Christopher D. Standish’s research while affiliated with University of Southampton and other places

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Publications (61)


Figure 3. Boron isotope accuracy (Δδ 11 B) of 14 reference materials analysed by LA-MC-ICP-MS/MS: (a) plotted against 11 B signal (V), (b) plotted against boron μg/g, and (c) plotted against B/Ca (μmol/mol). Solid horizontal bar represents Δδ 11 B of 0 ‰, dashed horizontal bar represents Δδ 11 B of +1 ‰ and −1 ‰ respectively. Uncertainties are the 2SD of the repeat measurements by LA-MC-ICP-MS/MS summed in quadrature with the uncertainties of the reference values presented in Table 1.
Figure 4. Boron isotope internal precision (2SE) of 14 reference materials analysed by LA-MC-ICP-MS/MS: (a) plotted against 11 B signal (V), (b) plotted against boron μg/g, and (c) plotted against B/Ca (μmol/mol). Solid black line represents 2SE of 1 ‰. Dashed coloured lines show power relationship of all transect or sport data respectively, with R 2 included.
Figure 5. Boron isotope external reproducibility (2SD) of 14 reference materials analysed by LA-MC-ICP-MS/MS: (a) plotted against 11 B signal (V), (b) plotted against boron μg/g, and (c) plotted against B/Ca (μmol/mol). Solid black line represents 2SD of 1 ‰. Dashed black line shows power relationship of all data, with R 2 included.
Figure 7. Mass scan from m/z of 9.968 to 9.992 showing the 40 Ar+Ca 4+ peak when ablating NIST SRM612 or JCp-1 (transect mode, 100 μm diameter laser beam, 6 J cm-2 laser energy density, 12 Hz repetition rate, 10 μm s -1 tracking speed) on a Neptune MC-ICP mass spectrometer (dashed red line), a Neoma MC-ICP mass spectrometer (dashed blue line), and a Neoma MS/MS MC-ICP mass spectrometer (solid grey line). Note that normalising to sensitivity does not impact the overall picture.
Figure 8. Intensity of 40 Ar 2+ and 24 Mg beams when a 100 ppb Mg solution is analysed on a Neoma MS/MS MC-ICP mass spectrometer with varying pre-cell mass filter Bfields. Data are available in Supplementary Table S7.

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Matrix independent and interference free in situ boron isotope analysis by laser ablation MC-ICP-MS/MS
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April 2025

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27 Reads

Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry

Christopher D. Standish

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J. Andy Milton

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The accuracy of boron isotope analysis by laser ablation multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICP-MS), particularly when the mass bias correction utilises non-matrix-matched reference materials, is compromised by matrix-...

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Topographic map showing Lubná VI and the surrounding physical context
Reindeer tooth mineralisation and eruption intervals. Mineralisation intervals based on estimates from cervids, previous isotopic studies of reindeer and, for P2 and P3, the intra-tooth seasonality data (δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C) reported in this study. Tooth eruption intervals are based on data from different reindeer populations (see main text for references)
Geology and strontium isotope variation in Bohemia. (a) Geological map and location of datapoints describing strontium isotope variation in the region, colour-coded according to the ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr ratio. Details for each numbered site can be found in Supplementary Table 2. (b) Summary of strontium isotope ratio base-mapping data by region, colour-coded using the same ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr ranges as panel (a). The grey-shaded bar indicates the ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr range of Lubná reindeer dentine, and the dotted lines indicate the maximum range recorded in the Lubna reindeer enamel, falling entirely within the green-shaded ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr range. See Supplementary Tables 2 and Supplementary Figure S4 for further details of basemapping sites by geographic region
Enamel strontium, oxygen and carbon isotope ratio data from the Lubná reindeer. ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr profiles are shown as a 10-point mean running average of the individual laser ablation measurements. Dark grey shading around the lines indicates the uncertainty of measurement defined as the standard error (1SE), although this is mostly hidden by the thickness of the ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr profile line. The light grey bar indicates the local bioavailable strontium range for Lubná as defined by the tooth dentine. Consecutively-forming teeth from the same individual are shown using a cumulative “distance from the enamel-root junction” (stacked x-axis), with the addition of a small gap of arbitrary length inserted between different elements to make clear where each tooth profile starts and finishes. Simultaneously-forming teeth (P2, P3 and P4 elements) were aligned visually by wiggle matching to obtain a close fit across the datasets, and are also shown using a stacked x-axis. Further dataplots showing the ⁸⁸Sr, ⁸⁴Sr/⁸⁶Sr and ⁸⁵Rb/⁸⁶Sr data from each sampled tooth are shown in Supplementary Information file 3
Intra-tooth δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C stable isotope data plotted using a composite (stacked) x-axis. The data from each tooth were first sorted by order of tooth mineralisation (Fig. 2b) and then aligned visually without any adjustment or scaling to obtain a good fit (giving preference to alignments in δ¹⁸O)
Reindeer prey mobility and seasonal hunting strategies in the late Gravettian mammoth steppe

July 2024

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214 Reads

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3 Citations

Reindeer are part of the faunal suite that dominated central Europe during the last glacial cycle. Their importance to Late Gravettian hunters as prey and a source of raw materials (hide, bone, antler) is well attested, however the context of Late Gravettian reindeer predation is lesser understood. This paper presents an investigation of human and reindeer predator-prey interactions at the Late Gravettian kill-butchery site of Lubná VI, Czech Republic. We reconstruct seasonal mobility (⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr, δ¹⁸O), diet (δ¹³C, δ¹⁵N) and season of death (dental cementum) of up to nine reindeer prey, to inform on the strategic choices made by Late Gravettian hunters. Results indicate that most hunted reindeer lived year-round in the foothills of the Bohemian-Moravian highlands near where Lubná is located, at altitudes between ~ 200–450 m above present sea level, while a smaller number showed evidence of seasonal migration between this area and the open plains of the Elbe river corridor (Bohemian Cretaceous basin). No evidence for long distance migration of reindeer was detected, indicating that productive local environments were supporting reindeer herds within a single annual territory. Meanwhile, areas higher than ~ 450 m above present sea level were avoided entirely by all analysed individuals, consistent with these areas being topographic barriers to movement due to climate severity. We conclude that hunters visited Lubná as part of a logistically-organised subsistence strategy, deliberately targeting reindeer in late autumn when fat supplies, hides and antler are in prime condition knowing that they would reliably encounter their prey at this location.


Synthetic and practical reconstructions of SST and seawater pH using the novel multiproxy SMITE method

June 2024

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91 Reads

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1 Citation

Geochemical proxies of sea surface temperature (SST) and seawater pH (pHsw) in scleractinian coral skeletons are valuable tools for reconstructing tropical climate variability. However, most coral skeletal SST and pHsw proxies are univariate methods that are limited in their capacity to circumvent non-climate-related variability. Here we present a novel multivariate method for reconstructing SST and pHsw from the geochemistry of coral skeletons. Our Scleractinian Multivariate Isotope and Trace Element (SMITE) method optimizes reconstruction skill by leveraging the covariance across an array of coral elemental and isotopic data with SST and pHsw. First, using a synthetic proxy experiment, we find that SMITE SST reconstruction statistics (correlation, accuracy, and precision) are insensitive to noise and variable calibration period lengths relative to Sr/Ca. While SMITE pHsw reconstruction statistics remain relative to δ¹¹B throughout the same synthetic experiment, the magnitude of the long-term trend in pHsw is progressively lost under conditions of moderate-to-high analytical uncertainty. Next, we apply the SMITE method to an array of seven coral-based geochemical variables (B/Ca, δ¹¹B, Li/Ca, Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, U/Ca & Li/Mg) measured from two Bermudan Porites astreoides corals. Despite a <3.5 year calibration period, SMITE SST and pHsw estimates exhibit significantly better accuracy, precision, and correlation with their respective climate targets than the best single- and dual-proxy estimators. Furthermore, SMITE model parameters are highly reproducible between the two coral cores, indicating great potential for fossil applications (when preservation is high). The results shown here indicate that the SMITE method can outperform the most common coral-based SST and pHsw reconstructions methods to date, particularly in datasets with a large variety of geochemical variables. We therefore provide a list of recommendations and procedures for users to begin implementing the SMITE method as well as an open-source software package to facilitate dissemination of the SMITE method.


(a) Overview, (b) Close-up and (c) Radiograph of an Acanella arbuscula specimen inside a Perspex holding tube in the micro-focus computed tomography scanner housed within the 3D X-ray Histology (XRH) Biomedical Imaging Unit facility at University Hospital Southampton.
A scaled transverse slice (voxel size, 15 µm) from the (a) Acanella arbuscula 8-bit coral volumes image set and (b) Keratoisis sp. 8-bit coral volumes image set showing rings of low density organic tissue (dark grey) and higher density calcium carbonate (light grey) at the node-internode connection, viewed in Fiji²⁶ (v2.3.0). Each coral volume image set consists of numbered images that are sequentially stacked to create the three-dimensional coral model.
Representative example of reconstructed three-dimensional coral model for Acanella arbuscula created from the stacked 8-bit coral volumes images in Dragonfly (v2022.1); approximate dimensions 89 × 85 × 142 (XYZ) mm.
Three-dimensional reconstruction of high latitude bamboo coral via X-ray microfocus Computed Tomography

June 2024

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69 Reads

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1 Citation

Scientific Data

The skeletons of long-lived bamboo coral (Family Keratoisididae) are promising archives for deep-water palaeoceanographic reconstructions as they can record environmental variation at sub-decadal resolution in locations where in-situ measurements lack temporal coverage. Yet, detailed three dimensional (3D) characterisations of bamboo coral skeletal architecture are not routinely available and non-destructive investigations into microscale variations in calcification are rare. Here, we provide high-resolution micro-focus computed tomography (µCT) data of skeletal density for two species of bamboo coral (Acanella arbuscula: 5 specimens, voxel size, 15 µm (central branch scans) and 50 µm (complete structure scan); Keratoisis sp.: 4 specimens, voxel size, 15 µm) collected from the Labrador Sea and Baffin Bay deep-water basins, Eastern Canadian Arctic. These data provide reference models useful for developing methods to assess structural integrity and other fine-scale complexities in many biological, geological, and industrial systems. This will be of wider value to those investigating structural composition, arrangement and/or composition of complex architecture within the fields and subdisciplines of biology, ecology, medicine, environmental geology, and structural engineering.


Correlative geochemical imaging of Desmophyllum dianthus reveals biomineralisation strategy as a key coral vital effect

May 2024

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85 Reads

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4 Citations

The chemical and isotopic composition of stony coral skeletons form an important archive of past climate. However, these reconstructions are largely based on empirical relationships often complicated by “vital effects” arising from uncertain physiological processes of the coral holobiont. The skeletons of deep-sea corals, such as Desmophyllum dianthus, are characterised by micron-scale or larger geochemical heterogeneity associated with: (1) centres of calcification (COCs) where nucleation of new skeleton begins, and (2) fibres that thicken the skeleton. These features are difficult to sample cleanly using traditional techniques, resulting in uncertainty surrounding both the causes of geochemical differences and their influence on environmental signals. Here we combine optical, and in-situ chemical and isotopic, imaging tools across a range of spatial resolutions (~ 100 nm to 10 s of μm) in a correlative multimodal imaging (CMI) approach to isolate the microstructural geochemistry of each component. This reveals COCs are characterised by higher organic content, Mg, Li and Sr and lower U, B and δ¹¹B compared to fibres, reflecting the contrasting biomineralisation mechanisms employed to construct each feature. CMI is rarely applied in Environmental/Earth Sciences, but here we illustrate the power of this approach to unpick the “vital effects” in D. dianthus, and by extension, other scleractinian corals.


Century‐Long Records of Sedimentary Input on a Caribbean Reef From Coral Ba/Ca Ratios

May 2024

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96 Reads

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2 Citations

Coral reef ecosystems are delicately balanced and are thus prone to disruption by stressors such as storms, disease, climate variability and natural disasters. Most tropical coral populations worldwide are now in rapid decline owing to additional anthropogenic pressures, such as global warming, ocean acidification and a variety of local stressors. One such problem is the addition of excess sediment and nutrients flux to reefs from increased soil erosion from land use changes. Here we present century‐long Ba/Ca records from two Siderastrea siderea colonies as a proxy for local riverine discharge and sediment flux to the southern Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System (MBRS). The coral colonies have linear extension trends, which can be seen as a first‐order indicator for coral health and response. The coral colony that exhibits a decline in linear extension rate from the forereef of the MBRS, mainly receives riverine input from Honduras, whilst the coral from the backreef, which does not exhibit a decline in extension rate, primarily receives riverine input from more sparsely populated regions of Belize. Coral Ba/Ca increased (>70%) through time in the forereef colony, while the backreef colony showed little long‐term increase in Ba/Ca over the last century. Our results suggest that increasing sediment supply may have played a role in the decline of forereef skeletal extension in the southernmost MBRS region, likely stemming from increasing land‐use changes in Honduras.


Isotopic biographies reveal horse rearing and trading networks in medieval London

March 2024

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115 Reads

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2 Citations

Science Advances

This paper reports a high-resolution isotopic study of medieval horse mobility, revealing their origins and in-life mobility both regionally and internationally. The animals were found in an unusual horse cemetery site found within the City of Westminster, London, England. Enamel strontium, oxygen, and carbon isotope analysis of 15 individuals provides information about likely place of birth, diet, and mobility during the first approximately 5 years of life. Results show that at least seven horses originated outside of Britain in relatively cold climates, potentially in Scandinavia or the Western Alps. Ancient DNA sexing data indicate no consistent sex-specific mobility patterning, although three of the five females came from exceptionally highly radiogenic regions. Another female with low mobility is suggested to be a sedentary broodmare. Our results provide direct and unprecedented evidence for a variety of horse movement and trading practices in the Middle Ages and highlight the importance of international trade in securing high-quality horses for medieval London elites.


Citations (35)


... However, the importance of the presented model ( Fig. 6) for reconstructing Gravettian mobility should be tested with independent data. For example, the possibility of embedded procurement of lithic material while following migrating herds should be tested by stable isotope analysis on Gravettian fauna bones (e.g., Pryor et al., 2024). These are still lacking for the Moravian/Silesian Palaeolithic, but there is an ongoing project by one of the authors that should soon rectify this. ...

Reference:

Tracing the transfers of raw materials in the Gravettian of Moravia and Silesia
Reindeer prey mobility and seasonal hunting strategies in the late Gravettian mammoth steppe

... The very stress-tolerant and slow-growing (<1 cm per year), massive starlet coral Siderastrea siderea (Ellis and Solander 1786) occurring in a wide range of tropical and marginal marine environments in the western Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea, and the Gulf of Mexico, is among the most commonly used corals regarding high-resolution stable isotope compositions (δ 18 O, δ 13 C, δ 11 B, δ 15 N) and trace element ratios (Sr/Ca, Cd/Ca, Ba/Ca, Li/Mg, Sr-U) of its aragonitic skeletons (e.g., Guzmán and Tudhope 1998;Reuer et al. 2003;Gischler and Oschmann 2005;Maupin et al. 2008;DeLong et al. 2011DeLong et al. , 2014DeLong et al. , 2016DeLong et al. , 2023Fowell et al. 2016;Flannery et al. 2017;Kuffner et al. 2017;Chalk et al. 2021;Galochkina et al. 2023;Harbott et al. 2023;Shaw et al. 2024). These studies have shown that S. siderea can be used as a valuable biological and paleoenvironmental archive ranging from sub-annual to multidecadal or even multicentennial timescales, especially as a biological thermometer for reconstructions of sea surface temperature (SST). ...

Century‐Long Records of Sedimentary Input on a Caribbean Reef From Coral Ba/Ca Ratios

... The workflow allows in-situ analysis of small dental elements such as modern or ancient human teeth to study movement histories of target individuals or populations 48,49 , as well as life history events, subsistence strategies, cultural practices, and social structures of past societies [50][51][52] . When applied to domesticated animals and coupled with additional isotopic tracers (e.g., δ 13 C and δ 18 O), the workflow can potentially inform strategies of animal husbandry such as seasonal residence regions, trade, and the timing of migration [53][54][55] . The minimally destructive LA-ICP-MS method can also be applied to fossil hominin tooth fragments to study their landscape use and make inferences on their social or reproductive characteristics 56 . ...

Isotopic biographies reveal horse rearing and trading networks in medieval London
  • Citing Article
  • March 2024

Science Advances

... Notably, the intra-coral variations in Mg/Ca and Ba/Ca as well as in other El/Ca values can be up to 14% (Figure 3; Table S5 in Supporting Information S1), in which longitudinal variations are usually higher than those within a cylinder. A similar phenomenon has also been reported on bamboo corals from the Eastern Canadian Arctic (Williams et al., 2024). In this case, we encourage taking duplicate measurements along the longitudinal direction for future studies, otherwise the measured El/Ca values may be biased. ...

Geochemical proxies for deep-sea temperature and nutrient content in cold-water bamboo corals

Chemical Geology

... Architectural heritage represents diverse cultures and civilizations, evoking deep-rooted traditions and memories in people's minds. Historical buildings are not only landmarks that deserve protection but also irreplaceable cultural assets, reflecting the collective identity and historical continuity of communities (Milligan, 2007;Wilhelm et al., 2023). Preserving architectural heritage is essential for maintaining cultural continuity, which contributes to social wellbeing and cultural sustainability (Lapadula and Quiroga, 2012). ...

The Historic Built Environment As a Long-Term Geochemical Archive: Telling the Time on the Urban "Pollution Clock"
  • Citing Article
  • July 2023

Environmental Science and Technology

... Uncertainty surrounding the Sr/Ca-SST relationship have also been attributed to biological controls on Sr uptake into the coral aragonite crystal lattice [21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30]. Recent work also suggests that nutrient conditions can create substantial non-SST-related variability in coral Sr/ Ca ratios [31]. While much work has gone into improving the reproducibility of coral Sr/ Caderived SST estimates [20,[32][33][34][35][36], the wide distribution of coral Sr/Ca regression coefficients often necessitates colony-specific Sr/Ca-SST calibrations, making applications of coral Sr/Ca paleothermometry to fossil coral material challenging at the present time [37,38]. ...

Geochemical responses of scleractinian corals to nutrient stress
  • Citing Article
  • April 2023

Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

... Despite being cultured in laboratories since the 1970s (see Table I), previous culturing work on G. bulloides has predominantly focused on its application as a geochemical proxy (Mashiotta et al., 1997;Lea et al., 1999;Russell et al., 2004;Hönisch et al., 2011;Allen et al., 2016). Biological, metabolic and behavioural observations are scarce, despite these processes contributing to geochemical "vital effects" (Kearns et al., 2023). Furthermore, previous culturing studies were conducted in the subtropics, predominantly coastal California (Spero and Lea, 1996;Hönisch et al., 2011;Davis et al., 2017), and therefore do not replicate the full range of the ecological and biological environments of temperate to subpolar G. bulloides specimens. ...

The Influence of Geochemical Variation Among Globigerinoides ruber Individuals on Paleoceanographic Reconstructions

... Most likely, this is explained by the aggregation of knowledge that occurred in Neolithic Antequera, since it is an area with a great wealth of abiotic resources ( fig. S1), acting as an economic-social attractor (13). A similar architectural solution can be seen in the megalithic temple of Mnajdra, in Malta ( fig. ...

A multimethod approach to the genesis of Menga, a World Heritage megalith

Quaternary Research

... The lacustrine sediments between 476 and 580 m correspond to the CIE. In addition, both δ 13 C carb and δ 13 C TOC show a potential pre-onset excursion (POE) below the onset of the CIE (Figures 4a and 4c), which might be attributed to the POE that was first identified in the Bighorn Basin (Wyoming, USA) (Bowen et al., 2015) (Figure 6e), and found along the US Atlantic coastal margin (Babila et al., 2022). From a lithostratigraphic point of view, the CIE stands out in the continuous deposition of lacustrine carbonates and the almost complete loss of anhydrites. ...

Surface ocean warming and acidification driven by rapid carbon release precedes Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum

Science Advances

... The effect of Quaternary glacial phase in the Jebel Ben Zannouch (Causse et al. 2003;Corbera et al. 2022) distinguished by the infiltration of water within the marls of the Aleg Formation that raise its elasticity rate in near surface condition. This climate condition is associated to an important compressive phase continues until present. ...

Glacial-aged development of the Tunisian Coral Mound Province controlled by glacio-eustatic oscillations and changes in surface productivity
  • Citing Article
  • March 2022

Marine Geology