摘要

During the last deglaciation, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations rose at the same time that the delta(14)C of that CO not subset of 2 not subset of fell. This has been attributed to the release of (14)C-depleted carbon dioxide from the deep ocean1, possibly vented through the Southern Ocean(2-5). Recently, a sediment record from the eastern North Pacific Ocean spanning the last deglaciation was interpreted to reflect transport of such radiocarbon-depleted
CO not subset of 2 not subset of from the Southern Ocean through Antarctic Intermediate
Water(2). However, the suggestion that the record reflects
intermediate water derived from the Southern Ocean remains controversial. Here we assess the source of the deglacial intermediate water by measuring the neodymium isotopes of
fossil fish teeth/debris from the same eastern North Pacific core used in the earlier study(2). The isotopic signature of awater mass, which is captured in the fossil fish teeth, reflects the location in which it formed. Our data exhibit a clear shift in the neodymium isotope values towards Southern Ocean values about 18,000 years ago, coinciding with the negative delta(14)C excursion. We conclude that these data support a Southern Ocean source for the deglacial radiocarbon-depleted CO not subset of 2 not subset of
detected in the eastern North Pacific.

  • 出版日期2010-11