Issue 8, 2017

Elemental mapping of Mg/Ca intensity ratios in marine mollusc shells using laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy

Abstract

Records of past environmental conditions in shell carbonate are usually derived from compositional analysis (i.e. trace elements, stable oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen isotopes) performed along the direction of the shell's growth and thus through time. However, compositional variations within isochronous parts of the shell can distort the environmental record and are difficult to assess without extensively mapping the whole shell. Here we apply Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) to efficiently map the elemental change throughout the growth increments of three mollusc shells (Conomurex fasciatus, Ostrea edulis, Anomalocardia flexuosa). We employ an automated LIBS setup to map the Mg/Ca composition of whole shell sections with over 2000 data points per hour. By assessing the spatial variability of Mg/Ca intensity ratios this method has the potential to mitigate distorted results while increasing the resolution of derived palaeoenvironmental information.

Graphical abstract: Elemental mapping of Mg/Ca intensity ratios in marine mollusc shells using laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 abr 2017
Accepted
16 jun 2017
First published
23 jun 2017

J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2017,32, 1467-1472

Elemental mapping of Mg/Ca intensity ratios in marine mollusc shells using laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy

N. Hausmann, P. Siozos, A. Lemonis, A. C. Colonese, H. K. Robson and D. Anglos, J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2017, 32, 1467 DOI: 10.1039/C7JA00131B

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