A box model of the Late Miocene Mediterranean Sea: implications from combined 87Sr/86Sr and salinity data
Publication date
2011
Authors
Topper, R.P.M.
Flecker, R.
Meijer, P.Th.
Wortel, M.J.R.
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2011
Abstract
Under certain conditions the strontium isotope ratio in the water of a semi‐enclosed
basin is known to be sensitive to the relative size of ocean water inflow and river input.
Combining Sr‐isotope ratios measured in Mediterranean Late Miocene successions with
data on past salinity, one can derive quantitative information on the Mediterranean
hydrological budget at times before and during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC).
Previous studies obtained this hydrological budget by inverting the salinity and strontium
data with steady state solutions to the conservation equations of salt, strontium and water.
Here, we develop a box model with a time‐dependent set of equations to investigate the
coeval evolution of salinity and Sr ratios under different water budgets, gateway
restrictions and riverine Sr characteristics. Model results are compared with the salinity
and strontium ratio data from the Mediterranean. With a present‐day water budget,
strontium ratios in the Mediterranean never reach the observed Messinian values
regardless of gateway restriction and water budget. However, a model with tripled river
input, as inferred for the Late Miocene, is able to reproduce the Sr ratios observed. The onset
of the MSC can be explained with a simple restriction of the gateway(s) between the
Mediterranean and Atlantic. Lower Evaporite gypsum formed in a basin with less outflow to
the Atlantic than modeled in previous studies because of the large Late Miocene river input.
Evaporite thicknesses predicted by our model and consistent with the Messinian Sr ratios
are on the low end of the thickness range inferred from seismics.