A Seasonal Model of Nitrogen Isotopes in the Ice Age Antarctic Zone: Support for Weakening of the Southern Ocean Upper Overturning Cell

In the Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean, the coupled observations of elevated diatom‐bound 15N/14N (δ15Ndb) and reduced export production during the ice ages indicates more complete nitrate (NO3−) consumption. This evidence points to an ice age decline in gross NO3− supply from the deep ocean to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Main Authors: Kemeny, P., Kast, E., Hain, M., Fawcett, S., Fripiat, F., Studer, A., Martinez-Garcia, A., Haug, G., Sigman, D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0003-02CD-4
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Summary:In the Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean, the coupled observations of elevated diatom‐bound 15N/14N (δ15Ndb) and reduced export production during the ice ages indicates more complete nitrate (NO3−) consumption. This evidence points to an ice age decline in gross NO3− supply from the deep ocean to the surface wind‐mixed layer, which may help to explain the reduced CO2 levels of the ice age atmosphere. We use a seasonally resolved, two‐layer model of the N isotopes in the Antarctic Zone upper ocean to quantify the ice age decline in gross NO3− supply implied by the data. When model parameters are varied to reflect reduced gross NO3− supply, the concentration of wintertime upper ocean NO3− is lowered, but with a much weaker increase in NO3− δ15N than predicted by analytical models such as the Rayleigh and steady state models. Physical mixing is the dominant cause, with a modest contribution from foodweb dynamics. As a result, the observed δ15Ndb rise of ~3‰–4‰ must be explained mostly by a greater summertime increase in NO3− δ15N during the ice ages. The high degree of NO3− consumption required to generate this summertime δ15N rise indicates a >80% reduction in gross NO3− supply. Half or more of the modern gross NO3− supply is from wind‐forced Antarctic upwelling that drives the upper cell of Southern Ocean overturning. Thus, the decrease in NO3− supply cannot be achieved solely by a decline in vertical mixing or wintertime convection; rather, it requires an ice age weakening of the upper cell.