High-resolution estimates of temporal mixing within shell beds: the
evils and virtues of time-averaging
Abstract.-This study quantifies the fine structure of time-averaging
by using large samples of dated shells collected from within individual
strata. Time-averaging results in both good and bad news for interpreting
bioclastic deposits. Nine samples of shells were collected from four Holocene
cheniers on the Colorado Delta (Gulf of California) and 165 shells of the
bivalve Chione fluctifraga were dated using 14C-calibrated
amino acid racemization (D-alloisoleucine/L-isoleucine). The age range
of shells within samples averages 661 years and, in seven out of nine samples,
exceeds 500 years. The sample standard deviation ranges from 73 to 294
years and averages 203 years, far exceeding the dating errors (<<
100 years) and potential variation in the life span of Chione (<
10 years). Time-averaging is homogeneous among strata within cheniers but
varies significantly among cheniers. Age-distributions of dated shells
indicate that at 50-year resolution, the samples provide a continuous and
uniform record for the entire interval. The actual sample completeness
(63.6%) is very close to that predicted by simulations of sampling a 100%
complete, uniform record (67.3%). The bad news is that, no matter how carefully
collected, data from shell beds may not be suitable for studying processes
on timescales shorter than 102 to 103 years; explanations
for faunal change that invoke reasoning or models derived from a strictly
ecological point of view may rarely be justifiable. Also, notable differences
in temporal resolution between the shell beds of seemingly identical origin
imply that paleontological patterns (e.g., species diversity) may be affected
by cryptic variation in time-averaging. The comparison of our data with
time-averaging estimates obtained from other cheniers at coarser sampling
resolutions indicates that pooling of samples (analytical time-averaging)
can significantly reduce the temporal resolution of paleontological data.
The good news is that shell beds can record the optimal type of time-averaging:
where paleobiological data are a time-weighted average of the faunal composition
from the spectrum of environments that existed during the entire interval
of time. Samples from single strata provide a long-term record that is
representative of the predominating environments. Within the range of
14C
dating, shell beds can provide a complete, high-resolution record, and
thus may offer exceptional insights into the environmental and climatic
changes of the last 40 thousand years.
Michal Kowalewski. Institute of Paleobiology, Polish Academy of
Sciences, Twarda 51/55, 00-818, Warszawa, Poland. E-mail:
michael.kowalewski@uni-tuebingen.de
Glenn A. Goodfriend. Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution
of Washington, 5251 Broad Branch Rd., N.W., Washington D.C. 20015
Karl W. Flessa. Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona,
Tucson Arizona 85721