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GSnapshots of tropical Pacific climate variability during the time of Lapita ocean voyaging: giant clam fossils from Fijian shell middens as high resolution archives of climate information.

Descrizione del progetto

Vongole giganti al centro della ricerca paleoclimatica

Affrontare efficacemente i cambiamenti climatici dipende dalla nostra capacità di simulare il sistema climatico della Terra e fare previsioni future. Un dato particolarmente prezioso del clima passato è quello degli anelli di crescita delle vongole giganti grazie al loro ritmo di crescita, alla longevità e all’anatomia, mentre le conchiglie delle vongole possono essere sottocampionate e analizzate per produrre dati proxy climatici a cadenza sub-annuale relativi a più decenni. Il loro habitat è il Pacifico tropicale, dove i dati paleoclimatici risultano particolarmente validi in quanto i cambiamenti in questa regione sono stati collegati a drammatiche anomalie della temperatura globale e delle precipitazioni. Il progetto REEFCLAM, finanziato dall’UE, sta studiando i gusci di vongole giganti in una sambaquì di circa 3 000 anni fa per generare i primi dati a cadenza sub-annuale di variabilità climatica pre-industriale nelle Fiji.

Obiettivo

Records of pre-industrial climate change are vital for accurately simulating Earth’s climate system and reducing uncertainty in 21st century climate predictions. Giant clams are particularly valuable archives of past climate as they are fast-growing, long-lived, and their dense shells have annual growth bands that can be subsampled and analysed to produce sub-annually resolved climate proxy records spanning multiple decades. Furthermore, they are common in the tropical Pacific, where paleoclimate data is particularly valued as sub-annual to decadal-scale changes in this region have been linked to dramatic global temperature and rainfall anomalies with far-reaching socioeconomic and environmental effects. Giant clams are/were a common food and tool supply in the tropical Pacific, and are abundant in Lapita-age shell middens, providing unique opportunities for paleoclimate research that have surprisingly not been exploited.

In REEFCLAM, I will use giant clam shells in a ~3,000 year old shell midden to generate the first sub-annually resolved record of pre-industrial climate variability in Fiji. Specifically, trace element and stable isotope profiles across multiple shells will be generated and stitched together, and used to reconstruct patterns of variability in sea surface temperature and salinity. Fiji’s climate is highly sensitive to changes in the SPCZ and WPWP, and so these records will provide a snapshot of Mid-Late Holocene variability relating to the El Niño Southern Oscillation that will be of great value to the climate community. I will generate the first modern clam-based geochemical proxy calibrations for Fiji providing an important platform for future work. Importantly, the data will be also used to test the hypothesis that the pulse of eastward ocean voyaging by the Lapita people and their rapid colonisation of the Pacific coincided with more frequent El Niño events (more westerlies), a novel opportunity to marry the sciences and the humanities.

Coordinatore

CARDIFF UNIVERSITY
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 212 933,76
Indirizzo
NEWPORT ROAD 30 36
CF24 0DE Cardiff
Regno Unito

Mostra sulla mappa

Regione
Wales East Wales Cardiff and Vale of Glamorgan
Tipo di attività
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Collegamenti
Costo totale
€ 212 933,76