Glacial - Interglacial Co 2 Change : the Iron Hypothesis
نویسنده
چکیده
Several explanations for the 200 to 280 ppm glacial/interglacial change in atmospheric CO 2 concentrations deal with variations in southern ocean phytoplankton productivity and the related use or nonuse of major plant nutrients. An hypothesis is presented herein in which arguments are made that new productivity in today's southern ocean (7.4 X 1013 g yr -1) is limited by iron deficiency, and hence the phytoplankton are unable to take advantage of the excess surface nitrate/ phosphate that, if used, could result in total southern ocean new production of 2-3 X 1015 g C yr -1. As a consequence of Fe-limited new productivity, Holocene interglacial CO 2 levels (preindustrial) are as high as they were during the last interglacial (• 280 ppm). In contrast, atmospheric dust Fe supplies were 50 times higher during the last glacial maximum (LGM). Because of this Fe enrichment, phytoplankton growth may have been greatly enhanced, larger amounts of upwelled nutrients may have been used, and the resulting stimulation of new productivity may have contributed to the LGM drawdown of atmospheric CO 2 to levels of less than Copyright 1990 by the American Geophysical Union. Paper number 89PA03449. 0883-8305/90/89PA-03449510.00 200 ppm. Background information and arguments in support of this hypothesis are presented.
منابع مشابه
Glacial CO2 sequestration
Introduction Conclusions References Tables Figures Back Close Full Screen / Esc Abstract Introduction Conclusions References Tables Figures Back Close Full Screen / Esc Abstract Given the magnitude and dynamism of the deep marine carbon reservoir, it is almost certain that past glacial – interglacial fluctuations in atmospheric CO 2 have relied at least in part on changes in the carbon storage ...
متن کاملGlacial cycles triggered by burial carbon release
Introduction Conclusions References Tables Figures Back Close Full Screen / Esc Abstract Introduction Conclusions References Tables Figures Back Close Full Screen / Esc Printer-friendly Version Interactive Discussion EGU Abstract A new mechanism is proposed in which climate, carbon cycle and icesheets interact with each other to produce a feedback that can produce quasi-100 ky glacial-interglac...
متن کاملGlacial-Interglacial Atmospheric CO2 Change —The Glacial Burial Hypothesis
Organic carbon buried under the great ice sheets of the Northern Hemisphere is suggested to be the missing link in the atmospheric CO2 change over the glacial-interglacial cycles. At glaciation, the advancement of continental ice sheets buries vegetation and soil carbon accumulated during warmer periods. At deglaciation, this burial carbon is released back into the atmosphere. In a simulation o...
متن کاملConstraints on soluble aerosol iron flux to the Southern Ocean at the Last Glacial Maximum
Relief of iron (Fe) limitation in the Southern Ocean during ice ages, with potentially increased carbon storage in the ocean, has been invoked as one driver of glacial-interglacial atmospheric CO2 cycles. Ice and marine sediment records demonstrate that atmospheric dust supply to the oceans increased by up to an order of magnitude during glacial intervals. However, poor constraints on soluble a...
متن کاملApplication of sediment core modelling to understanding climates of the past: An example from glacial-interglacial changes in Southern Ocean silica cycling
Paleoceanographic evidence from the Southern Ocean reveals an apparent stark meridional divide in biogeochemical dynamics associated with the glacial-interglacial cycles of the late Neogene. South of the present-day position of the Antarctic Polar Front biogenic opal is generally much more abundant in sediments during interglacials 5 compared to glacials. To the north, an anti-phased relationsh...
متن کامل