Δ13C


In geochemistry, paleoclimatology, and paleoceanography δ13C is an isotopic signature, a measure of the ratio of stable isotopes 13C : 12C, reported in parts per thousand. The measure is also widely used in archaeology for the reconstruction of past diets, particularly to see if marine foods or certain types of plants were consumed
The definition is, in per mil:
where the standard is an established reference material.
δ13C varies in time as a function of productivity, the signature of the inorganic source, organic carbon burial, and vegetation type. Biological processes preferentially take up the lower mass isotope through kinetic fractionation. However some abiotic processes do the same, methane from hydrothermal vents can be depleted by up to 50%.

Causes of ''δ''13C variations

Methane has a very light δ13C signature: biogenic methane of −60‰, thermogenic methane −40‰. The release of large amounts of methane clathrate can impact on global δ13C values, as at the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum.
More commonly, the ratio is affected by variations in primary productivity and organic burial. Organisms preferentially take up light 12C, and have a δ13C signature of about −25‰, depending on their metabolic pathway. Therefore, an increase in δ13C in marine fossils is indicative of an increase in the abundance of vegetation.
An increase in primary productivity causes a corresponding rise in δ13C values as more 12C is locked up in plants. This signal is also a function of the amount of carbon burial; when organic carbon is buried, more 12C is locked out of the system in sediments than the background ratio.

Geologic significance of ''δ''13C excursions

and C4 plants have different signatures, allowing the abundance of C4 grasses to be detected through time in the δ13C record. Whereas plants have a δ13C of −16 to −10‰, plants have a δ13C of −33 to −24‰.
Mass extinctions are often marked by a negative δ13C anomaly thought to represent a decrease in primary productivity and release of plant-based carbon.
The evolution of large land plants in the late Devonian led to increased organic carbon burial and consequently a rise in δ13C.