Anthropocene North Western Pacific Oceanography Recorded as Seasonal‐Resolution Radiocarbon in Coral From Kikai Island, Japan

Author:

Zeng Yuning12ORCID,Yokoyama Yusuke12345ORCID,Hirabayashi Shoko1ORCID,Miyairi Yosuke1,Suzuki Atsushi6ORCID,Aze Takahiro1ORCID,Kawakubo Yuta13

Affiliation:

1. Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute The University of Tokyo Kashiwa Japan

2. Graduate Program on Environmental Sciences Graduate School of Arts and Sciences The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

3. Department of Earth and Planetary Science Graduate School of Science The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

4. Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) Yokosuka Japan

5. Research School of Physics The Australian National University Canberra ACT Australia

6. Geological Survey of Japan National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) Ibaraki Japan

Abstract

AbstractRadiocarbon (14C) in corals can be used as a relatively high‐sensitivity indicator of vertical and horizontal advection of water masses, which contributes to the understanding of ocean circulation. In this study, we reconstruct Kuroshio and Ryukyu current transport with a seasonal resolution Δ14C record spanning 1947–2009. This record covers the beginning of the atomic era and was obtained from a coral on Kikai Island in the south of Japan. The Kikai Δ14C curve features a newly discovered Δ14C spike in July 1955, a rapid increase after 1962, and a steady decrease after 1980. The spike in 1955 may directly reflect ocean current transport. The lack of periodicity in the Δ14C record suggests the existence of mesoscale eddies and the complexity of Kuroshio and Ryukyu current transport. In addition, comparing the high‐resolution Δ14C of Kikai and Ishigaki islands, both situated along the path of the Kuroshio, reveals the influence of Pacific Decadal Oscillation and El Niño‐Southern Oscillation on the Kuroshio and Ryukyu currents. This suggests that seasonally resolved Δ14C in corals along an ocean current can produce a long‐term record of ocean mixing that responds to climate variability.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

China Scholarship Council

Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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