Dripwater hydrology and hydrogeochemistry is particularly useful to constrain the meaning of speleothem palaeoclimate archives, for example using d18O signatures. Here, we calibrate the relationship between d18O in precipitation, percolation waters and contemporary calcite deposits, at Tartair cave, Sutherland, NW Scotland, an Atlantic site sensitive to regional changes both of temperature and precipitation. Monthly precipitation displayed a 7.1 %0 range in d18O, a negative linear relationship with rainfall amount, and no correlation with temperature. Autogenically-derived cave percolation waters show little variation in d18O during the same period and their annual weighted mean is the same as that of the local precipitation. This evidence ...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is a widely used proxy for past climate change. Robust...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is an important proxy of continental paleoenvironments...
The oxygen isotopic composition of calcite speleothems (stalagmites, etc.) can be used as a record o...
Dripwater hydrology and hydrogeochemistry is particularly useful to constrain the meaning of speleot...
High-resolution (annual to decadal) stable isotope records of oxygen and carbon are analysed from an...
The response of a climate proxy against measured temperature, rainfall and atmospheric circulation p...
Deuterium (dD) and oxygen (d18O) isotopes are powerful tracers of the hydrological cycle and have be...
A major assumption in palaeoclimatic studies using speleothems is that cave‐seepage waters are homog...
The geochemical signature of many speleothems used for reconstruction of past continental climates i...
The response of a climate proxy against measured temperature, rainfall and atmospheric circulation p...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is a widely utilised paleoclimate proxy that is respon...
Stable isotopes archived in cave deposits such as stalagmites have been widely used to reconstruct p...
Speleothems are calcium carbonate deposits, such as stalagmites, stalactites and flowstones, formed ...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is a widely used proxy for past climate change. Robust...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is an important proxy of continental paleoenvironments...
The oxygen isotopic composition of calcite speleothems (stalagmites, etc.) can be used as a record o...
Dripwater hydrology and hydrogeochemistry is particularly useful to constrain the meaning of speleot...
High-resolution (annual to decadal) stable isotope records of oxygen and carbon are analysed from an...
The response of a climate proxy against measured temperature, rainfall and atmospheric circulation p...
Deuterium (dD) and oxygen (d18O) isotopes are powerful tracers of the hydrological cycle and have be...
A major assumption in palaeoclimatic studies using speleothems is that cave‐seepage waters are homog...
The geochemical signature of many speleothems used for reconstruction of past continental climates i...
The response of a climate proxy against measured temperature, rainfall and atmospheric circulation p...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is a widely utilised paleoclimate proxy that is respon...
Stable isotopes archived in cave deposits such as stalagmites have been widely used to reconstruct p...
Speleothems are calcium carbonate deposits, such as stalagmites, stalactites and flowstones, formed ...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is a widely used proxy for past climate change. Robust...
The oxygen isotope composition of speleothems is an important proxy of continental paleoenvironments...
The oxygen isotopic composition of calcite speleothems (stalagmites, etc.) can be used as a record o...