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You are here: Home / Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2024 / Belgian fossil shells as fortune tellers? Unique climate archives yet hardly tapped into

Stijn Goolaerts, Johan Vellekoop, Niels J de Winter, Philippe Claeys, Andrew L Johnson, Frank Wesselingh, Nina Wichern, and Martin Ziegler (2024)

Belgian fossil shells as fortune tellers? Unique climate archives yet hardly tapped into

In: Belgian Science for Climate Action Conference, Climate Extremes: Causes and Consequences, Feb 19-20th at Maison de la Poste, Brussels, organized by Belgian Climate Centre. .

Shells are powerful climate archives - they add growth increments on timescales as short as sub-daily, and often live for decades, some even more than 100 years. With the aid of isotope and trace-elemental geochemistry, the effects of climate change on temperature, seasonality and extreme weather can be read from them. Belgium is one of the few countries blessed with extensive records of exquisitely preserved fossil shells dating to the Pliocene, a geologic period dating from 5.3 to 2.6 million year ago. Critically, the Pliocene is the youngest geologic time during which CO2 levels were >400 ppm and mean annual temperatures comparable to those to be reached by the end of this century, following Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP) 2-4.5 of the IPCC. It therefore presents an ideal near-future analogue. Rich collections of well-preserved Belgian Pliocene shells are in the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS), and more material is collected from temporary outcrops like building sites in and around Antwerp with the aid of citizen-scientists. In recent years, RBINS collaborated with national (VUB, KULeuven) and international (VU Amsterdam, Naturalis, UDerby) researchers to start tapping into these exquisite climate archives, unraveling previously unknown details on Belgian past climate, predicting amplified seasonality in Europe in a warmer world, and investigating the potential of fossil shells to document heat waves and storms. The poster will highlight some of this recent collaborative work, and, why the RBINS, through its collections, fieldwork and expertise can play a pivotal role in climate research in Belgium.
RBINS Collection(s), Abstract of an Oral Presentation or a Poster

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