Iron Fertilization of the Subantarctic Ocean During the Last Ice Age
ETH Zurich · Princeton University · +6 more institutions
Abstract
John H. Martin, who discovered widespread iron limitation of ocean productivity, proposed that dust-borne iron fertilization of Southern Ocean phytoplankton caused the ice age reduction in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). In a sediment core from the Subantarctic Atlantic, we measured foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes to reconstruct ice age nitrate consumption, burial fluxes of iron, and proxies for productivity. Peak glacial times and millennial cold events are characterized by increases in dust flux, productivity, and the degree of nitrate consumption; this combination is uniquely consistent with Subantarctic iron fertilization. The associated strengthening of the Southern Ocean's biological pump can…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 30.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Iron fertilization
- Oceanography
- Ice age
- Biological pump
- Productivity
- Phytoplankton
- Foraminifera
- Glacial period
- Life below water