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Patterns and magnitude of deep sea carbonate dissolution during Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 and H2, Walvis Ridge, southeastern Atlantic Ocean
Author(s) -
Stap Lucy,
Sluijs Appy,
Thomas Ellen,
Lourens Lucas
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
paleoceanography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9186
pISSN - 0883-8305
DOI - 10.1029/2008pa001655
Subject(s) - carbonate , geology , isotopes of carbon , deep sea , carbon cycle , ridge , dissolution , calcite , geochemistry , paleontology , oceanography , total organic carbon , environmental chemistry , chemistry , ecology , organic chemistry , ecosystem , biology
Eocene Thermal Maximum 2 (ETM2 or H1; ∼53.7 Ma) represents a short‐lived warming episode, associated with the injection of a large mass of 13 C‐depleted carbon into the ocean‐atmosphere system. The mass of injected carbon, the extent of deep sea dissolution, and the amount of warming during ETM2 appear to be approximately half of those documented for the Paleocene‐Eocene thermal maximum (PETM, ∼55.5 Ma), but the pattern of lysocline migration during ETM2 has not yet been documented sufficiently to decipher potential differences in carbon sources and sequestration mechanisms. We present high‐resolution carbonate dissolution and bulk stable isotope records across ETM2 and the successive H2 event (∼53.6 Ma) on a common age model for four sites along the Walvis Ridge depth transect (1500 to 3600 m paleowater depth) to assess lysocline evolution. The onset of ETM2 is characterized by multiple, depth‐dependent transitions of carbonate dissolution (up to ∼96% of the total flux), associated with rapid depletions in bulk carbonate carbon (up to ∼1–1.5‰) and oxygen (up to ∼0.7–1.5‰) isotope values. H2 shows a ∼0.7‰ negative carbon isotope excursion, with a coeval decrease in δ 18 O of ∼0.5‰ and ∼80% of carbonate dissolution. During ETM2, the lysocline recovered within ∼30 ka. We attribute this rapid recovery to terrestrial CaCO 3 neutralization through enhanced chemical weathering of carbonates in soils and rocks. According to theory, carbonate dissolution was lower after recovery than prior to ETM2, indicating carbonate ion oversaturation and a deeper position of the lysocline. Spectral analysis indicates that the changes in carbonate dissolution and δ 13 C values were precession paced, implying that weathering feedbacks and short‐term perturbations in the carbon cycle were important in determining early Eocene background and hyperthermal ocean [CO 3 2− ] conditions.

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