Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9462573 | Global and Planetary Change | 2005 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Here, through modeling, we investigate two of the principal biogeochemical processes involved in this response: silicate weathering and marine organic carbon cycling. We initiate the event with a rapid drawdown in atmospheric CO2 resulting from increased weatherability of the continents associated with Himalayan orogeny. This perturbation triggers the overshoot and adjustment of the δ18O record because of feedback among ice-sheet coverage, silicate weathering rates, and atmospheric CO2. The system is a damped oscillator, the strength of which depends on the sensitivity of chemical weathering rates to climate change and climate to changes in atmospheric CO2. Increased oceanic mixing associated with initial transition into a glacial world accelerates the rates of biological productivity and carbon burial, lowering atmospheric CO2 and accelerating global cooling and ice-sheet growth, and generating a carbon isotope response that crudely approximates that observed. The Oi-1 overshoot appears to require a rapid (<1 million year) application of the forcing (e.g., tectonic drawdown of atmospheric CO2). Although further investigation and more sophisticated models ultimately may show that other triggers and feedbacks prevailed during Oi-1, the modeling presented here demonstrates that simple feedbacks in the climate system can explain the overshoot and adjustment response to early Oligocene climate forcing.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
James C. Zachos, Lee R. Kump,