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4 result(s) for "Sophia K. V. Hines"
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A deep Tasman outflow of Pacific waters during the last glacial period
The interoceanic exchange of water masses is modulated by flow through key oceanic choke points in the Drake Passage, the Indonesian Seas, south of Africa, and south of Tasmania. Here, we use the neodymium isotope signature (ε Nd ) of cold-water coral skeletons from intermediate depths (1460‒1689 m) to trace circulation changes south of Tasmania during the last glacial period. The key feature of our dataset is a long-term trend towards radiogenic ε Nd values of ~−4.6 during the Last Glacial Maximum and Heinrich Stadial 1, which are clearly distinct from contemporaneous Southern Ocean ε Nd of ~−7. When combined with previously published radiocarbon data from the same corals, our results indicate that a unique radiogenic and young water mass was present during this time. This scenario can be explained by a more vigorous Pacific overturning circulation that supported a deeper outflow of Pacific waters, including North Pacific Intermediate Water, through the Tasman Sea. Using cold-water corals, this work identifies a deep outflow of Pacific waters via the Tasman Sea during the last ice age, thus highlighting the role of this area for the interoceanic exchange of water masses on climatic time scales.
GNOM v1.0: an optimized steady-state model of the modern marine neodymium cycle
Spatially distant sources of neodymium (Nd) to the ocean that carry different isotopic signatures (εNd) have been shown to trace out major water masses and have thus been extensively used to study large-scale features of the ocean circulation both past and current. While the global marine Nd cycle is qualitatively well understood, a complete quantitative determination of all its components and mechanisms, such as the magnitude of its sources and the paradoxical conservative behavior of εNd, remains elusive. To make sense of the increasing collection of observational Nd and εNd data, in this model description paper we present and describe the Global Neodymium Ocean Model (GNOM) v1.0, the first inverse model of the global marine biogeochemical cycle of Nd. The GNOM is embedded in a data-constrained steady-state circulation that affords spectacular computational efficiency, which we leverage to perform systematic objective optimization, allowing us to make preliminary estimates of biogeochemical parameters. Owing to its matrix representation, the GNOM model is additionally amenable to novel diagnostics that allow us to investigate open questions about the Nd cycle with unprecedented accuracy. This model is open-source and freely accessible, is written in Julia, and its code is easily understandable and modifiable for further community developments, refinements, and experiments.
Strong glacial-interglacial variability in upper ocean hydrodynamics, biogeochemistry, and productivity in the southern Indian Ocean
In the southern Indian Ocean, the position of the subtropical front – the boundary between colder, fresher waters to the south and warmer, saltier waters to the north – has a strong influence on the upper ocean hydrodynamics and biogeochemistry. Here we analyse a sedimentary record from the Agulhas Plateau, located close to the modern position of the subtropical front and use alkenones and coccolith assemblages to reconstruct oceanographic conditions over the past 300,000 years. We identify a strong glacial-interglacial variability in sea surface temperature and productivity associated with subtropical front migration over the Agulhas Plateau, as well as shorter-term high frequency variability aligned with variations in high latitude insolation. Alkenone and coccolith abundances, in combination with diatom and organic carbon records indicate high glacial export productivity. We conclude that the biological pump was more efficient and strengthened during glacial periods, which could partly account for the reported reduction in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.
Glacial Ocean Dynamics: Insight from Deep-Sea Coral Reconstructions and a Time-Dependent Dynamical Box Model
Glacial-interglacial cycles, occurring at a period of approximately 100,000 years, have dominated Earth’s climate over the past 800,000 years. These cycles involve major changes in land ice, global sea level, ocean circulation, and the carbon cycle. While it is generally agreed that the ultimate driver of global climate is changes in insolation, glacial cycles do not look like insolation forcing. Notably, there is a highly non-linear warming response at 100,000 years to a relatively small forcing, implicating a more complicated system of biogeochemical and physical drivers. The ocean plays a pivotal role in glacial-interglacial climate through direct equator-topole transport of heat and its role in the carbon cycle. The deep ocean contains 60 times more carbon than the atmosphere, and therefore even small changes in ocean circulation can have a large impact on atmospheric CO2, a crucial amplifier in the climate system. In order to better understand the role that ocean circulation plays in glacial-interglacial climate we focus on the last glacial-interglacial transition. In this thesis, we present reconstructions of changes in intermediate water circulation and explore a new time-dependent dynamical box model. We reconstruct circulation using radiocarbon and clumped isotope measurements on U/Th dated deep-sea corals from the New England and Corner Rise Seamounts in the western basin of the North Atlantic and from south of Tasmania in the Indo-Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean. Our new time-dependent model contains key aspects of ocean physics, including Southern Ocean Residual Mean theory, and allows us to explore dynamical mechanisms which drive abrupt climate transitions during the last glacial period.In Chapter 2 we present a compilation of reconnaissance dated deep-sea corals from the Caltech collection. Reconnaissance dating facilitates sample selection for our high-precision radiocarbon and temperature time series and patterns in the depth distribution of deep-sea corals over time contain additional relevant climate information. In Chapter 3, we present a high-resolution radiocarbon record from south of Tasmania which highlights variability in Southern Ocean Intermediate Water radiocarbon during the deglaciation, particularly during the Antarctic Cold Reversal. We use our radiocarbon data, in combination with other deglacial climate records, to infer changes in overturning circulation configuration across this time interval. In Chapter 4 we present our time-dependent dynamical box model. Our model displays hysteresis in basin stratification and Southern Ocean isopycnal outcrop position as a function of North Atlantic Deep Water formation rate. In a dynamical system, hysteresis implies that there are multiple stable states, and switches between these states can lead to abrupt transitions, such as those observed during the middle of the last glacial period. In Chapter 5 we present paired radiocarbon and temperature time series from the North Atlantic and Southern Ocean spanning the late part of the last glacial. We explore the mechanisms driving trends in radiocarbon and temperature by looking at cross-plots of the data, and we make inferences about changes in circulation configuration using insight gained from our dynamical box model.