Opal burial in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean over the last 30 ka: Implications for glacial-interglacial changes in the ocean silicon cycle
نویسندگان
چکیده
[1] The Silicic Acid Leakage Hypothesis (SALH) suggests that, during glacial periods, excess silicic acid was transported from the Southern Ocean to lower latitudes, which favored diatom production over coccolithophorid production and caused a drawdown of atmospheric CO2. Downcore records of Th-normalized opal fluxes and Pa/Th ratios from seven equatorial Atlantic cores were used to reconstruct diatom productivity over the past 30 ka (where a is years) and to test the SALH. Downcore records of Pa/Th ratios and opal fluxes are highly correlated, suggesting that they constitute a production-based record of opal flux. Opal flux records support the SALH in that glacial opal burial exceeded Holocene burial by 1.8 Gt opal/ka in the area 0 –40 W and 5 N–5 S. Earlier results from the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean showed the opposite trend, with greater Holocene than glacial opal burial, but approximately the same magnitude of difference between glacial and interglacial opal burial. We suggest four (nonexclusive) scenarios to explain the data from both basins: (1) Increased upwelling in the equatorial Atlantic and El Niño–like conditions suppressing upwelling in the eastern equatorial Pacific altered the overall nutrient supply to both basins; (2) Si leaked from the Southern Ocean because of Fe fertilization, but was prevented from upwelling in the equatorial Pacific because of El Niño–like conditions during the LGM; (3) Si leaked from the Southern Ocean because diatom productivity was limited by increased sea ice extent and was again prevented from upwelling in the equatorial Pacific; or (4) changes in ocean circulation related to the decreased input of Agulhas water to the glacial South Atlantic provided excess dissolved Si to the equatorial Atlantic Ocean. A deglacial opal pulse is seen in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. All four scenarios and the presence of the common deglacial opal pulse suggest a common driver in the Southern Ocean.
منابع مشابه
Spatial and temporal distribution of biogenic carbonate and opal in deep-sea sediments from the eastern equatorial Paci¢c: implications for ocean history since 1.3 Ma
High-resolution records of glacial^interglacial variations in biogenic carbonate, opal, and detritus (derived from non-destructive core log measurements of density, P-wave velocity and color; rv 0.9) from 15 sediment sites in the eastern equatorial (sampling resolution is V1 kyr) clear response to eccentricity and precession forcing. For the Peru Basin, we generate a high-resolution (21 kyr inc...
متن کاملContrasting ocean changes between the subpolar and polar North Atlantic during the past 135 ka
[1] Variations in the poleward-directed Atlantic heat transfer was investigated over the past 135 ka with special emphasis on the last and present interglacial climate development (Eemian and Holocene). Both interglacials exhibited very similar climatic oscillations during each preceding glacial terminations (deglacial TI and TII). Like TI, also TII has pronounced cold–warm–cold changes akin to...
متن کاملModeling the response of the oceanic Si inventory to perturbation, and consequences for atmospheric CO2
[1] It has been suggested that much of the observed glacial-interglacial variability in the atmospheric mixing ratio of CO2 (xCO2) could potentially be driven by a perturbation of the marine Si cycle. To date, only relatively simple steady-state analysis has been made of this hypothesis. In this study, we develop a description of the ocean carbon cycle, incorporating novel descriptions for the ...
متن کاملPersistent millennial-scale link between Greenland climate and northern Pacific Oxygen Minimum Zone under interglacial conditions
The intensity and/or extent of the northeastern Pacific Oxygen Minimum Zone (OMZ) varied in-phase with the Northern Hemisphere high latitude climate on millennial timescales during the last glacial period, indicating the occurrence of atmospheric and oceanic connections under glacial conditions. While millennial variability was reported for both the Greenland and the northern Atlantic Ocean dur...
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 کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2007