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1.
Sci Adv ; 9(1): eadd4909, 2023 Jan 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36598985

RESUMEN

Abrupt changes in the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) are thought to affect tropical hydroclimate through adjustment of the latitudinal position of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ). Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1) involves the largest AMOC reduction in recent geological time; however, over the tropical Indian Ocean (IO), proxy records suggest zonal anomalies featuring intense, widespread drought in tropical East Africa versus generally wet but heterogeneous conditions in the Maritime Continent. Here, we synthesize proxy data and an isotope-enabled transient deglacial simulation and show that the southward ITCZ shift over the eastern IO during HS1 strengthens IO Walker circulation, triggering an east-west precipitation dipole across the basin. This dipole reverses the zonal precipitation anomalies caused by the exposed Sunda and Sahul shelves due to glacial lower sea level. Our study illustrates how zonal modes of atmosphere-ocean circulation can amplify or reverse global climate anomalies, highlighting their importance for future climate change.

2.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 36(8): e9252, 2022 Apr 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35014116

RESUMEN

RATIONALE: Compound-specific oxygen stable isotope analysis has been commercially available for about 20 years but the technique has been infrequently applied and practical operating knowledge is limited. Existing reactor designs and chemistry fail to fully exclude contaminating oxygen, are chromatographically flawed, and are generally fabricated from expensive platinum tubing. METHODS: As a new interface between the gas chromatograph and isotope ratio mass spectrometer, we used a nickel tube reactor (containing no platinum wires) in a ceramic sheath with countercurrent helium flushing, operated at 1250°C. We analyzed suites of four long-chain alcohols (LCAs), defining the least and most 18 O-enriched LCAs as internal standards. The other two LCAs, co-injected in varying amounts, were treated as unknowns and amplitude-corrected during data reduction. RESULTS: With this design, signals from non-oxygenated compounds are minimized with a hydrogen trickle, while excessive graphitization is counterproductive. A balance of hydrogen and graphite is required to maintain a proper, stable redox state in the reactor. With low extraneous oxygen, the exact hydrogen flow has little effect on final δ18 O data quality. Overall average δ18 O values precisions and errors for the unknowns were better than 0.4 ‰ for injections between 2 and 7 nmol per component. CONCLUSIONS: Our actively flushed sheath reduces oxygen infiltration to negligible levels and results in a chromatographic flow devoid of dead or poorly swept volumes. The improved design allows measurement of LCAs with accuracy and precision sufficient to enable investigating real processes, and may also have wider applications to other isotopes.


Asunto(s)
Helio , Níquel , Hidrógeno/análisis , Oxígeno , Isótopos de Oxígeno/análisis
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(8)2021 02 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33593902

RESUMEN

Terrestrial vegetation and soils hold three times more carbon than the atmosphere. Much debate concerns how anthropogenic activity will perturb these surface reservoirs, potentially exacerbating ongoing changes to the climate system. Uncertainties specifically persist in extrapolating point-source observations to ecosystem-scale budgets and fluxes, which require consideration of vertical and lateral processes on multiple temporal and spatial scales. To explore controls on organic carbon (OC) turnover at the river basin scale, we present radiocarbon (14C) ages on two groups of molecular tracers of plant-derived carbon-leaf-wax lipids and lignin phenols-from a globally distributed suite of rivers. We find significant negative relationships between the 14C age of these biomarkers and mean annual temperature and precipitation. Moreover, riverine biospheric-carbon ages scale proportionally with basin-wide soil carbon turnover times and soil 14C ages, implicating OC cycling within soils as a primary control on exported biomarker ages and revealing a broad distribution of soil OC reactivities. The ubiquitous occurrence of a long-lived soil OC pool suggests soil OC is globally vulnerable to perturbations by future temperature and precipitation increase. Scaling of riverine biospheric-carbon ages with soil OC turnover shows the former can constrain the sensitivity of carbon dynamics to environmental controls on broad spatial scales. Extracting this information from fluvially dominated sedimentary sequences may inform past variations in soil OC turnover in response to anthropogenic and/or climate perturbations. In turn, monitoring riverine OC composition may help detect future climate-change-induced perturbations of soil OC turnover and stocks.


Asunto(s)
Carbono/análisis , Carbono/metabolismo , Ecosistema , Sedimentos Geológicos/análisis , Ríos/química , Suelo/química , Atmósfera , Ciclo del Carbono , Secuestro de Carbono , Clima , Temperatura
4.
Nature ; 581(7806): 63-66, 2020 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32376961

RESUMEN

The storage of organic carbon in the terrestrial biosphere directly affects atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide over a wide range of timescales. Within the terrestrial biosphere, the magnitude of carbon storage can vary in response to environmental perturbations such as changing temperature or hydroclimate1, potentially generating feedback on the atmospheric inventory of carbon dioxide. Although temperature controls the storage of soil organic carbon at mid and high latitudes2,3, hydroclimate may be the dominant driver of soil carbon persistence in the tropics4,5; however, the sensitivity of tropical soil carbon turnover to large-scale hydroclimate variability remains poorly understood. Here we show that changes in Indian Summer Monsoon rainfall have controlled the residence time of soil carbon in the Ganges-Brahmaputra basin over the past 18,000 years. Comparison of radiocarbon ages of bulk organic carbon and terrestrial higher-plant biomarkers with co-located palaeohydrological records6 reveals a negative relationship between monsoon rainfall and soil organic carbon stocks on a millennial timescale. Across the deglaciation period, a depletion of basin-wide soil carbon stocks was triggered by increasing rainfall and associated enhanced soil respiration rates. Our results suggest that future hydroclimate changes in tropical regions are likely to accelerate soil carbon destabilization, further increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.


Asunto(s)
Dióxido de Carbono/análisis , Dióxido de Carbono/historia , Secuestro de Carbono , Suelo/química , Clima Tropical , Atmósfera/química , Ciclo del Carbono , Planeta Tierra , Historia Antigua , Lluvia , Estaciones del Año , Temperatura , Factores de Tiempo
5.
Nature ; 570(7760): 228-231, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31190013

RESUMEN

The balance between photosynthetic organic carbon production and respiration controls atmospheric composition and climate1,2. The majority of organic carbon is respired back to carbon dioxide in the biosphere, but a small fraction escapes remineralization and is preserved over geological timescales3. By removing reduced carbon from Earth's surface, this sequestration process promotes atmospheric oxygen accumulation2 and carbon dioxide removal1. Two major mechanisms have been proposed to explain organic carbon preservation: selective preservation of biochemically unreactive compounds4,5 and protection resulting from interactions with a mineral matrix6,7. Although both mechanisms can operate across a range of environments and timescales, their global relative importance on 1,000-year to 100,000-year timescales remains uncertain4. Here we present a global dataset of the distributions of organic carbon activation energy and corresponding radiocarbon ages in soils, sediments and dissolved organic carbon. We find that activation energy distributions broaden over time in all mineral-containing samples. This result requires increasing bond-strength diversity, consistent with the formation of organo-mineral bonds8 but inconsistent with selective preservation. Radiocarbon ages further reveal that high-energy, mineral-bound organic carbon persists for millennia relative to low-energy, unbound organic carbon. Our results provide globally coherent evidence for the proposed7 importance of mineral protection in promoting organic carbon preservation. We suggest that similar studies of bond-strength diversity in ancient sediments may reveal how and why organic carbon preservation-and thus atmospheric composition and climate-has varied over geological time.


Asunto(s)
Secuestro de Carbono , Carbono/análisis , Carbono/química , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Suelo/química , Atmósfera/química , Carbono/metabolismo , Dióxido de Carbono/análisis , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Respiración de la Célula , Conjuntos de Datos como Asunto , República Democrática del Congo , Pradera , Oxígeno/análisis , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Fotosíntesis , Ríos
6.
Science ; 360(6385): 209-212, 2018 04 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29650673

RESUMEN

Lithospheric organic carbon ("petrogenic"; OCpetro) is oxidized during exhumation and subsequent erosion of mountain ranges. This process is a considerable source of carbon dioxide (CO2) to the atmosphere over geologic time scales, but the mechanisms that govern oxidation rates in mountain landscapes are poorly constrained. We demonstrate that, on average, 67 ± 11% of the OCpetro initially present in bedrock exhumed from the tropical, rapidly eroding Central Range of Taiwan is oxidized in soils, leading to CO2 emissions of 6.1 to 18.6 metric tons of carbon per square kilometer per year. The molecular and isotopic evolution of bulk OC and lipid biomarkers during soil formation reveals that OCpetro remineralization is microbially mediated. Rapid oxidation in mountain soils drives CO2 emission fluxes that increase with erosion rate, thereby counteracting CO2 drawdown by silicate weathering and biospheric OC burial.


Asunto(s)
Carbono/metabolismo , Compuestos Orgánicos/metabolismo , Microbiología del Suelo , Suelo/química , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Oxidación-Reducción , Taiwán
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