| Contributors | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Davis, Catherine V. | North Carolina State University (NCSU) | Principal Investigator |
| Burke, Janet | Michigan State University (MSU) | Scientist |
| Machain-Castillo, Maria Luisa | Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM) | Scientist |
| Alcorn, Rachel | North Carolina State University (NCSU) | Student |
| Mickle, Audrey | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO) | BCO-DMO Data Manager |
Please see Alcorn et al. (2026) for a more detailed methodology.
Core MAZ-1E-04 (MAZ-I E04G) was collected on the oceanographic cruise MAZ-I aboard the R/V "El Puma" on April 28, 2015 using a gravity corer.
Approximately 30 Neogloboquadrina dutertrei (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:113473) individuals >300 µm (~1 mg) from each sample were cleaned and prepared following the clay removal and oxidative steps from Barker et al. (2003). This procedure has been successfully applied to I/Ca analyses (Winkelbauer et al., 2023). The samples were gently crushed between glass slides to open the tests and allow debris to escape during cleaning. Subsequent steps include ultrasonication in Milli-Q water, methanol, and hydrogen peroxide to remove clay and organic matter. Samples were then sent to Michigan State University and analyzed using the Thermo Scientific ICAP Q quadrupole Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer.
- Loaded "Supplementary Table S6.xlsx" (sheet 1) in xlsx format, treating empty strings and "nd" as missing values
- Renamed fields: Depth (cm) to Depth_core, # of N. dutertrei to N_dutertrei_count, Weight (μg) to Weight, I/Ca (µmol mol-1) to I_Ca, and Age (ybp) to Age
- Exported file as 991492_v1_n_dutertrei_iodine_calcium.csv
- Species name Neogloboquadrina dutertrei (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:113473) verified as current accepted form on 2026-04-08, using the WoRMs World Registry of Marine Species database.
| File |
|---|
991492_v1_n_dutertrei_iodine_calcium.csv (Comma Separated Values (.csv), 437 bytes) MD5:6012a5740138254ecd81a336a3447a9c Primary data file for dataset ID 991492, version 1 |
| Parameter | Description | Units |
| Depth_core | Depth in sediment core | centimeter (cm) |
| Age | Calibrated sediment age in years before present | years before present (yr BP) |
| N_dutertrei_count | Number of N. dutertrei removed from core and used in sampling | unitless |
| Weight | N. dutertrei sample weight | micrograms |
| I_Ca | Iodine: calcium ratios in N. dutertrei | micromol per mol |
| Dataset-specific Instrument Name | gravity corer |
| Generic Instrument Name | Gravity Corer |
| Dataset-specific Description | Core MAZ-1E-04 (MAZ-I E04G) was collected on the oceanographic cruise MAZ-I aboard the R/V "El Puma" on April 28, 2015 using a gravity corer. |
| Generic Instrument Description | The gravity corer allows researchers to sample sediment layers at the bottom of lakes or oceans. The coring device is deployed from the ship and gravity carries it to the seafloor. (http://www.whoi.edu/instruments/viewInstrument.do?id=1079). |
| Dataset-specific Instrument Name | Thermo Scientific ICAP Q quadrupole Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer |
| Generic Instrument Name | Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer |
| Dataset-specific Description | Samples were then sent to Michigan State University and analyzed using the Thermo Scientific ICAP Q quadrupole Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer. |
| Generic Instrument Description | An ICP Mass Spec is an instrument that passes nebulized samples into an inductively-coupled gas plasma (8-10000 K) where they are atomized and ionized. Ions of specific mass-to-charge ratios are quantified in a quadrupole mass spectrometer. |
| Website | |
| Platform | R/V El Puma |
| Start Date | 2015-04-27 |
| End Date | 2015-04-29 |
NSF abstract:
Oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) are naturally occurring regions of low oxygen found across large swaths of the ocean at depths of 100 to 1000 meters below the surface. OMZs play an important role in biogeochemical cycling and ecosystem function and any change in the expanse of their low oxygen waters can have far reaching implications for marine life and valuable fisheries resources. Marine oxygenation is variable on multiple timescales in response to global climate change, with recent observations showing that OMZs have expanded over the past half century. This project will explore promising new geochemical and morphologic proxies applicable to low-oxygen environments in the planktic foraminifer Globorotaloides hexagonus, a unicellular calcifying organism whose fossil record in seafloor sediments is well suited to reconstructing past low-oxygen environments in the water column. The project will focus on the extensive OMZ of the eastern tropical Pacific. The first goal is to evaluate and calibrate the targeted measurements for modern G. hexagonus collected live in plankton tows. The second goal is to apply these proxies to fossil specimens in sediment cores to generate records of glacial-Holocene change. The outcomes will be useable proxies for generating records of the OMZ environment, and a better understanding of how a major regional OMZ changed during the most recent period of rapid climate change. Both outcomes represent important progress towards understanding natural oscillations in the OMZ as well as modeling and planning for a changing OMZ in the face of global climate perturbations. The project will provide opportunities for undergraduate researchers as well as support a female early career researcher.
The marine sedimentary record is the most promising archive from which to reconstruct long term marine oxygenation. However, significant limitations exist in the available proxies for low oxygen marine environments. This project aims to address this need by evaluating and applying a range of promising geochemical (trace element and stable isotope) and morphologic (area-density and porosity) proxies relevant to low oxygen environments in the planktic foraminifer Globorotaloides hexagonus. The project will develop viable proxies based on the morphology and geochemistry of G. hexagonus shells previously collected in depth-distributed MOCNESS (Multiple Opening/Closing Net and Environmental Sensing System) tows from the eastern Pacific. The results from this proxy development in modern shells will then be ground-truthed and applied to two already well characterized sediment cores from the Mexican Margin and Panama Basin that span from the Last Glacial Maximum through the Holocene. The sediment records will be used to reconstruct past conditions in the eastern tropical Pacific OMZ, where significant questions about glacial-interglacial oxygenation persist. This research will lead to a more mechanistic understanding of how OMZs respond to climate more broadly.
| Funding Source | Award |
|---|---|
| NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) |