4.8 Article

Marine radiocarbon evidence for the mechanism of deglacial atmospheric CO2 rise

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 316, Issue 5830, Pages 1456-1459

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1138679

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We reconstructed the radiocarbon activity of intermediate waters in the eastern North Pacific over the past 38,000 years. Radiocarbon activity paralleled that of the atmosphere, except during deglaciation, when intermediate-water values fell by more than 300 per mil. Such a large decrease requires a deglacial injection of very old waters from a deep-ocean carbon reservoir that was previously well isolated from the atmosphere. The timing of intermediate-water radiocarbon depletion closely matches that of atmospheric carbon dioxide rise and effectively traces the redistribution of carbon from the deep ocean to the atmosphere during deglaciation.

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