The impact of outgassing of CO2 and prior calcium precipitation to the isotope composition of calcite precipitated on stalagmites. Implications for reconstructing climate information from proxies
Wolfgang Dreybrodt, Jens Fohlmeister

TL;DR
This study develops a theoretical model to understand how CO2 outgassing and calcium precipitation affect isotope signals in stalagmite calcite, clarifying their implications for climate reconstructions from speleothem proxies.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive model distinguishing diffusive and precipitation-driven outgassing effects on isotope signals, emphasizing the dominant role of precipitation-driven degassing.
Findings
Diffusive outgassing does not influence isotope composition.
Precipitation-driven degassing determines isotope signals in calcite.
Model successfully explains field observations and prior calcite precipitation effects.
Abstract
Degassing of CO2 and precipitation of calcite to the surface of stalagmites can strongly impact isotope signals imprinted into the calcite of these speleothems. Here, we show that in all the variety of conditions occurring in nature only two distinct types of degassing exist. First, when a thin film of calcareous solution comes in contact to cave air lower pCO2 value than that of the aqueous CO2 in the water, molecular CO2 escapes by physical diffusion in several seconds. In a next step lasting several ten seconds, pH and DIC in the solution achieve chemical equilibrium with respect to the CO2 in the cave atmosphere. This solution becomes supersaturated with respect to calcite. During precipitation for each unit CaCO3 deposited one molecule of CO2 is generated and escapes from the solution. This precipitation driven degassing is active during precipitation only. We show that all…
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