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Dive into the research topics where Julie N. Richey is active.

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Featured researches published by Julie N. Richey.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Globigerinoides ruber morphotypes in the Gulf of Mexico: A test of null hypothesis

Kaustubh Thirumalai; Julie N. Richey; Terrence M. Quinn; Richard Z. Poore

Planktic foraminifer Globigerinoides ruber (G. ruber), due to its abundance and ubiquity in the tropical/subtropical mixed layer, has been the workhorse of paleoceanographic studies investigating past sea-surface conditions on a range of timescales. Recent geochemical work on the two principal white G. ruber (W) morphotypes, sensu stricto (ss) and sensu lato (sl), has hypothesized differences in seasonal preferences or calcification depths, implying that reconstructions using a non-selective mixture of morphotypes could potentially be biased. Here, we test these hypotheses by performing stable isotope and abundance measurements on the two morphotypes in sediment trap, core-top, and downcore samples from the northern Gulf of Mexico. As a test of null hypothesis, we perform the same analyses on couplets of G. ruber (W) specimens with attributes intermediate to the holotypic ss and sl morphologies. We find no systematic or significant offsets in coeval ss-sl δ18O, and δ13C. These offsets are no larger than those in the intermediate pairs. Coupling our results with foraminiferal statistical model INFAUNAL, we find that contrary to previous work elsewhere, there is no evidence for discrepancies in ss-sl calcifying depth habitat or seasonality in the Gulf of Mexico.


Nature Communications | 2018

Pronounced centennial-scale Atlantic Ocean climate variability correlated with Western Hemisphere hydroclimate

Kaustubh Thirumalai; Terrence M. Quinn; Yuko M. Okumura; Julie N. Richey; Judson W. Partin; Richard Z. Poore; Eduardo Moreno-Chamarro

Surface-ocean circulation in the northern Atlantic Ocean influences Northern Hemisphere climate. Century-scale circulation variability in the Atlantic Ocean, however, is poorly constrained due to insufficiently-resolved paleoceanographic records. Here we present a replicated reconstruction of sea-surface temperature and salinity from a site sensitive to North Atlantic circulation in the Gulf of Mexico which reveals pronounced centennial-scale variability over the late Holocene. We find significant correlations on these timescales between salinity changes in the Atlantic, a diagnostic parameter of circulation, and widespread precipitation anomalies using three approaches: multiproxy synthesis, observational datasets, and a transient simulation. Our results demonstrate links between centennial changes in northern Atlantic surface-circulation and hydroclimate changes in the adjacent continents over the late Holocene. Notably, our findings reveal that weakened surface-circulation in the Atlantic Ocean was concomitant with well-documented rainfall anomalies in the Western Hemisphere during the Little Ice Age.Knowledge of surface-ocean circulation in the Atlantic over the late Holocene is incomplete. Here, the authors show that Atlantic Ocean surface-circulation varied in concert with Western Hemisphere rainfall anomalies on centennial timescales and that this link played an essential role during the Little Ice Age.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2017

Fidelity of the Sr/Ca proxy in recording ocean temperature in the western Atlantic coral Siderastrea siderea

Ilsa B. Kuffner; Kelsey E. Roberts; Jennifer A. Flannery; Jennifer M. Morrison; Julie N. Richey

Massive corals provide a useful archive of environmental variability, but careful testing of geochemical proxies in corals is necessary to validate the relationship between each proxy and environmental parameter throughout the full range of conditions experienced by the recording organisms. Here we use samples from a coral-growth study to test the hypothesis that Sr/Ca in the coral Siderastrea siderea accurately records sea-surface temperature (SST) in the subtropics (Florida, USA) along 350 km of reef tract. We test calcification rate, measured via buoyant weight, and linear extension (LE) rate, estimated with Alizarin Red-S staining, as predictors of variance in the Sr/Ca records of 39 individual S. siderea corals grown at four outer-reef locations next to in-situ temperature loggers during two, year-long periods. We found that corals with calcification rates < 1.7 mg cm−2 d−1 or < 1.7 mm yr−1 LE returned spuriously high Sr/Ca values, leading to a cold-bias in Sr/Ca-based SST estimates. The threshold-type response curves suggest that extension rate can be used as a quality-control indicator during sample and drill-path selection when using long cores for SST paleoreconstruction. For our corals that passed this quality control step, the Sr/Ca-SST proxy performed well in estimating mean annual temperature across three sites spanning 350 km of the Florida reef tract. However, there was some evidence that extreme temperature stress in 2010 (cold snap) and 2011 (SST above coral-bleaching threshold) may have caused the corals not to record the temperature extremes. Known stress events could be avoided during modern calibrations of paleoproxies.


Fact Sheet | 2015

Investigación del USGS sobre el ecosistema de arrecifes de coral en el Atlántico

Ilsa B. Kuffner; Kimberly K. Yates; David G. Zawada; Julie N. Richey; Christina A. Kellogg; Lauren T. Toth; Legna M. Torres-Garcia

Los arrecifes de coral son estructuras sólidas, biomineralizadas que protegen comunidades costeras actuando como barreras protectoras de peligros tales como los huracanes y los tsunamis. Estos proveen arena a las playas a través de procesos naturales de erosión, fomentan la industria del turismo, las actividades recreacionales y proveen hábitats pesqueros esenciales. La continua degradación mundial de ecosistemas de arrecifes de coral está bien documentada (por ejemplo, fig. 1). Existe la necesidad de enfoque y organización de la ciencia para entender los procesos complejos físicos y biológicos e interacciones que están afectando el estado de los arrecifes coralinos y su capacidad para responder a un entorno cambiante.


Fact Sheet | 2015

USGS research on Atlantic coral reef ecosystems

Ilsa B. Kuffner; Kimberly K. Yates; David G. Zawada; Julie N. Richey; Christina A. Kellogg; Lauren T. Toth

Coral reefs are massive, biomineralized structures that protect coastal communities by acting as barriers to hazards such as hurricanes and tsunamis. They provide sand for beaches through the natural process of erosion, support tourism and recreational industries, and provide essential habitat for fisheries. The continuing global degradation of coral reef ecosystems is well documented (for example, fig. 1). There is a need for focused, coordinated science to understand the complex physical and biological processes and interactions that are impacting the condition of coral reefs and their ability to respond to a changing environment.


Biogeosciences | 2014

Lunar periodicity in the shell flux of planktonic foraminifera in the Gulf of Mexico

Lukas Jonkers; Caitlin E. Reynolds; Julie N. Richey; Ian Robert Hall


Paleoceanography | 2016

GDGT and alkenone flux in the northern Gulf of Mexico: Implications for the TEX86 and UK'37 paleothermometers

Julie N. Richey; Jessica E. Tierney


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2017

Multi-species coral Sr/Ca-based sea-surface temperature reconstruction using Orbicella faveolata and Siderastrea siderea from the Florida Straits

Jennifer A. Flannery; Julie N. Richey; Kaustubh Thirumalai; Richard Z. Poore; Kristine L. DeLong


Quaternary Geochronology | 2017

Millennial-scale variability in the local radiocarbon reservoir age of south Florida during the Holocene

Lauren T. Toth; Hai Cheng; R. Lawrence Edwards; Erica Ashe; Julie N. Richey


Global and Planetary Change | 2017

A North American Hydroclimate Synthesis (NAHS) of the Common Era

Jessica Rodysill; Lesleigh Anderson; Thomas M. Cronin; Miriam C. Jones; Robert S. Thompson; David B. Wahl; Debra A. Willard; Jason A. Addison; J. R. Alder; Katherine H. Anderson; Lysanna Anderson; John A. Barron; Christopher E. Bernhardt; Steven W. Hostetler; Natalie Kehrwald; Nicole S. Khan; Julie N. Richey; Scott W. Starratt; Laura E. Strickland; Michael R. Toomey; Claire C. Treat; G. Lynn Wingard

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Ilsa B. Kuffner

United States Geological Survey

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Caitlin E. Reynolds

United States Geological Survey

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Jennifer A. Flannery

United States Geological Survey

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Lauren T. Toth

United States Geological Survey

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Richard Z. Poore

United States Geological Survey

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Kaustubh Thirumalai

University of Texas at Austin

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Christina A. Kellogg

United States Geological Survey

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David G. Zawada

United States Geological Survey

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Jennifer M. Morrison

United States Geological Survey

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