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Ongoing transients in carbonate compensation
Author(s) -
Boudreau Bernard P.,
Middelburg Jack J.,
Hofmann Andreas F.,
Meysman Filip J. R.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1029/2009gb003654
Subject(s) - ocean acidification , carbonate , carbonate compensation depth , dissolution , calcite , saturation (graph theory) , aragonite , snow , geology , biogeochemical cycle , sedimentary rock , mineralogy , environmental science , oceanography , geomorphology , climate change , chemistry , geochemistry , environmental chemistry , mathematics , organic chemistry , combinatorics
Uptake of anthropogenic CO 2 is acidifying the oceans. Over the next 2000 years, this will modify the dissolution and preservation of sedimentary carbonate. By coupling new formulas for the positions of the calcite saturation horizon, z sat , the compensation depth, z cc , and the snowline, z snow , to a biogeochemical model of the oceanic carbonate system, we evaluate how these horizons will change with ongoing ocean acidification. Our model is an extended Havardton‐Bear‐type box model, which includes novel kinetic descriptions for carbonate dissolution above, between, and below these critical depths. In the preindustrial ocean, z sat and z cc are at 3939 and 4750 m, respectively. When forced with the IS92a CO 2 emission scenario, the model forecasts (1) that z sat will rise rapidly (“runaway” conditions) so that all deep water becomes undersaturated, (2) that z cc will also rise and over 1000 years will pass before it will be stabilized by the dissolution of previously deposited CaCO 3 , and (3) that z snow will respond slowly to acidification, rising by ∼1150 m during a 2000 year timeframe. A further simplified model that equates the compensation and saturation depths produces quantitatively different results. Finally, additional feedbacks due to acidification on calcification and increased atmospheric CO 2 on organic matter productivity strongly affect the positions of the compensation horizons and their dynamics.

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