Data for: "The origin of non-skeletal carbonate mud and implications for global climate"

Geyman, Emily C.; Wu, Ziman; Nadeau, Matthew D.; Edmonsond, Stacey; Turner, Andrew; Purkis, Sam J.; Howes, Bolton; Dyer, Blake; Ahm, Anne-Sofie C.; Yao, Nan; Deutsch, Curtis A.; Higgins, John A.; Stolper, Daniel A.; Maloof, Adam C.
Issue date: 16 June 2022
Cite as:
Geyman, Emily C., Wu, Ziman, Nadeau, Matthew D., Edmonsond, Stacey, Turner, Andrew, Purkis, Sam J., Howes, Bolton, Dyer, Blake, Ahm, Anne-Sofie C., Yao, Nan, Deutsch, Curtis A., Higgins, John A., Stolper, Daniel A., & Maloof, Adam C. (2022). Data for: "The origin of non-skeletal carbonate mud and implications for global climate" [Data set]. Princeton University. https://doi.org/10.34770/0kd8-4233
@electronic{geyman_emily_c_2022,
  author      = {Geyman, Emily C. and
                Wu, Ziman and
                Nadeau, Matthew D. and
                Edmonsond, Stacey and
                Turner, Andrew and
                Purkis, Sam J. and
                Howes, Bolton and
                Dyer, Blake and
                Ahm, Anne-Sofie C. and
                Yao, Nan and
                Deutsch, Curtis A. and
                Higgins, John A. and
                Stolper, Daniel A. and
                Maloof, Adam C.},
  title       = {{Data for: "The origin of non-skeletal ca
                rbonate mud and implications for global
                climate"}},
  publisher   = {{Princeton University}},
  year        = 2022,
  url         = {https://doi.org/10.34770/0kd8-4233}
}
Abstract:

Carbonate mud represents one of the most important geochemical archives for reconstructing ancient climatic, environmental, and evolutionary change from the rock record. Mud also represents a major sink in the global carbon cycle. Yet, there remains no consensus about how and where carbonate mud is formed. In this contribution, we present new geochemical data that bear on this problem, including stable isotope and minor and trace element data from carbonate sources in the modern Bahamas such as ooids, corals, foraminifera, and green algae.

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