4.6 Article

Tropospheric 14CO2 at Wellington, New Zealand: the world's longest record

Journal

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 104, Issue 1-3, Pages 5-22

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10533-009-9352-6

Keywords

(CO2)-C-14; Radiocarbon; Carbon cycle; Bomb pulse

Funding

  1. NIWA [C01X0204]

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Measurements of near-sea-level tropospheric Delta(CO2)-C-14 have been made at Wellington, New Zealand since December 1954; these measurements comprise the longest such record available. The Delta C-14 rose from -10aEuro degrees in 1955 peaking at 695aEuro degrees in 1965 as a result of bomb C-14 production, before falling thereafter to the present day (2005) value of 73aEuro degrees. The Delta C-14 peak occurred about 1 year later in the southern hemisphere than in the northern hemisphere. The post-1965 fall is due to the transfer of C-14-enriched CO2 to the biospheric and oceanic pools together with ongoing release of C-14-free CO2 from fossil fuel combustion, during an era without major atmospheric nuclear-weapon tests. Time series analysis of the data using Loess decomposition and filtering indicates an approximately exponential decline in excess Delta(CO2)-C-14 over 1967-2005 with an e-folding time of 18 years. The seasonal cycle from 1954 until 1980 had a maximum in the late (austral) summer, a minimum in winter, with peak-to-trough amplitude that peaked at 20aEuro degrees in 1966. For the period 1980-1989, a new seasonal cycle emerged, with a maximum in winter and a minimum in late summer/early autumn and peak-to-trough amplitude of 3.5aEuro degrees, transitioning to a new seasonal structure after about 1990.

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