CO2 storage and release in the deep Southern Ocean on millennial to centennial timescales

被引:0
作者
J. W. B. Rae
A. Burke
L. F. Robinson
J. F. Adkins
T. Chen
C. Cole
R. Greenop
T. Li
E. F. M. Littley
D. C. Nita
J. A. Stewart
B. J. Taylor
机构
[1] University of St Andrews,School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[2] University of Bristol,School of Earth Sciences
[3] California Institute of Technology,Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences
[4] Nanjing University,School of Earth Sciences and Engineering
[5] Babes-Bolyai University,Faculty of Environmental Science and Engineering
来源
Nature | 2018年 / 562卷
关键词
Deep Southern Ocean; Centennial Timescales; Boron Isotope; Oceanic Carbonate System; Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC);
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The cause of changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) during the recent ice ages is yet to be fully explained. Most mechanisms for glacial–interglacial CO2 change have centred on carbon exchange with the deep ocean, owing to its large size and relatively rapid exchange with the atmosphere1. The Southern Ocean is thought to have a key role in this exchange, as much of the deep ocean is ventilated to the atmosphere in this region2. However, it is difficult to reconstruct changes in deep Southern Ocean carbon storage, so few direct tests of this hypothesis have been carried out. Here we present deep-sea coral boron isotope data that track the pH—and thus the CO2 chemistry—of the deep Southern Ocean over the past forty thousand years. At sites closest to the Antarctic continental margin, and most influenced by the deep southern waters that form the ocean’s lower overturning cell, we find a close relationship between ocean pH and atmospheric CO2: during intervals of low CO2, ocean pH is low, reflecting enhanced ocean carbon storage; and during intervals of rising CO2, ocean pH rises, reflecting loss of carbon from the ocean to the atmosphere. Correspondingly, at shallower sites we find rapid (millennial- to centennial-scale) decreases in pH during abrupt increases in CO2, reflecting the rapid transfer of carbon from the deep ocean to the upper ocean and atmosphere. Our findings confirm the importance of the deep Southern Ocean in ice-age CO2 change, and show that deep-ocean CO2 release can occur as a dynamic feedback to rapid climate change on centennial timescales.
引用
收藏
页码:569 / 573
页数:4
相关论文
共 127 条
  • [1] Broecker WS(1982)Glacial to interglacial changes in ocean chemistry Prog. Oceanogr. 11 151-197
  • [2] Sarmiento JL(1984)A new model for the role of the oceans in determining atmospheric pCO Nature 308 621-624
  • [3] Toggweiler JR(2010)The polar ocean and glacial cycles in atmospheric CO Nature 466 47-55
  • [4] Sigman DM(2012) concentration Science 335 557-561
  • [5] Hain MP(2016)The Southern Ocean’s role in carbon exchange during the last deglaciation Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 113 514-519
  • [6] Haug GH(2014)Evolution of South Atlantic density and chemical stratification across the last deglaciation Science 343 1347-1350
  • [7] Burke A(2014)Iron fertilization of the Subantarctic Ocean during the last ice age Quat. Sci. Rev. 90 80-89
  • [8] Robinson LF(2014)Deep South Atlantic carbonate chemistry and increased interocean deep water exchange during last deglaciation Paleoceanography 29 645-667
  • [9] Roberts J(2013)Deep water formation in the North Pacific and deglacial CO2 rise Quat. Sci. Rev. 76 39-52
  • [10] Martinez-Garcia A(2010)Responses of the deep ocean carbonate system to carbon reorganization during the last glacial–interglacial cycle Paleoceanography 25 PA1209-8758