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Abstract Boron to calcium (B/Ca) records in benthic foraminifera, used for reconstructing the carbonate ion saturation state (ΔCO 3 ) of the deep ocean, suggest that carbon sequestration in the Southern Pacific contributed to lowering atmospheric CO 2 during the last glacial interval. However, the spatial and temporal extent of this storage is debated due to limited ΔCO 3 records. To increase available ΔCO 3 records, we explored using strontium and sulfur to calcium (Sr/Ca, S/Ca) in Planulina wuellerstorfi as additional proxies for ΔCO 3 based on comparison with paired B/Ca down‐core records from Pacific Sites U1486 (1,332 m depth) and U1487 (874 m depth) cored during the International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 363. The Sr/Ca and S/Ca records from P. wuellerstorfi closely covary with the B/Ca‐derived ΔCO 3 records. Temperature, reconstructed using Uvigerina peregrina magnesium to calcium (Mg/Ca), has no discernible effect on Sr/Ca, whereas S/Ca also varies with Mg/Ca in both U. peregrina and P. wuellerstorfi , suggesting an additional temperature effect. Mg/Ca records from P. wuellerstorfi are affected by both temperature and ΔCO 3 . We assess calibrations of Sr/Ca to ΔCO 3 for the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans and recommend using the down‐core rather than core‐top calibrations as they yield consistent sensitivity, though with offsets, in all ocean basins. Reconstructing Pacific ΔCO 3 records from sites U1486, U1487, and DSDP 593, we demonstrate the benefit of using Sr/Ca as an additional ΔCO 3 proxy to assess the contribution of the Southern Pacific to the increase of atmospheric CO 2 at glacial terminations.
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Vera J. Lawson
Yair Rosenthal
Samantha C. Bova
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems
Columbia University
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Durham University
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Lawson et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e5dfcbb6db6435875740bd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2024gc011508
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