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A Continental Shelf Pump for CO 2 on the Adélie Land Coast, East Antarctica
Author(s) -
Arroyo Mar C.,
Shadwick Elizabeth H.,
Tilbrook Bronte,
Rintoul Stephen R.,
Kusahara Kazuya
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1029/2020jc016302
Subject(s) - continental shelf , oceanography , ice shelf , hydrography , geology , outflow , circumpolar deep water , carbon cycle , environmental science , sea ice , thermohaline circulation , cryosphere , north atlantic deep water , ecology , ecosystem , biology
We quantify the transport of inorganic carbon from the continental shelf to the deep ocean in Dense Shelf Water (DSW) from the Mertz and Ninnis Polynyas along the Adélie Land coast in East Antarctica. For this purpose, observations of total dissolved inorganic carbon (TCO 2 ) from two summer hydrographic surveys in 2015 and 2017 were paired with DSW volume transport estimates derived from a coupled ocean‐sea ice‐ice shelf model to examine the fate of inorganic carbon in DSW from Adélie Land. Transports indicate a net outflow of 227 ± 115 Tg C yr −1 with DSW in the postglacial calving configuration of the Mertz Polynya. The greatest outflow of inorganic carbon from the shelf region was delivered through the northern boundary across the Adélie and Mertz Sills, with an additional transport westward from the Mertz Polynya. Inorganic carbon in DSW is derived primarily from inflowing TCO 2 ‐rich modified Circumpolar Deep Water; local processes (biological productivity, air‐sea exchange of CO 2 , and the addition of brine during sea ice formation) make much smaller contributions. This study proposes that DSW export serves as a continental shelf pump for CO 2 and is a pathway to sequester inorganic carbon from the shallow Antarctic continental shelf to the abyssal ocean, removing CO 2 from atmospheric exchange on the time scale of centuries.

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