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Radiocarbon measurements on a 175‐year (A.D. 1800 to 1974) growth of the coral Montastrea annularis from The Rocks reef off the Florida Keys reveal the rate of local uptake of fossil fuel CO 2 and bomb 14 C by surface ocean waters of the Gulf Stream. In the nineteenth century, the pre‐bomb, pre‐industrial Δ 14 C value of surface ocean waters as seen in these corals of the Gulf Stream in the Florida Straits was −51 ± 2‰. By 1955, uptake of industrial CO 2 by these waters had lowered the Δ 14 C values to about −61‰. The results can be used to make predictions regarding anthropogenic CO 2 that can be expected to enter the oceans in future decades. Bomb‐produced 14 C is found to be present in the corals in comparable concentrations to that found in the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIOC) of the North Pacific and North Atlantic Oceans.
Druffel et al. (Wed,) studied this question.