Deep water formation in the North Pacific and deglacial CO2 rise

Deep water formation in the North Atlantic and Southern Ocean is widely thought to influence deglacial CO2 rise and climate change; here we suggest that deep water formation in the North Pacific may also play an important role. We present paired radiocarbon and boron isotope data from foraminifera f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Paleoceanography
Main Authors: Rae, James W. B., Sarnthein, Michael, Foster, Gavin L., Ridgwell, Andy, Grootes, Pieter M., Elliott, Tim
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Amer Geophysical Union
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/2013PA002570
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00290/40133/39114.pdf
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00290/40133/
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Summary:Deep water formation in the North Atlantic and Southern Ocean is widely thought to influence deglacial CO2 rise and climate change; here we suggest that deep water formation in the North Pacific may also play an important role. We present paired radiocarbon and boron isotope data from foraminifera from sediment core MD02-2489 at 3640m in the North East Pacific. These show a pronounced excursion during Heinrich Stadial 1, with benthic-planktic radiocarbon offsets dropping to similar to 350 years, accompanied by a decrease in benthic delta B-11. We suggest that this is driven by the onset of deep convection in the North Pacific, which mixes young shallow waters to depth, old deep waters to the surface, and low-pH water from intermediate depths into the deep ocean. This deep water formation event was likely driven by an increase in surface salinity, due to subdued atmospheric/monsoonal freshwater flux during Heinrich Stadial 1. The ability of North Pacific Deep Water (NPDW) formation to explain the excursions seen in our data is demonstrated in a series of experiments with an intermediate complexity Earth system model. These experiments also show that breakdown of stratification in the North Pacific leads to a rapid similar to 30 ppm increase in atmospheric CO2, along with decreases in atmospheric delta C-13 and Delta C-14, consistent with observations of the early deglaciation. Our inference of deep water formation is based mainly on results from a single sediment core, and our boron isotope data are unavoidably sparse in the key HS1 interval, so this hypothesis merits further testing. However, we note that there is independent support for breakdown of stratification in shallower waters during this period, including a minimum in delta N-15, younging in intermediate water C-14, and regional warming. We also re-evaluate deglacial changes in North Pacific productivity and carbonate preservation in light of our new data and suggest that the regional pulse of export production observed during the Bolling-Allerod is ...