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  1. Stable lithium isotopes (δ7Li) of CaCO3 minerals have increasingly been used as a tracer for changes in silicate weathering processes. However, there is limited understanding of the influence of physical and chemical conditions on δ7Li values of CaCO3 minerals during their formation in aqueous solutions. Here, we examined Li isotope fractionation in inorganic calcite and aragonite precipitation experiments with systematic manipulations of solution pH and concentrations of total dissolved inorganic carbon species ([DIC] ≈ [HCO3−] + [CO32−]) and calcium ion (Ca2+). Calcite and aragonite samples had δ7Li values lower than those of dissolved Li in solutions by about 3‰ and 16‰, respectively, indicating preferential uptake of the lighter 6Li isotopes. Aragonite consistently had δ7Li values lower than those of calcite by ∼13‰, likely due to differences in Li coordination and thereby the strength of bonds formed by/with Li within the respective mineral structure. We observed no statistically significant changes in aragonite nor calcite δ7Li values in response to changing solution pH, [DIC], [Ca2+], and CaCO3 precipitation rates, indicating our solution chemistry manipulations imposed little effect on Li isotope fractionation. These findings lead us to argue that the observed Li isotope fractionations in calcite and aragonite with respect to dissolved Li in solutions are dominated by equilibrium isotope effects, and that kinetic effects for δ7Li values in CaCO3 are either non-existent or too small to be expressed under our experimental conditions. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
  2. The sulfur over calcium ratio (S/Ca) in foraminiferal shells was recently proposed as a new and independent proxy for reconstructing marine inorganic carbon chemistry. This new approach assumes that sulfur is incorporated into CaCO3 predominantly in the form of sulfate (SO42−) through lattice substitution for carbonate ions (CO32–), and that S/Ca thus reflects seawater [CO32–]. Although foraminiferal growth experiments validated this approach, field studies showed controversial results suggesting that the potential impact of [CO32–] may be overwritten by one or more parameters. Hence, to better understand the inorganic processes involved, we here investigate S/Ca values in inorganically precipitated CaCO3 (S/Ca(cc)) grown in solutions of CaCl2 − Na2CO3 − Na2SO4 − B(OH)3 − MgCl2. Experimental results indicate the dependence of sulfate partitioning in CaCO3 on the carbon chemistry via changing pH and suggest that faster precipitation rates increase the partition coefficient for sulfur. The S/Ca ratios of our inorganic calcite samples show positive correlation with modelled [CaSO40](aq), but not with the concentration of free SO42− ions. This challenges the traditional model for sulfate incorporation in calcite and implies that the uptake of sulfate potentially occurs via ion-ion pairs rather than being incorporated as single anions. Based on the [Ca2+] dependence via speciation, we here suggest a critical evaluation of this potential proxy. As sulfate complexation seems to control sulfate uptake in inorganic calcite, application as a proxy using foraminiferal calcite may be limited to periods for which seawater chemistry is well-constrained. As foraminiferal calcite growth is modulated by inward Ca2+ flow to the site of calcification coupled to outward H+ pumping, sulfate incorporation as CaSO40 ion-pair in the foraminifer’s shell also provides a mechanistic link for the observed relationship between S/Ca(cc) and [CO32–]. 
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