EGU2020-4241, updated on 14 Jan 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-4241
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Storage/Release of Geologic Carbon Influenced Pleistocene Glacial/Interglacial Atmospheric pCO2 Cycles

Lowell Stott, Jun Shao, Kathleen Harazin, Bryan Davy, Ingo Pecher, Richard Coffin, Ludovic Reiss, and Jenny Suckale
Lowell Stott et al.
  • University of Southern California, Earth Sciences, United States of America (lowellstott@gmail.com)

For over 100 years scientists have puzzled over the mechanisms responsible for the repeated climate changes known as Ice Ages. A breakthrough was achieved when ice cores and marine archives revealed that the Ice Ages were paced at 100kyr intervals in alignment with Earth’s eccentricity cycle for the past million years. A second breakthrough was achieved when ice core records revealed that the Ice Ages were accompanied by ~80-90ppm variations in atmospheric pCO2. But after decades of research the mechanisms responsible for those atmospheric pCO2 variations remains an open and unresolved puzzle.

Here we present new findings that challenge the long-standing paradigm that geologic processes that regulate carbon exchange between the Earth’s interior and exterior act too slowly to have influenced the ocean and atmosphere carbon budgets on glacial time scales. The evidence includes large Δ14C excursions found in biogenic sediments in each of the Ocean basins at the last glacial termination. These excursions point to a sustained release of 14C-dead carbon spanning several thousand years.  In the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Ocean the excursions are found near seafloor deformation features, including pockmarks that are indicative of gas-rich fluid release from sub-surface reservoirs. In the eastern equatorial Pacific, the Δ14C excursions are associated with enhanced hydrothermal metal concentrations including Fe, and Z that point to a hydrothermal source. Our ongoing research seeks to identify the storage and release mechanisms that operate on these carbon reservoirs on glacial time scales and to put constraints on the amount of carbon released at the last glacial termination. While the amount of carbon released from these geologic sources remains an open question for now, it is clear that geologic processes have affected changes in the global carbon budget on glacial time scales.

How to cite: Stott, L., Shao, J., Harazin, K., Davy, B., Pecher, I., Coffin, R., Reiss, L., and Suckale, J.: Storage/Release of Geologic Carbon Influenced Pleistocene Glacial/Interglacial Atmospheric pCO2 Cycles, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-4241, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-4241, 2020.

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