through 2019-2024; alongside botanical remains (grains, wood). Of the three morphotypes (or, species/genera) identified from those recovered, only one (here, Bithynia sp.) has been used for stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses to pre-empt any interference potentially arising from species-based fractionation. The same single-specie aliquots were used for radiocarbon dating. Additionally, the inorganic δ¹⁸O data has been supplemented with that of organic plant matter (δ¹³C) wherever possible.

We observe values ranging from -5.07‰ VPDB to -0.66% VPDB between a period of 4500 to 3800 years BP. The period 4300 BP to 4150 years BP, in particular, witnesses rapid fluctuations of the order of 3-4‰ VPDB, indicating abrupt changes in the rainfall and local evaporative regimes in the location in the above timeframe.

This work carries importance not only in terms of utilising micropalaeontological recoveries for palaeo-environmental reconstruction; but also in-terms of ascribing a climatic agency for the gradual decline of the Indus Valley Civilisation. It is noteworthy that most climate records from North-West India, based on isotopic assessments of molluscs, reconstructed for this purpose have been constructed from lake cores. These records, inevitably, carry ‘averaged-out’ signatures, for lakes collect waters through relatively large time-scales. This study, by contrast, is one of the first few attempts at reconstructing a climate-record directly from mollusc shells recovered in-situ from the archaeological site itself.

How to cite: Chaturvedi, R., Parmar, N., Pokharia, A. K., Baghel, P., Sharma, R., Thirumalai, K., and Ghosh, P.: Rainfall Reconstruction through Isotope Signatures of Mollusc Micro-fossils from a Late Holocene Archaeological Site in North West India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18781, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18781, 2026.

EGU26-18846 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Micropaleontological insights into Late Pleistocene coastal lagoon and tsunami deposits at Copiapó mouth river (Southern Atacama Desert) 

María Frías Álvarez, Manuel Abad, Rolando Fernández, Francisco Ruiz, and Tatiana Izquierdo

Deposits associated with MIS 3 have been recently described and dated along the coastal margin of the Southern Atacama Desert. These deposits generally exhibit a wide heterogeneity of littoral facies, including beaches, deltaic fans, dunes, and coastal lagoons. In some of these marine terraces, coastal boulder deposits interpreted as tsunami-related have been identified, extending the chronology of major earthquakes and tsunamis in northern Chile and expanding the current geodynamic scenario of a tectonically active coastline back to the terminal Pleistocene.

This work describes deposits from a coastal lagoon exposed in an abandoned quarry at the mouth of the Copiapó River (northern Chile). The stratigraphic succession reaches approximately 22 m in thickness and has been dated at its base and top, yielding ages of 42,431 ± 1,891 yr and 35,984 ± 277 yr, respectively. The lower and middle sections consist of centimeter-thick layers of gypsum and gray argillites, occasionally containing solenoid bivalves and the abundant benthic foraminifera Ammonia confertitesta, with less frequent Buliminella sp., Bolivina sp., and some planktonic forms as Orbulina universa. Interbedded within these deposits are thicker beds (25–165 cm) of gray arkosic sands, slightly micaceous, showing normal grading and horizontal planar lamination.  These levels exhibit tabular geometry and slightly erosive base, dominating the middle and upper parts of the section and defining a coarsening-upward sequence. Additionally, near the base, two layers of fine yellowish sands (<20 cm thick) with gravels and highly erosive surfaces have been identified, containing abundant bioclastic remains, echinoderm spines, siliceous sponge spicules, plant debris and large fragments of Late Miocene calcarenites eroded from surrounding outcrops. The foraminiferal specimens in these layers are relatively scarce, although they exhibit a similar assemblage characterized also by the occurrence of numerous individuals of Cibicides spp. Their tests are commonly broken and/or abraded, which strongly suggests the simultaneous presence of allochthonous marine taxa together with autochthonous groups, providing robust evidence of a high-energy marine inundation of the coastal lagoon.

This stratigraphic succession records the progressive and increasingly frequent arrival of sheet floods into a coastal lagoon from alluvial fans which are likely located at the inland reliefs. The lagoon was connected to the sea and intermittently isolated from the marine basin by a littoral barrier that has not been preserved in the outcrops. During its early stages of evolution at least two high-energy episodes are recorded, in which marine flooding transported sediments from the shallow marine zone, littoral barrier and nearby cliffs into this area. In MIS 3 deposits, that are exceptionally exposed in the Southern Atacama, these findings extend the chronology of major earthquakes and tsunamis and underscore the value of foraminiferal as proxies for coastal dynamics, salinity variability, and high‑energy marine events in the recent Quaternary geological record.

The authors thank project PID2021-127268NB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI /10.13039/501100011033 and by FEDER/UE

How to cite: Frías Álvarez, M., Abad, M., Fernández, R., Ruiz, F., and Izquierdo, T.: Micropaleontological insights into Late Pleistocene coastal lagoon and tsunami deposits at Copiapó mouth river (Southern Atacama Desert), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18846, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18846, 2026.

EGU26-19472 | ECS | Posters on site | SSP4.5

Unlocking UK Chalk macrofossil collections using calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy: Insights into Late Cretaceous ecosystem change, resilience, and extinction 

Deborah Tangunan, James D. Witts, Liam Gallagher, Stephen Stukins, Emma Bernard, Katie Collins, Leila D'Souza, Mike Day, Timothy Ewin, Richie Howard, Zoë Hughes, Marc Jones, Giles Miller, Jonathan A. Todd, Andrew S. Gale, Charlie Underwood, Richard J. Twitchett, and Paul R. Bown

The Upper Cretaceous Chalk Group of the United Kingdom (UK) preserves one of the most complete and fossiliferous records of greenhouse marine conditions, spanning the Cenomanian–Maastrichtian (~100–72 million years ago). While the Chalk has been intensively studied, a large proportion of its macrofossil record remains under-utilised because specimens collected over the past two centuries commonly lack precise stratigraphic or chronological attribution. Previous studies have demonstrated that nannofossil biostratigraphy of the chalk matrix attached to such specimens provides an effective means of unlocking the ‘dark data’ preserved in historic museum collections. Here we update and expand on those pilot studies by applying the biostratigraphic framework developed within the Chalk Sea Ecosystems (ChaSE) project to a wide range of macrofossil groups to investigate temporal and regional patterns in ecosystem change.  

We apply calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy to re-date >1,500 macrofossil specimens housed at the Natural History Museum, London (NHMUK), many of which are from now-inaccessible localities and are labelled only with broad lithostratigraphic or geographic information. Small, non-destructive samples taken from the chalk matrix associated with individual macrofossils yield diverse nannofossil assemblages, with preservation ranging from poor to moderate. Despite the variability in preservation, key marker species and bioevents were identified, allowing for confident placement within UK Chalk litho- and biostratigraphic schemes. The reliability matrix being developed will strengthen these results by evaluating a range of criteria (e.g. taxonomic clarity, morphological specificity, geographical and temporal distribution, rarity, preservation quality; Tangunan et al., 2024). This approach aims to provide robust age constraints at sub-stage to zonal resolution, substantially improving the stratigraphic utility of specimens previously unsuitable for quantitative analysis.

To complement the museum-based work, targeted field sampling was conducted at key Chalk localities across England, including Yorkshire, Devon, Dorset, Folkestone, and Eastbourne. These sites span northern, central, and southern Chalk provinces and capture spatial variability across the Cretaceous Chalk Sea. Field-derived calcareous nannofossil datasets will be integrated with the re-dated museum material to refine correlations and to investigate temporal and regional patterns in extinction timing and ecosystem change.

The resulting framework will enable both nannofossil and macrofossil occurrences to be analysed within a consistent temporal context across major Cretaceous climatic and oceanographic perturbations, including the Mid-Cenomanian Event and Oceanic Anoxic Event 2, as well as the transition from peak Turonian warmth into Late Cretaceous cooling. By transforming historic museum collections into stratigraphically resolved datasets, the ChaSE project demonstrates the critical role of calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy in maximising the scientific value of museum archives and provides a foundation for whole-ecosystem reconstructions of Chalk Sea resilience under extreme greenhouse climates.

 

Reference

Tangunan, D., Bown, P., Hampton, M., Fogerty, T., Gale, A., Twitchett, R., Underwood, C., Witts, J. and Gallagher, L., 2024. Multivariate evaluation rubric for assessing the reliability of Cretaceous nannofossil index taxa and bioevents. Journal of Nannoplankton Research, 42(S), pp.119-119.

How to cite: Tangunan, D., Witts, J. D., Gallagher, L., Stukins, S., Bernard, E., Collins, K., D'Souza, L., Day, M., Ewin, T., Howard, R., Hughes, Z., Jones, M., Miller, G., Todd, J. A., Gale, A. S., Underwood, C., Twitchett, R. J., and Bown, P. R.: Unlocking UK Chalk macrofossil collections using calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy: Insights into Late Cretaceous ecosystem change, resilience, and extinction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19472, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19472, 2026.

EGU26-20075 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

A characterisation of biological rhythms in behaviour and holobiont-wide gene expression in the foraminifer Heterostegina depressa from laboratory culture 

Adrian Schoerghofer, Audrey Mat, Matthias Nagy, Paul Wulf, Federico Scaramuzza, and Kristin Tessmar-Raible

Algal symbiosis facilitates the success of Large Benthic Foraminifera (LBF) as major carbonate producers in the ocean. Throughout the evolution of these associations, microalgae and their foraminiferal hosts are exposed to periodic changes in external conditions (e.g. tidal and daily cycles), driven by astronomical cycles such as Earth’s rotation and orbital motions. Many other unicellular and multicellular organisms have evolved biological rhythms, with period lengths similar to those of environmental cycles, as adaptations to these periodic changes. These rhythms can either be exogenously driven as responses to environmental cycles or can emerge from endogenous molecular pacemakers. It has been shown that organisms with internal periods closely aligned with the environmental cycles gain significant advantages. However, climatic changes can lead to disruptions and desynchronization of biological rhythms with adverse effects on the fitness of organisms and ecosystem functions, making the characterisation of biological rhythms an important subject in LBF ecology. While biological rhythms in microalgal model systems, such as diatoms (e.g., Phaeodactylum tricornutum) and dinoflagellates (e.g., Symbiodiniaceae), have gained increasing attention, little is known about the persistence of rhythmic processes in associations with LBF. These foraminifers exhibit reticulopodial locomotion and photoprotective behaviour in response to diurnal changes in irradiance, which are widely regarded to be governed by their microalgal symbionts.

In this experimental study, we characterise the behavioural and holobiont-wide molecular rhythms of the diatom-bearing calcareous LBF Heterostegina depressa. Cultured cells were maintained under light-dark conditions (14:10, LD), at a constant temperature of 25°C. For the behavioural characterisation, locomotor activity was quantified using time-lapse imaging. Behavioural recordings with lengths ranging from 3 to 7 days were conducted to assess rhythmicity and determine dominant period lengths. Transcriptomic dynamics were assessed through bulk RNA sequencing, de novo transcriptome assembly, and subsequent differential gene expression analysis. Cells for the differential gene expression analysis were sampled every 4 hours over a 48-hour period. Rhythm analysis of the activity patterns derived from behavioural recordings revealed substantial inter-individual variability, with some individuals exhibiting recurring spikes in activity with a period length of 24 hours. Additionally, we identified a set of significantly rhythmic transcripts, cycling with a period length of 24 hours.

Our findings suggest that timepoints of observations in studies of LBF ecology need to account for temporal changes across a 24-hour period, even under constant temperature conditions. Beyond these findings, we present insights from locomotion behaviour and gene expression under constant dim light (LL) conditions, highlight enriched pathways, and discuss potential endogenously driven rhythms in transcript expression.

How to cite: Schoerghofer, A., Mat, A., Nagy, M., Wulf, P., Scaramuzza, F., and Tessmar-Raible, K.: A characterisation of biological rhythms in behaviour and holobiont-wide gene expression in the foraminifer Heterostegina depressa from laboratory culture, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20075, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20075, 2026.

EGU26-20159 | ECS | Orals | SSP4.5

High-resolution reconstruction of Peruvian OMZ bottom-water oxygen since the last deglaciation using automated benthic foraminifera identification 

Sikandar Hayat, Meryem Mojtahid, Jorge Cardich, Mary Elliot, Thibault de Garidel-Thoron, Matthieu Carré, Dimitri Gutiérrez, Renato Salvatteci, Christine Barras, and Emmanuelle Geslin

The Peruvian upwelling system (PUS) sits within the intense, shallow oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) of the eastern tropical South Pacific and is strongly influenced by the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). El Niño suppresses the upwelling off Peru by weakening the trade winds and allowing warm surface waters to shift eastward, which deepens the thermocline. In contrast, La Niña generally strengthens the trade winds, shoals the thermocline, and enhances upwelling. This study reconstructs Peruvian upwelling variability by using fossil benthic foraminifera assemblages to infer past fluctuations in bottom-water oxygen and productivity. We analysed 168 samples from two sediment cores collected offshore Peru from the center of current OMZ; G10 (14.23° S, 76.40° W; 312 m water depth) and G14 (14.38° S, 76.42° W; 390 m water depth) spanning the last 25,000 years, with average resolution of 113 years. Detecting subtle faunal changes typically requires counting at least 300 specimens per sample, and the identification accuracy and speed depends on the experience of the taxonomist. We trained a CNN to identify and count benthic foraminifera, achieving 92.0% classification accuracy, 93.4% precision, and 92.4% recall. Automated results closely matched manual counts across 31 samples (from both cores at multiple depths), including species abundances, diversity metrics, multivariate assemblage patterns, and bottom-water oxygen estimates, demonstrating the model’s suitability for palaeoecological applications.

We next applied the CNN model to the remaining samples to reconstruct downcore changes in assemblage composition and bottom water oxygenation using the extended Benthic Foraminifera Assemblage index (BFAex). Low- diversity, and high-density assemblages dominated by thin, elongated tests persisted throughout much of the record, consistent with typical OMZ communities. Bolivina humilis was the dominant species across most of the record, whereas Fursenkoina spp. dominated in several intervals in the Heinrich Stadial 1 (H1S), coinciding with high denitrification and a modest increase in organic-matter input. Additionally, Suggrunda porosaB. costataB. plicata, Epistominella obesa, and Cassidulina limbata were among the major species. Reconstructed bottom-water oxygen was generally below 0.1 mL/L, however, H1S exhibits several peaks, some exceeding 1 mL/L. Moreover, H1S also shows the largest oxygen variability, potentially reflecting a stronger transmission of ENSO-related perturbations to the seafloor when sea level was 100 m lower than today. During the early and late Holocene, oxygen levels remained at or below the modern value (0.1 mL/L), implying a persistently developed OMZ. Several stratigraphic intervals, including early Glacial, the last Glacial Maximum, middle Holocene, Bølling-Allerød (BA), and many samples from late Holocene show a complete absence of benthic foraminifera. CT scans of two 10 cm-long sections (from BA and late Holocene) reveal “ghost” foraminifera outlines and the presence of gypsum crystals. These observations suggest post-depositional removal of carbonate tests, either during core storage or via early diagenetic dissolution. This latter interpretation is more likely and supported by the coincidence of barren intervals with low enrichment of redox-sensitive metals, reduced denitrification, and low sedimentation rates, conditions generally associated with more oxygenated periods on the Peruvian margin.

How to cite: Hayat, S., Mojtahid, M., Cardich, J., Elliot, M., Garidel-Thoron, T. D., Carré, M., Gutiérrez, D., Salvatteci, R., Barras, C., and Geslin, E.: High-resolution reconstruction of Peruvian OMZ bottom-water oxygen since the last deglaciation using automated benthic foraminifera identification, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20159, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20159, 2026.

Larger benthic foraminifera (LBF) are key carbonate producers and nutrient recyclers in shallow tropical–subtropical seas, with much of their ecological success attributed to photosymbiosis with diverse microalgae. Beyond these well-studied living associations, foraminiferal tests also host post-mortem microbial colonizers that can drive early diagenetic alteration. Endolithic cyanobacteria are among the most effective carbonate microborers, yet their diversity and trace-forming styles in LBF tests remain poorly documented, limiting interpretation of micritization pathways and preservation bias in both modern and fossil foraminifera tests.

Here we present a preliminary, morphotype-based classification of endolithic cyanobacteria associated with five common LBF taxa collected from Aziziyah Corniche (near the King Fahd Causeway), Eastern Saudi Arabia (Arabian Gulf): Coscinospira hemprichii, Peneroplis planatus, P. pertusus, P. arietinus, and Sorites orbiculus. Specimens were hand-picked from a scoop of marine beach sediment, selecting tests that showed visible evidence of cyanobacterial infestation/bioerosion; therefore, the dataset is intended to characterize endolithic forms rather than quantify infestation frequency. We examined >40 tests using an embedding–casting approach (Logitech type 301 two part epoxy resin infiltration of microborings in vacuum,  carbonate dissolution with dilute HCl to recover casts) combined with incident-light stereo microscopy and SEM. Endolithic forms were categorized by diagnostic boring architecture (e.g., filament diameter, branching frequency, chamber-wall penetration style, and distribution across whorls/chambers), with taxonomic assignment based on cast morphology where possible.

Across hosts, endolithic assemblages were dominated by Hyella (including an H. imanis-like morphotype; ~90% of observations), with Hyella forms consistently abundant in all five host taxa. At least three additional endolithic cyanobacterial morphotypes were observed but could only be assigned to genus-level. Boring patterns indicate active colonization of test walls that plausibly facilitates structural weakening and subsequent micritization during early taphonomy.

This morphotype inventory offers a practical reference for recognizing cyanobacterial microborings in LBF tests and for comparing bioerosion and micritization signatures among host taxa. The observed boring patterns further suggest that endolithic cyanobacteria can contribute to post-mortem test alteration, including micritization pathways that influence preservation in the fossil record.

How to cite: Amao, A. and Korin, A.: Endolithic cyanobacteria in larger benthic foraminifera: a morphotype-based classification framework for interpreting bioerosion and micritization, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22087, 2026.

EGU26-23290 | Orals | SSP4.5 | Jean Baptiste Lamarck Medal Lecture

 The green poles of a warmer past: how Antarctic polar forests shaped plant evolution  

Benjamin Bomfleur

Today, Antarctica appears as a continent locked in eternal ice and snow, but its sedimentary record preserves rich fossil archives of past life. Because present-day Antarctic landmasses have already been circling in polar latitudes for more than 300 million years, many Antarctic fossil occurrences derive from past high-latitude palaeoecosystems without modern analogue. Of special importance are exceptional plant-fossil assemblages—some classic, some only recently discovered—from the early Mesozoic of the Transantarctic Mountains. These yield exquisitely preserved plant compressions and anatomically preserved biotas in silicified peat and wood, allowing detailed insights into the biology and ecology of past polar forests during times of global warmth. The Late Triassic vegetation of Gondwana is particularly well-known. It was dominated by Dicroidium seed-ferns, conifers, ginkgoes, cycads, and diverse fern communities, and documents sophisticated adaptations to extreme seasonal light regimes, including widespread deciduousness, growth dormancy, and specialized understorey life strategies. There is now increasing evidence that such high-latitude ecosystems acted as evolutionary refugia during major biotic crises. The iconic Triassic Dicroidium plants, for example, survived the end-Triassic mass extinction in Gondwanan high-latitude populations and persisted there long into the Jurassic, far beyond their time of disappearance at lower latitudes. Recent discoveries from previously unexplored regions of northern Victoria Land substantially expand this perspective, revealing unexpected growth strategies, complex ecological interactions, and evidence for extreme evolutionary stasis. Taken together, the fascinating fossil record of the Transantarctic Mountains highlights the varied roles of high-latitude palaeoecosystems in plant evolution during times of global change.

How to cite: Bomfleur, B.:  The green poles of a warmer past: how Antarctic polar forests shaped plant evolution , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23290, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23290, 2026.

CC BY 4.0