In:
Paleoceanography, American Geophysical Union (AGU), Vol. 13, No. 3 ( 1998-06), p. 225-244
Abstract:
A zonally averaged, circulation‐biogeochemical ocean model is used to explore how the distribution of PO 4 and δ 13 C in the major basins and the atmospheric p CO 2 respond to rapid changes in the thermohaline circulation (THC). Different evolutions of the Atlantic THC are simulated by applying surface freshwater pulses typical, for example, of Heinrich events and the last deglaciation. In the model, when the THC completely collapses, PO 4 increases ( 〉 0.5 mmol m −3 ) and δ 13 C decreases ( 〈 0.5‰) in Atlantic bottom waters because of a drop in ventilation by North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW). Although consistent with the traditional interpretation of sedimentary records of benthic foraminiferal Cd/Ca and δ 13 C, the relationship between the degree of PO 4 enrichment and δ 13 C depletion and the degree of THC reduction is not linear. In the NADW formation area the preformed PO 4 declines ( 〈 0.5 mmol m −3 ) because of an imbalance between biological uptake and PO 4 supply from the deep, and the preformed δ 13 C rises ( 〉 1‰) because of a longer residence time of waters at the surface. These surface anomalies are propagated to the bottom North Atlantic when the THC resumes. When the thermohaline overturning is only partly reduced and at shallower depths, changes in bottom waters are accompanied by a PO 4 decrease and δ 13 C increase at intermediate levels in the mid‐latitude Atlantic. This results in enhanced vertical gradients of these properties consistent with chemical and isotopic reconstructions for the last glacial maximum. Finally, the atmospheric p CO 2 increases during the cold period in the North Atlantic when the THC is reduced with an amplitude (7–30 µatm) and timescale (∼10² to 1–2 × 10³ yr) depending on the intensity of the THC change. This is qualitatively consistent with recent data from an Antarctic ice core documenting a p CO 2 increase during the Younger Dryas and after Heinrich events 4 and 5.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0883-8305
,
1944-9186
Language:
English
Publisher:
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Publication Date:
1998
detail.hit.zdb_id:
637876-6
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2015231-0
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2916554-4
SSG:
16,13
SSG:
13
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