Overturning circulation, nutrient limitation, and warming in the Glacial North Pacific

This work was funded by NERC grant NE/N011716/1 to J.W.B.R., a NERC studentship to B.T., and NSF grant OPP 1643445 to I.E. A.R. acknowledges support from NSF grant 1736771. Although the Pacific Ocean is a major reservoir of heat and CO2, and thus an important component of the global climate system,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Science Advances
Main Authors: Rae, James W. B., Gray, W. R., Wills, R. C. J., Eisenman, I., Fitzhugh, B., Fotheringham, M., Littley, Eloise, Rafter, P. A., Rees-Owen, Rhian Laura, Ridgwell, A., Taylor, Ben, Burke, Andrea
Other Authors: NERC, University of St Andrews. School of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of St Andrews. St Andrews Isotope Geochemistry
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
DAS
BDC
R2C
GC
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10023/21128
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abd1654
https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/6/50/eabd1654/tab-figures-data
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Summary:This work was funded by NERC grant NE/N011716/1 to J.W.B.R., a NERC studentship to B.T., and NSF grant OPP 1643445 to I.E. A.R. acknowledges support from NSF grant 1736771. Although the Pacific Ocean is a major reservoir of heat and CO2, and thus an important component of the global climate system, its circulation under different climatic conditions is poorly understood. Here, we present evidence that during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the North Pacific was better ventilated at intermediate depths and had surface waters with lower nutrients, higher salinity, and warmer temperatures compared to today. Modeling shows that this pattern is well explained by enhanced Pacific meridional overturning circulation (PMOC), which brings warm, salty, and nutrient-poor subtropical waters to high latitudes. Enhanced PMOC at the LGM would have lowered atmospheric CO2—in part through synergy with the Southern Ocean—and supported an equable regional climate, which may have aided human habitability in Beringia, and migration from Asia to North America. Peer reviewed