iron hypothesis

An increase in the productivity of the glacial-age Southern Ocean has been postulated to explain the decrease in pC0, of the atmosphere observed in ice cores. A plausible mechanism has been proposed elsewhere that productivity is limited by the availability of Fe in this region and that the greater...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: W. H. Berger, G. Wefer
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.530.5421
http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_36/issue_8/1899.pdf
Description
Summary:An increase in the productivity of the glacial-age Southern Ocean has been postulated to explain the decrease in pC0, of the atmosphere observed in ice cores. A plausible mechanism has been proposed elsewhere that productivity is limited by the availability of Fe in this region and that the greater supply of eolian dust during glacial time removed this limit. Recently published evidence from cores from the Southern Ocean suggests that in fact there was no change in productivity in the assumed manner. Glacial-age productivity was indeed greatly increased in the equatorial Pacific and in the eastern boundary upwelling systems. The cause, presumably, was the mechanical action of glacial-age winds rather than a greater supply of Fe. However, a role of increased supply of micronutrients from the continents in the increase of equatorial productivity during glacial time cannot be excluded. Such enhancement from increased supply of dust would have the interesting corollary of more efficient export transfer to depth, possibly contributing to nutrient depletion in glacial-age, deep intermediate waters. There is some indication, as well, of a general decrease in nutrient content in the tropical thermocline in the western Pacific during the last several million years, a depletion