Tamburini, Federica and Foellmi, Karl B. (2009): Phosphorus burial in the ocean over glacial-interglacial time scales

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 108
ODP 112
ODP 117
ODP 128
ODP 130
ODP 184
ODP 184 1143
ODP 184 1144
ODP 108 658
ODP 112 680
ODP 117 724
ODP 128 798
ODP 130 806
ODP 151 907
ODP 162 907
Identifier:
2010-078415
georefid

10.5194/bg-6-501-2009
doi

Creator:
Tamburini, Federica
ETH Zuerich, Geologisches Institut, Zurich, Switzerland
author

Foellmi, Karl B.
Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland
author

Identification:
Phosphorus burial in the ocean over glacial-interglacial time scales
2009
Biogeosciences
Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Union, Katlenburg-Lindau, International
6
4
501-513
The role of nutrients, such as phosphorus (P), and their impact on primary productivity and the fluctuations in atmospheric CO (sub 2) over glacial-interglacial periods are intensely debated. Suggestions as to the importance of P evolved from an earlier proposal that P actively participated in changing productivity rates and therefore climate change, to most recent ones that changes in the glacial ocean inventory of phosphorus were important but not influential if compared to other macronutrients, such as nitrate. Using new data coming from a selection of ODP sites, we analyzed the distribution of oceanic P sedimentary phases and calculate reactive P burial fluxes, and we show how P burial fluxes changed over the last glacial-interglacial period at these sites. Concentrations of reactive P are generally lower during glacial times, while mass accumulation rates (MAR) of reactive P show higher variability. If we extrapolate for the analyzed sites, we may assume that in general glacial burial fluxes of reactive P are lower than those during interglacial periods by about 8%, because the lack of burial of reactive P on the glacial shelf reduced in size, was apparently not compensated by burial in other regions of the ocean. Using the calculated changes in P burial, we evaluate their possible impact on the phosphate inventory in the world oceans. Using a simple mathematical approach, we find that these changes alone could have increased the phosphate inventory of glacial ocean waters by 17-40% compared to interglacial stages. Variations in the distribution of sedimentary P phases at the investigated sites seem to indicate that at the onset of interglacial stages, shallower sites experienced an increase in reactive P concentrations, which seems to point to P-richer waters at glacial terminations. All these findings would support the Shelf-Nutrient Hypothesis, which assumes that during glacial low stands nutrients are transferred from shallow sites to deep sea with possible feedback on the carbon cycle.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:69.1459
West:-78.0436East: 159.2142
South:-11.0354

Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments; Quaternary geology; Arabian Sea; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; atmospheric transport; carbon; carbon cycle; carbon dioxide; Cenozoic; climate change; deep-sea environment; East Pacific; Equatorial Pacific; geochemical cycle; geochemistry; glacial environment; Indian Ocean; inorganic materials; interglacial environment; Japan Sea; Leg 108; Leg 112; Leg 117; Leg 128; Leg 130; Leg 184; marine environment; North Atlantic; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Norwegian Sea; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1143; ODP Site 1144; ODP Site 658; ODP Site 680; ODP Site 724; ODP Site 798; ODP Site 806; ODP Site 907; Oki Ridge; Ontong Java Plateau; organic compounds; Pacific Ocean; paleoclimatology; phosphorus; Quaternary; sedimentation; shelf environment; Shelf-Nutrient Hypothesis; South China Sea; South Pacific; Southeast Pacific; transport; West Pacific; world ocean;

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