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AGU: Paleoceanography

 

Keywords

  • PETM
  • carbon cycling
  • sediment modeling

Index Terms

  • Biogeosciences: Carbon cycling
  • Biogeosciences: Modeling
  • Atmospheric Processes: Regional modeling
  • Paleoceanography: Paleocene/Eocene thermal maximum
  • Oceanography: Biological and Chemical: Carbon cycling
Abstract
Cited By (8)
 

Abstract

Reversed deep-sea carbonate ion basin gradient during Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum

Richard E. Zeebe

School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, Department of Oceanography, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

James C. Zachos

Earth and Planetary Sciences Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, California, USA

The Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM, ∼55 Ma ago) was marked by widespread CaCO3 dissolution in deep-sea sediments, a process that has been attributed to massive release of carbon into the ocean-atmosphere system. The pattern of carbonate dissolution is key to reconstructing changes in deep sea carbonate chemistry and, ultimately, the rate, magnitude, and location of carbon input. Here we show that during the PETM, the deep-sea undersaturation was not homogeneous among the different ocean basins. Application of a sediment model to a suite of data records from different sites and ocean basins shows that a globally uniform decrease in deep-sea carbonate ion concentration ([CO3 2−]) is inconsistent with the data. Rather, we demonstrate that deep-sea [CO3 2−] increased from the Atlantic through the Southern Ocean into the Pacific. Our results show that the PETM deep-sea [CO3 2−] basin gradient during dissolution was reversed relative to the modern.

Received 18 November 2006; accepted 15 February 2007; published 14 July 2007.

Citation: Zeebe, R. E., and J. C. Zachos (2007), Reversed deep-sea carbonate ion basin gradient during Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, Paleoceanography, 22, PA3201, doi:10.1029/2006PA001395.

Cited By

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