Title: Variation of the 1.5 ka surface water marine radiocarbon reservoir age in the Adriatic based on the study of algal rims
Abstract: The latest research on relative sea-level change along the eastern Adriatic has been cantered on algal rims build by Lithophyllum byssoides (FAIVRE et al., 2010 ; 2013). Such fossil bio-constructions have proven to be precise sea-level indicators in microtidal environments (LABOREL et al., 1994). However, this perfect relative sea-level marker is constrained by its marine radiocarbon reservoir (MRE) which is not known. Previous research assumes that Lithophyllum does not appear to be subject to any kind of reservoir effect. Those assumptions were based on the datation of living thalli (LABOREL et al., 1994). Here, we provide evidence for the algal MRE based on algal samples of known obtained from the Natural History Museums in Paris and Vienna and from the Universitat Hamburg. The algae used for 14C dating were collected from AD 1858 to 1913 and represent the pre-bomb period. We applied radiocarbon dating of marine material with a known calendar date of death of the organism. This approach enables a comparison of contemporaneous atmospheric and marine radiocarbon ages. The deficiency in 14C content of the measured marine sample relative to the global atmospheric calibration curve is then used to calculate the apparent age of the material. We further used palaeo data from 10 Eastern Adriatic algal rims from which we obtained radiocarbon and stable isotope (δ180 and δ13C) records. Based on those records we provide several lines of evidence that the alga which lives in the intertidal zone has a lower marine radiocarbon reservoir than the mean surface water MRE. On the other hand, shells (mytilid bivalves) from algal rims reveal higher reservoir ages than global means, similar to previously published data (FAIVRE et al., 2015). Furthermore, as living exclusively in the intertidal zone L. byssoides, could reflect long-term surface water MRE variations. Till now continuous marine 14C records have only been acquired from a limited number of biogenic calcifying archives. Currently, only sparse 14C data are available for the Mediterranean Sea in order to constrain the MRE with limited ranges (SIANI et al., 2000, 2001 ; REIMER and MCCORMAC, 2002 ; MCCULLOCH et al., 2010 ; TISNERAT-LABORDE et al., 2013 ; FAIVRE et al., 2015). In this framework, several research lines on algal and shell MREs (shells inhabiting algal rims) have been initiated, which could together provide records on MRE variability throughout the 1.5 ka period. Our radiocarbon and stable isotope records over the last 1.5 ka from 10 algal rims revealed bimodal properties of the Adriatic surface water MRE. This research was supported by the Croatian Science Foundation (project no. HRZZ-IP-11-2013-1623, Reconstruction of the Quaternary environment in Croatia using isotope methods – REQUENCRIM) and by the University of Zagreb Supports for 2013 (no. 4.1.1.28), 2014 (no. IP2.4) and 2015 (no. IP003). We would also like to express our gratitude to the Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris, especially to Bruno de Reviers, for providing algal samples from its collections for this research. We also thank the Universitat Hamburg, Biozentrum Klein Flottbek und Botanischer Garten, Dr Matthias Schultz (curator at Herbarium Hamburgense) as well as the Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien, Dr Anton Igersheim (Curator of the Cryptogamic Collection) both of which kindly provided samples without which this study could not be effectuated.