IIT Kharagpur, Deccan College Pune comes up with technique to retrieve sea surface temperature data

IIT Kharagpur, Deccan College Pune comes up with technique to retrieve sea surface temperature data

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Anupama Mehra
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New Delhi, Updated on Apr 4, 2022 09:08 IST

IIT Kharagpur in a statement said that the study, which has also been published in Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, was funded by the Infosys foundation.

IIT Kharagpur, Deccan College Pune comes up with technique to retrieve sea surface temperature data

IIT Kharagpur, Deccan College Pune comes up with technique to retrieve sea surface temperature data

A team of researchers from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur and Deccan College PGRI Pune has come up with a new technique that can precisely retrieve data about the past seasonal change in sea surface temperature from calcium carbonate continuously secreted by biological organisms like fish. These carbonates are concentrated in fish ear bones, known as otoliths.

IIT Kharagpur in a statement said that the study, which has also been published in Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, was funded by the Infosys foundation. The method can be used in any kind of biological organisms and has vast potential in climate studies, it said.

“Instrumental climate record is not available at every place. If anyone wants to know, for example, how the temperature changed over week to monthly scale during the last several years in deep tiger-infested creeks of Sundarban delta, one can go catch a live fish that recorded the past climate in otoliths,” the statement said. The key problem in modelling past climate is lack of seasonality data, principally because geological or archaeological records do not provide that kind of resolution.

“We have employed a novel technique where few millimeter size otoliths are analysed by a carbon-dioxide laser at few micron scale intervals for measuring their oxygen isotopic compositions.

“The isotopes of oxygen in these otoliths depend on the temperature of the water in which the fish grew and therefore record continuous snapshots of past temperature during its lifetime of a few years,” said Lead Investigator Prof Anindya Sarkar, Department of Geology & Geophysics, IIT-Kharagpur.

Dr Arati Deshpande Mukherjee of Deccan College, who collaborated in this research, added: “We are studying the 5,000-year-old fish otoliths from Indus Valley sites to assess how the seasonality through time affected the growth and collapse of this spectacular civilization.”

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