Global reorganization of deep-sea circulation and carbon storage after the last ice age

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Rafter, Patrick A.
Gray, William R.
Hines, Sophia K.V.
Burke, Andrea
Costa, Kassandra M.
Gottschalk, Julia
Hain, Mathis P.
Rae, James W.B.
Southon, John R.
Walczak, Maureen H.

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Using new and published marine fossil radiocarbon (14C/C) measurements, a tracer uniquely sensitive to circulation and air-sea gas exchange, we establish several benchmarks for Atlantic, Southern, and Pacific deep-sea circulation and ventilation since the last ice age. We find the most 14C-depleted water in glacial Pacific bottom depths, rather than the mid-depths as they are today, which is best explained by a slowdown in glacial deep-sea overturning in addition to a “flipped” glacial Pacific overturning configuration. These observations cannot be produced by changes in air-sea gas exchange alone, and they underscore the major role for changes in the overturning circulation for glacial deep-sea carbon storage in the vast Pacific abyss and the concomitant drawdown of atmospheric CO2.

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Science advances

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