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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, 2012. blah blah blah……
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Last Glacial Maximum Artist’s rendition Imbrie & Imbrie 1979 Last Glacial Maximum climate –Generally colder –Sea level lower by ~120 m –CO 2 ~190 ppm Standard approaches + limitations –Compilations of proxy records –Model intercomparison projects After Waelbroeck et al. (2002) Sea level -120 m Present 450,000 years ago LGM
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Water mass distributions from benthic isotopes Ocean circulation model + model adjoint δ 18 O 171 records δ 13 C 171 records Alkenones 55 records Forams 181records Mg/Ca 32 records Deep ocean isotope data Near sea surface temperatures Dinocysts 53 records Seek estimate of Atlantic Ocean state at the LGM that is consistent with available data ocean general circulation model
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Key questions in this talk Is it possible to find a model state close to the available LGM data? Are LGM δ 13 C proxies consistent with an AMOC shallower than today’s?
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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
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mean State estimate fits the SST proxies better than PMIP2 coupled model simulations do PMIP2: Braconnot et al., 2007 State estimate
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Incorporating a simple model for isotopes [draws on Marchal and Curry, JPO 2008] δ 13 C –δ 13 C calcite = 0.13 + 0.90 δ 13 C DIC –δ 13 C DIC modeled as a passive tracer + remineralization –Uncertainty = 0.2‰ –Data excluded above 1000 m –δ 13 C DIC model tested against modern GEOSECS δ 13 C δ 18 O – not discussed here New controls for initial and boundary conditions on tracers
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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
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Modern: GEOSECS δ 13 C DIC distribution at 2730 m (‰) 10 year state estimate80 year state estimate
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1000 m1900 m2500 m 3000 m3900 m4600 m LGM: 93% of modeled δ 13 C values are within 2σ of the proxy data (‰)
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Benthic δ 13 C 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)
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Curry & Oppo (2005) State estimate δ 13 C at 28°W
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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
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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 δ 13 C proxies consistent with an AMOC shallower than today’s? –Yes
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