201. The Southern Ocean's role in carbon exchange during the last deglaciation.
- Author
-
Burke A and Robinson LF
- Subjects
- Animals, Carbon Dioxide, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Ice Cover, Oceans and Seas, Radiometric Dating, Time, Anthozoa chemistry, Atmosphere chemistry, Carbon Cycle, Carbon Radioisotopes analysis, Seawater chemistry
- Abstract
Changes in the upwelling and degassing of carbon from the Southern Ocean form one of the leading hypotheses for the cause of glacial-interglacial changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide. We present a 25,000-year-long Southern Ocean radiocarbon record reconstructed from deep-sea corals, which shows radiocarbon-depleted waters during the glacial period and through the early deglaciation. This depletion and associated deep stratification disappeared by ~14.6 ka (thousand years ago), consistent with the transfer of carbon from the deep ocean to the surface ocean and atmosphere via a Southern Ocean ventilation event. Given this evidence for carbon exchange in the Southern Ocean, we show that existing deep-ocean radiocarbon records from the glacial period are sufficiently depleted to explain the ~190 per mil drop in atmospheric radiocarbon between ~17 and 14.5 ka.
- Published
- 2012
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