Abstract

Abstract We present new geochemical evidence of changes in oxygenation of the deep Antarctic Pacific over the last 770 kyr. Our data are derived from redox-sensitive metals and export production proxies extracted from gravity core ANT34/A2-10 at 4217 m water depth. Our results show that oxygen levels in the deep Antarctic Zone (AZ) varied in line with the release of deeply sequestered remineralized carbon to the atmosphere during glacial–interglacial (G–IG) cycles, with lower oxygen concentrations and more carbon storage during glacial periods. Subsequent reductions in the amount of carbon stored at depth were closely associated with improved ventilation during glacial terminations. The systematic and repeated glacial-to-interglacial increases in export production in the AZ region indicate a robust pattern of enhanced Southern Ocean (SO) ventilation during interglacial periods. In addition to the decline in atmospheric CO2 caused by iron fertilization in the Subantarctic AZ (SAZ) during the latter half of the glacial progression, decreases in productivity in the central AZ suggest that the weakening of SO ventilation induced deep AZ carbon sequestration and that this might have made a continuous additional contribution to the CO2 decline from each interglacial peak to glacial maximum. Observed variations in the degree of deep oxygenation and “organic carbon pump” efficiency in the central AZ might be driven primarily by physical “ventilation” processes (i.e., overturning circulation, mixing, and/or air–sea gas exchange). Our records of abyssal oxygenation in the central AZ, which vary in concert with atmospheric CO2 levels over the last several G–IG cycles, provide strong evidence that SO ventilation plays a significant role in controlling variations in both the amount of respired carbon sequestered in the deep ocean and atmospheric CO2 concentrations on G–IG timescales. Specifically, we suggest that the “organic carbon pump” (OCP) in the SAZ and the physical ventilation processes in the AZ (the “carbon venting valve”) acted together synergistically, but dominated at different intervals over G–IG cycles, to repeatedly switch the SO between carbon sink and carbon source, thereby modulating the atmospheric CO2 over the last 770 kyr. These findings provide new insights into the role of the AZ in controlling deep SO carbon sequestration and atmospheric CO2 levels in G–IG cycles.

Highlights

  • The Southern Ocean (SO) is believed to play a central role in modulating the ocean–atmosphere CO2 exchange over glacial cycles, thereby adjusting the greenhouse effect on global climate [1,2,3]

  • We reconstructed levels of deep ocean oxygenation and export production in the central Antarctic Zone (AZ) since 773 ka B.P. using redox-sensitive metal and export production proxies extracted from core ANT34/A2-10 from >4000 m water depth, which currently sits in Antarctic bottom water (AABW)

  • Our results have generated the following conclusions: (1) Our observations in the central AZ Pacific show that changes in the oxygenation of the deep AZ are in line with the changes in the amount of deeply sequestered remineralized carbon released to the atmosphere during G–IG cycles over the last 770 kyr

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Summary

Introduction

The Southern Ocean (SO) is believed to play a central role in modulating the ocean–atmosphere CO2 exchange over glacial cycles, thereby adjusting the greenhouse effect on global climate [1,2,3]. The SO may exert a substantial control on the atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) by (1) facilitating the upwelling and exposure of deeply sequestered CO2 and nutrient-rich water masses along outcropping isopycnals and (2) storing dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the ocean interior following the export and respiration of biologically fixed carbon.

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