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- Title
Ice sheet and precession controlled subarctic Pacific productivity and upwelling over the last 550,000 years.
- Authors
Yao, Zhengquan; Shi, Xuefa; Yin, Qiuzhen; Jaccard, Samuel; Liu, Yanguang; Guo, Zhengtang; Gorbarenko, Sergey A.; Wang, Kunshan; Chen, Tianyu; Wu, Zhipeng; Nan, Qingyun; Zou, Jianjun; Wang, Hongmin; Cui, Jingjing; Wang, Anqi; Yang, Gongxu; Zhu, Aimei; Bosin, Aleksandr; Vasilenko, Yuriy; Yu, Yonggui
- Abstract
The polar oceans play a vital role in regulating atmospheric CO2 concentrations (pCO2) during the Pleistocene glacial cycles. However, despite being the largest modern reservoir of respired carbon, the impact of the subarctic Pacific remains poorly understood due to limited records. Here, we present high-resolution, 230Th-normalized export productivity records from the subarctic northwestern Pacific covering the last five glacial cycles. Our records display pronounced, glacial-interglacial cyclicity superimposed with precessional-driven variability, with warm interglacial climate and high boreal summer insolation providing favorable conditions to sustain upwelling of nutrient-rich subsurface waters and hence increased export productivity. Our transient model simulations consistently show that ice sheets and to a lesser degree, precession are the main drivers that control the strength and latitudinal position of the westerlies. Enhanced upwelling of nutrient/carbon-rich water caused by the intensification and poleward migration of the northern westerlies during warmer climate intervals would have led to the release of previously sequestered CO2 from the subarctic Pacific to the atmosphere. Our results also highlight the significant role of the subarctic Pacific in modulating pCO2 changes during the Pleistocene climate cycles, especially on precession timescale (~ 20 kyr). Ice sheets and precession are shown to control westerly strength and position, impacting nutrient-rich water upwelling and productivity in the subarctic Pacific. This finding underscores the subarctic Pacific's significant contribution to Pleistocene CO2, particularly on a precession timescale.
- Subjects
ICE sheets; GLOBAL warming; WESTERLIES; PLEISTOCENE Epoch; SOLAR radiation
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2024, Vol 15, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-47871-8