Abstract

A range of complementary radionuclide proxies in sediments of the southernmost Atlantic Ocean over the past 140,000 years indicate that glacial periods were characterized by greatly increased fluxes of biogenic detritus out of surface waters. This increase in export production, which may have contributed to lower concentrations of carbon dioxide in the glacial atmosphere, was accompanied by more than a fivefold increase in accumulation of lithogenic iron transported by winds from Patagonian deserts. These observations support the hypothesis that the iron limitation of today's Southern Ocean productivity was relieved in glacial periods by a greater supply of iron from wind-blown dust.

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