Speleothem Science
From Process to Past Environments
Blackwell Quaternary Geoscience Series

1. Auflage April 2012
450 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Speleothems (mineral deposits that formed in caves) are currently giving us some of the most exciting insights into environments and climates during the Pleistocene ice ages and the subsequent Holocene rise of civilizations. The book applies system science to Quaternary environments in a new and rigorous way and gives holistic explanations the relations between the properties of speleothems and the climatic and cave setting in which they are found. It is designed as the ideal companion to someone embarking on speleothem research and, since the underlying science is very broad, it will also be invaluable to a wide variety of others. Students and professional scientists interested in carbonate rocks, karst hydrogeology, climatology, aqueous geochemistry, carbonate geochemistry and the calibration of climatic proxies will find up-to-date reviews of these topics here. The book will also be valuable to Quaternary scientists who, up to now, have lacked a thorough overview of these important archives.
Additional resources for this book can be found at: www.wiley.com/go/fairchild/speleothem.
I: Scientific and Geological Context
1. Introduction to Speleothems and Systems
1.1 What is all the fuss about?
1.2 How is this book organized?
1.3 Concepts and approaches of system science
1.4 The speleothem factory within the karst system
2. Carbonate and Karst Geology
2.1 Carbonates in the Earth system over geological time
2.2 Lithologies of carbonate aquifers
2.3 Carbonate diagenesis and eogenetic karst
2.4 Speleogenesis in mesogenetic and telogenetic karst (with contributions from David J. Lowe and John Gunn)
2.5 Cave infilling
2.6 Conclusion
3. Surface Environments: Climate, Soil and Vegetation
3.1 The modern climate system
3.2 Water isotopes in the atmosphere
3.3 Soils of karst regions
3.4 Vegetation of karst regions
3.5 Synthesis: inputs to the incubator
II: Transfer Processes in Karst
4. The Speleothem Incubator
4.1 Introduction to speleophysiology
4.2 Physical parameters and fluid behaviour
4.3 Water movement
4.4 Air circulation
4.5 Heat flux (authored by David Domínguez-Villar)
4.6 Synthesis: cave climatologies
5. Inorganic Water Chemistry
5.1 Sampling protocols for water chemistry
5.2 The carbonate system
5.3 Weathering, trace elements and isotopes
5.4 Carbon isotopes
5.5 Evolution of water chemistry: modelling sources and environmental signals
6. Biogeochemistry of Karstic Environments
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Organic macromolecules
6.3 Pollen and Spores
6.4 Cave faunal remains
6.5 Synthesis and research gaps
III: Speleothem Properties
7. The Architecture of Speleothems
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Theoretical models of stalagmite growth and of stalagmite and stalactite shapes
7.3 Geometrical classification of speleothems
7.4 Mineralogy and petrography
7.5 Synthesis
8. Geochemistry of Speleothems
8.1 Analysis and the sources of uncertainty
8.2 The growth interface
8.3 Trace element partitioning
8.4 Oxygen and carbon isotope fractionation
8.5 Evolution of dripwater and speleothem chemistry along water flowlines
8.6 Process models of variability over time
9. Dating of Speleothems
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Dating techniques
9.3 Age-distance models
9.4 Conclusions
IV: Palaeoenvironments
10. The Instrumental Era: Calibration and Validation of Proxy-Environment Relationships
10.1 Available instrumental and derived series
10.2 Methodologies
10.3 Case studies of calibrated speleothem proxies
10.4 Questions raised and future directions
11. The Holocene Epoch: Testing the Climate and Environment Proxies
11.1 A brief overview of the Holocene
11.2 The last millennium
11.3 Holocene environmental changes- speleothem responses
11.4 Questions raised and future directions
12. The Pleistocene and Beyond
12.1 Pleistocene proxy records ( ice-age climate fluctuations defined and drawn)
12.2 Insights into pre-Quaternary environments
12.3 Questions raised and forward look
Appendix 1. Archiving Speleothems and Speleothem Data
Index
"The book is comprehensive; it brings together all the relevant disciplines (geology, biology, hydrology, chemistry...) and, whichever way you cut it, Fairchild and Baker have succeeded in bringing an important subject to a wider readership. Speleothem Science is highly recommended." (Descent, 1 August 2013)
"The target readership of Speleothem Science is threefold. First, researchers who are already working with the stalagmite archive can widen and considerably deepen their knowledge in sub-disciplines not already covered in their own training. Second, climate researchers who are not yet working on speleothem should be catapulted to the front-end once they will have studied the book together with the relating bench mark papers. Third, graduate students who are looking for a topic for their PhD dissertation. They might have found their textbook." (Computers & Geosciences, 27 January 2013)
"The volume will no doubt serve as a fine textbook and reference volume. A companion website provides access to slides of all figures and tables. Summing Up: Essential. Upper-division undergraduates through professionals." (Choice, 1 December 2012) "I highly recommend the landmark and very thorough book Speleothem Science: From Process to Past Environments by Ian J. Fairchild, Ph.D., and Andy Baker, Ph.D., to any students and professional scientists from a wide range of disciplines, who are seeking a holistic and comprehensive examination of the many topics and areas of research and study surrounding speleothems, climate, caves, and Quaternary science." (Blog Business World, 8 May 2012)
Andy Baker was trained as a physical geographer, and worked at the interface of geology, physical geography, and environmental engineering. He is currently a Professor at the University of New South Wales and a chief investigator in Australia's National Centre for Groundwater Research and Training.