Publication | Open Access
Northern-sourced water dominated the Atlantic Ocean during the Last Glacial Maximum
44
Citations
34
References
2020
Year
EngineeringPaleoceanographyMarine ChemistryLast Glacial MaximumOceanographyRemineralized CarbonEarth SciencePaleoenvironmental ChangePleistoceneNorthern-sourced WaterSea-level HistoryMarine GeologyBiogeochemistryCarbon SequestrationAtlantic OceanCryospherePaleoclimatologyStable Carbon IsotopePaleoecologyδ13C Values
Abstract Increased carbon sequestration in the ocean subsurface is commonly assumed to have been one of the main causes responsible for lower glacial atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Remineralized carbon must have been stored away from the atmosphere for thousands of years, yet the water mass structure accommodating such increased carbon storage continues to be debated. Here, we present new sediment-derived bottom-water neodymium isotope records that allow fingerprinting of water masses and provide a more complete picture of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation geometry during the Last Glacial Maximum. These results suggest that the vertical and meridional structure of the Atlantic water mass distribution only experienced minor changes since the last ice age. In particular, we find no compelling evidence supporting glacial southern-sourced water substantially expanding to shallower depths and farther into the Northern Hemisphere than today, which had been previously inferred from stable carbon isotope (δ13C) reconstructions. We argue that depleted δ13C values observed in the deep Northwest Atlantic do not necessarily indicate the presence of southern-sourced water. Instead, these values may represent a northern-sourced water mass with lower than modern preformed δ13C values that were further modified downstream by increased sequestration of remineralized carbon, facilitated by a more sluggish glacial deep circulation, corroborating previous evidence.
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