Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic...

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Inferred δ C and δ O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail [email protected] ECCO Meeting November 1, 2012. blah blah blah……

Transcript of Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic...

Page 1: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Inferred δ13C and δ18O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic

Holly Dail

[email protected]

ECCO Meeting

November 1, 2012.

blah blah blah……

Page 2: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Last Glacial Maximum

Artist’s renditionImbrie & Imbrie 1979

Last Glacial Maximum climate– Generally colder– Sea level lower by ~120 m– CO2 ~190 ppm

Standard approaches + limitations– Compilations of proxy records– Model intercomparison

projects

After Waelbroeck et al. (2002)

Sea level

450,000years ago

LGM

Page 3: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Ocean circulation model+ model adjoint

δ18O171 records

δ13C171 records

Alkenones55 records

Forams181records

Mg/Ca32 records

Deep ocean isotope dataNear sea surfacetemperatures

Dinocysts53 records

Seek estimate of Atlantic Ocean state at the LGM that is consistent with

available data ocean general circulation model

Page 4: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Key questions in this talk

Is it possible to find a model state close to the available LGM data?

Are LGM δ13C proxies consistent with an AMOC shallower than today’s?

Page 5: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

75°N

35°S

100°W 20°E

LGM bathymetry based on ICE-5G (Peltier, 2004)

MIT GCM + adjoint

Model– MIT GCM ocean / sea ice

model– Prescribed atmosphere– 1° degree, 50 vertical levels– Open southern boundary

Cost function– Misfit to MARGO SSTs

• uncertainties: as published by MARGO NGS’09

– Misfit to deep ocean isotope data

• uncertainties: 0.2 ‰

– Penalties on controls

Page 6: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

mean

State estimate fits the SST proxies better than PMIP2 coupled model simulations do

PMIP2: Braconnot et al., 2007

Sta

te e

stim

ate

Page 7: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Incorporating a simple model for isotopes[draws on Marchal and Curry, JPO 2008]

δ13C– δ13Ccalcite = 0.13 + 0.90 δ13CDIC

– δ13CDIC modeled as a passive tracer + remineralization

– Uncertainty = 0.2‰

– Data excluded above 1000 m

– δ13CDIC model tested against modern GEOSECS δ13C

δ18O – not discussed here

New controls for initial and boundary conditions on tracers

Page 8: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

A gap in available modeling methods

Paleoclimate simulations w/ coupled models (e.g. PMIP): – run to equilbrium, but model state may be far from

data

Standard ocean state estimation (e.g. ECCO): – close to data, but deep ocean not in equilibrium

Our solution: long-running state estimates– goal: build connection between deep ocean and model

forcing– results: reach maximum 80 years -- still not long

enough

Page 9: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Modern: GEOSECS δ13CDIC distribution at 2730 m

(‰)

10 year state estimate 80 year state estimate

Page 10: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

1000 m 1900 m 2500 m

3000 m 3900 m 4600 m

LGM: 93% of modeled δ13C values are within 2σ of the proxy data

(‰)

Page 11: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Benthic δ13C records: shifts in water mass boundaries?

Observation:– weak gradients with

depth in modern ocean– strong gradients with

depth at LGM

Inference:– deep Atlantic dominated

by AABW?– changes in end-member

concentrations?Curry & Oppo (2005)

Page 12: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Curry & Oppo (2005)

State estimate δ13C at 28°W

State estimate δ13C at 28°W

Page 13: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Modern AMOC streamfunction (Sv)(OCCA, Forget JPO 2010)

LGM AMOC streamfunction (Sv)(Inferred with state estimation)

• Results are preliminary: - model partially equilibrated- tendency towards weak MOC in modern tests- other AMOC arrangements have not been excluded

Page 14: Inferred δ 13 C and δ 18 O distributions in the modern and Last Glacial Maximum deep Atlantic Holly Dail hdail@fas.harvard.edu ECCO Meeting November 1,

Key questions

Is it possible to find a model state close to the available LGM data?– Unconstrained coupled models: not yet– With state estimation: yes

Are LGM δ13C proxies consistent with an AMOC shallower than today’s?– Yes