4.4 Article

Atmosphere-Ocean CO2 Exchange Across the Last Deglaciation From the Boron Isotope Proxy

Journal

PALEOCEANOGRAPHY AND PALEOCLIMATOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 10, Pages 1650-1670

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018PA003498

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [MGG 1558990]
  2. NERC [NE/M004619/1, NE/N011716/1]
  3. RSNZ Marsden Fund [UOA1022]
  4. DOE-NETL [601970]
  5. NERC [NE/N011716/1, NE/N003861/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Identifying processes within the Earth System that have modulated atmospheric pCO(2) during each glacial cycle of the late Pleistocene stands as one of the grand challenges in climate science. The growing array of surface ocean pH estimates from the boron isotope proxy across the last glacial termination may reveal regions of the ocean that influenced the timing and magnitude of pCO(2) rise. Here we present two new boron isotope records from the subtropical-subpolar transition zone of the Southwest Pacific that span the last 20 kyr, as well as new radiocarbon data from the same cores. The new data suggest this region was a source of carbon to the atmosphere rather than a moderate sink as it is today. Significantly higher outgassing is observed between similar to 16.5 and 14 kyr BP, associated with increasing delta C-13 and [CO3](2-) at depth, suggesting loss of carbon from the intermediate ocean to the atmosphere. We use these new boron isotope records together with existing records to build a composite pH/pCO(2) curve for the surface oceans. The pH disequilibrium/CO2 outgassing was widespread throughout the last deglaciation, likely explained by upwelling of CO2 from the deep/intermediate ocean. During the Holocene, a smaller outgassing peak is observed at a time of relatively stable atmospheric CO2, which may be explained by regrowth of the terrestrial biosphere countering ocean CO2 release. Our stack is likely biased toward upwelling/CO2 source regions. Nevertheless, the composite pCO(2) curve provides robust evidence that various parts of the ocean were releasing CO2 to the atmosphere over the last 25 kyr.

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