Modeling the evolution of pulse-like perturbations in atmospheric carbon and carbon isotopes: the role of weathering–sedimentation imbalances
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Published:2020-03-04
Issue:2
Volume:16
Page:423-451
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ISSN:1814-9332
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Container-title:Climate of the Past
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Jeltsch-Thömmes AurichORCID, Joos FortunatORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Measurements of carbon isotope variations in climate archives and isotope-enabled climate
modeling advance the understanding of the carbon cycle. Perturbations in atmospheric CO2
and in its isotopic ratios (δ13C, Δ14C) are removed by different
processes acting on different timescales.
We investigate these differences on timescales of up to 100 000 years in pulse-release
experiments with the Bern3D-LPX Earth system model of intermediate complexity and by analytical
solutions from a box model.
On timescales from years to many centuries, the atmospheric perturbations in CO2 and
δ13CO2 are reduced by air–sea gas exchange, physical transport from the
surface to the deep ocean, and by the land biosphere. Isotopic perturbations are initially
removed much faster from the atmosphere than perturbations in CO2 as explained by aquatic
carbonate chemistry. On multimillennial timescales, the CO2 perturbation is removed by
carbonate compensation and silicate rock weathering. In contrast, the δ13C
perturbation is removed by the relentless flux of organic and calcium carbonate particles buried
in sediments.
The associated removal rate is significantly modified by spatial δ13C gradients
within the ocean, influencing the isotopic perturbation of the burial flux. Space-time variations
in ocean δ13C perturbations are captured by principal components and empirical
orthogonal functions. Analytical impulse response functions for atmospheric CO2 and
δ13CO2 are provided. Results suggest that changes in terrestrial carbon storage were not the sole cause for the
abrupt, centennial-scale CO2 and δ13CO2 variations recorded in ice
during Heinrich stadials HS1 and HS4, though model and data uncertainties prevent a firm
conclusion. The δ13C offset between the Penultimate Glacial Maximum and Last
Glacial Maximum reconstructed for the ocean and atmosphere is most likely caused by imbalances
between weathering, volcanism, and burial fluxes.
Our study highlights the importance of isotopic fluxes connected to weathering–sedimentation
imbalances, which so far have been often neglected on glacial–interglacial timescales.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
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