Abstract

Abstract. We have developed and employed an Earth system model to explore the forcings of atmospheric pCO2 change and the chemical and isotopic evolution of seawater over the last glacial cycle. Concentrations of dissolved phosphorus (DP), reactive nitrogen, molecular oxygen, dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), total alkalinity (TA), 13C-DIC, and 14C-DIC were calculated for 24 ocean boxes. The bi-directional water fluxes between these model boxes were derived from a 3-D circulation field of the modern ocean (Opa 8.2, NEMO) and tuned such that tracer distributions calculated by the box model were consistent with observational data from the modern ocean. To model the last 130 kyr, we employed records of past changes in sea-level, ocean circulation, and dust deposition. According to the model, about half of the glacial pCO2 drawdown may be attributed to marine regressions. The glacial sea-level low-stands implied steepened ocean margins, a reduced burial of particulate organic carbon, phosphorus, and neritic carbonate at the margin seafloor, a decline in benthic denitrification, and enhanced weathering of emerged shelf sediments. In turn, low-stands led to a distinct rise in the standing stocks of DIC, TA, and nutrients in the global ocean, promoted the glacial sequestration of atmospheric CO2 in the ocean, and added 13C- and 14C-depleted DIC to the ocean as recorded in benthic foraminifera signals. The other half of the glacial drop in pCO2 was linked to inferred shoaling of Atlantic meridional overturning circulation and more efficient utilization of nutrients in the Southern Ocean. The diminished ventilation of deep water in the glacial Atlantic and Southern Ocean led to significant 14C depletions with respect to the atmosphere. According to our model, the deglacial rapid and stepwise rise in atmospheric pCO2 was induced by upwelling both in the Southern Ocean and subarctic North Pacific and promoted by a drop in nutrient utilization in the Southern Ocean. The deglacial sea-level rise led to a gradual decline in nutrient, DIC, and TA stocks, a slow change due to the large size and extended residence times of dissolved chemical species in the ocean. Thus, the rapid deglacial rise in pCO2 can be explained by fast changes in ocean dynamics and nutrient utilization whereas the gradual pCO2 rise over the Holocene may be linked to the slow drop in nutrient and TA stocks that continued to promote an ongoing CO2 transfer from the ocean into the atmosphere.

Highlights

  • The discussion of mechanisms that might be responsible for the glacial to interglacial change in the atmosphere’s CO2 content is focused on the ocean (Broecker, 1982b)

  • The sequestration of atmospheric pressure of CO2 (pCO2) in the glacial ocean may have been further promoted by the glacial shoaling of the Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) in the Atlantic (Duplessy et al, 1988; Sarnthein et al, 1994), a possible increase in Southern Ocean stratification (Toggweiler, 1999), a prolonged residence time of surface waters in the Southern Ocean providing more time for the biota to draw down nutrients and CO2 (Watson et al, 2015) and a global decline in MOC intensity and deep ocean ventilation (Sarnthein et al, 2013)

  • Simulation standard model run (STD)-CC was run with constant circulation – that is, all water fluxes were maintained at the Holocene level over the full model period – whereas simulation STD-CC-CN was performed with the Holocene circulation field and constant nutrient utilization

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Summary

Introduction

The discussion of mechanisms that might be responsible for the glacial to interglacial change in the atmosphere’s CO2 content is focused on the ocean (Broecker, 1982b). The biological pump was probably intensified by iron fertilization (Martin, 1990) and the coeval expansion of nitrate (Deutsch et al, 2004) and phosphate (Broecker, 1982b) stocks in the glacial ocean, while seawater alkalinity may have been enhanced by the demise of neritic carbonate formation (Berger, 1982; Opdyke and Walker, 1992; Kleypas, 1997). The sequestration of atmospheric pCO2 in the glacial ocean may have been further promoted by the glacial shoaling of the Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) in the Atlantic (Duplessy et al, 1988; Sarnthein et al, 1994), a possible increase in Southern Ocean stratification (Toggweiler, 1999), a prolonged residence time of surface waters in the Southern Ocean providing more time for the biota to draw down nutrients and CO2 (Watson et al, 2015) and a global decline in MOC intensity and deep ocean ventilation (Sarnthein et al, 2013)

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