nikkii Posted September 22, 2018 Posted September 22, 2018 I have recently been reading a lot of papers of different paleothermometers. The Calcium in calcium carbonate can get replaced by Mg and Sr and people use the ratios of Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca to predict past ocean surface temperatures. What I can't seem to understand is why the Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca show opposite trends with temperature such that as temperature increases Mg/Ca increases while Sr/Ca decreases. I would have thought they would both increase. Could someone please explain this to me? Thank you
John Cuthber Posted September 22, 2018 Posted September 22, 2018 In both cases the ratio (lighter ion/ heavier ion) increases. 1
studiot Posted September 22, 2018 Posted September 22, 2018 (edited) 12 minutes ago, John Cuthber said: In both cases the ratio (lighter ion/ heavier ion) increases. Unlike some I am not above learning from others, in fact I am pleased you have told me something I didn't know or spot, though I tried to look it up. Thank you. +1 Edited September 22, 2018 by studiot
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