An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans

An improved method has been developed for the separation of the anthropogenic CO2 from the large natural background variability of dissolved inorganic carbon (C) in the ocean. This technique employs a new quasi-conservative carbon tracer ΔC*, which reflects the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 and the ai...

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Main Authors: Gruber, Nicolas, Sarmiento, Jorge L., Stocker, Thomas F.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: American Geophysical Union 1996
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/158804
https://boris.unibe.ch/158804/
id ftdatacite:10.48350/158804
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spelling ftdatacite:10.48350/158804 2023-05-15T17:28:24+02:00 An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans Gruber, Nicolas Sarmiento, Jorge L. Stocker, Thomas F. 1996 https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/158804 https://boris.unibe.ch/158804/ unknown American Geophysical Union open access publisher holds copyright http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 530 Physics Text article-journal journal article ScholarlyArticle 1996 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.48350/158804 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z An improved method has been developed for the separation of the anthropogenic CO2 from the large natural background variability of dissolved inorganic carbon (C) in the ocean. This technique employs a new quasi-conservative carbon tracer ΔC*, which reflects the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 and the air-sea disequilibrium when a water parcel loses contact with the atmosphere. The air-sea disequilibrium component can be discriminated from the anthropogenic signal using either information about the water age or the distribution of ΔC* in regions not affected by the anthropogenic transient. This technique has been applied to data from the North Atlantic sampled during the Transient Tracers in the Ocean North Atlantic (TTO NAS) and Tropical Atlantic study (TTO TAS) cruises in 1981–1983. The highest anthropogenic CO2 concentrations and specific inventories (inventory per square meter) are found in the subtropical convergence zone. In the North Atlantic, anthropogenic CO2 has already invaded deeply into the interior of the ocean, north of 50°N it has even reached the bottom. Only waters below 3000 m and south of 30°N are not yet affected. We estimate an anthropogenic CO2 inventory of 20 ± 4 Gt C in the North Atlantic between 10°N and 80°N. The 2.5-dimensional ocean circulation model of Stocker et al. [1994] and the three-dimensional ocean general circulation biogeochemistry model of Sarmiento et al. [1995] predict anthropogenic CO2 inventories of 18.7 Gt C and 18.4 Gt C, respectively, in good agreement with the observed inventory. Important differences exist on a more regional scale, associated with known deficiencies of the models. Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Sarmiento ENVELOPE(-68.000,-68.000,-72.000,-72.000)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic 530 Physics
spellingShingle 530 Physics
Gruber, Nicolas
Sarmiento, Jorge L.
Stocker, Thomas F.
An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans
topic_facet 530 Physics
description An improved method has been developed for the separation of the anthropogenic CO2 from the large natural background variability of dissolved inorganic carbon (C) in the ocean. This technique employs a new quasi-conservative carbon tracer ΔC*, which reflects the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 and the air-sea disequilibrium when a water parcel loses contact with the atmosphere. The air-sea disequilibrium component can be discriminated from the anthropogenic signal using either information about the water age or the distribution of ΔC* in regions not affected by the anthropogenic transient. This technique has been applied to data from the North Atlantic sampled during the Transient Tracers in the Ocean North Atlantic (TTO NAS) and Tropical Atlantic study (TTO TAS) cruises in 1981–1983. The highest anthropogenic CO2 concentrations and specific inventories (inventory per square meter) are found in the subtropical convergence zone. In the North Atlantic, anthropogenic CO2 has already invaded deeply into the interior of the ocean, north of 50°N it has even reached the bottom. Only waters below 3000 m and south of 30°N are not yet affected. We estimate an anthropogenic CO2 inventory of 20 ± 4 Gt C in the North Atlantic between 10°N and 80°N. The 2.5-dimensional ocean circulation model of Stocker et al. [1994] and the three-dimensional ocean general circulation biogeochemistry model of Sarmiento et al. [1995] predict anthropogenic CO2 inventories of 18.7 Gt C and 18.4 Gt C, respectively, in good agreement with the observed inventory. Important differences exist on a more regional scale, associated with known deficiencies of the models.
format Text
author Gruber, Nicolas
Sarmiento, Jorge L.
Stocker, Thomas F.
author_facet Gruber, Nicolas
Sarmiento, Jorge L.
Stocker, Thomas F.
author_sort Gruber, Nicolas
title An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans
title_short An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans
title_full An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans
title_fullStr An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans
title_full_unstemmed An improved method for detecting anthropogenic CO2 in the oceans
title_sort improved method for detecting anthropogenic co2 in the oceans
publisher American Geophysical Union
publishDate 1996
url https://dx.doi.org/10.48350/158804
https://boris.unibe.ch/158804/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-68.000,-68.000,-72.000,-72.000)
geographic Sarmiento
geographic_facet Sarmiento
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_rights open access
publisher holds copyright
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
op_doi https://doi.org/10.48350/158804
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