Millennial‐Scale Changes in Atmospheric Nitrous Oxide During the Holocene

Author:

Azharuddin Syed12,Ahn Jinho13ORCID,Ryu Yeongjun4,Brook Ed5,Salehnia Nasrin13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Seoul National University Seoul South Korea

2. Now at Graduate School of Environmental Studies Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

3. Center for Cryospheric Sciences Seoul National University Siheung South Korea

4. Department of Geosciences Princeton University Princeton NJ USA

5. College of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Sciences Oregon State University Corvallis OR USA

Abstract

AbstractNitrous oxide (N2O) is an important greenhouse gas which destroys the ozone in the stratosphere. Primary sources of atmospheric N2O are nitrification and denitrification in terrestrial soils and the ocean, and the main sink is photolysis in the stratosphere. Studies have mostly focused on the climate‐related response of N2O during glacial‐interglacial periods. However, its mechanism of variation during the Holocene remains unclear. We present a high‐resolution N2O record from the South Pole Ice (SPICE) core covering the Holocene epoch. The millennial‐scale N2O trend agrees with existing records. We constructed a Holocene composite consisting of the new N2O measurements in SPICE and existing records from other ice core sites. The N2O composite reveals four distinct periods of N2O variation during 11.5–10.0 ka, 10.0–6.2 ka, 6.2–2.2 ka, and 2.2–1.4 ka, including two maxima in 11.0–10.0 ka and 3.0–2.2 ka and minima in 8.8–6.2 ka and approximately 1.4 ka. Apart from these, our new high‐resolution record from SPICE shows a short‐term N2O decrease around 2.8 ka which is not observed in other records possibly due to lower sample resolution and/or higher age smoothing. Comparison of our new Holocene N2O composite with the paleo‐proxy records suggests the plausible linkage of major monsoon (Asian, North African, South and North American, and Australian‐Indonesian monsoon) and upwelling (Arabian Sea and Eastern Tropical South Pacific) regions in regulating the atmospheric N2O during the Holocene.

Funder

Oregon State University

National Research Foundation of Korea

Korea Polar Research Institute

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)

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