Mediterranean Sea surface radiocarbon reservoir age changes since the last glacial maximum

G Siani, M Paterne, E Michel, R Sulpizio, A Sbrana… - Science, 2001 - science.org
G Siani, M Paterne, E Michel, R Sulpizio, A Sbrana, M Arnold, G Haddad
Science, 2001science.org
Sea surface reservoir ages must be known to establish a common chronological framework
for marine, continental, and cryospheric paleoproxies, and are crucial for understanding
ocean-continent climatic relationships and the paleoventilation of the ocean. Radiocarbon
dates of planktonic foraminifera and tephra contemporaneously deposited over
Mediterranean marine and terrestrial regions reveal that the reservoir ages were similar to
the modern one (∼ 400 years) during most of the past 18,000 carbon-14 years. However …
Sea surface reservoir ages must be known to establish a common chronological framework for marine, continental, and cryospheric paleoproxies, and are crucial for understanding ocean-continent climatic relationships and the paleoventilation of the ocean. Radiocarbon dates of planktonic foraminifera and tephra contemporaneously deposited over Mediterranean marine and terrestrial regions reveal that the reservoir ages were similar to the modern one (∼400 years) during most of the past 18,000 carbon-14 years. However, reservoir ages increased by a factor of 2 at the beginning of the last deglaciation. This is attributed to changes of the North Atlantic thermohaline circulation during the massive ice discharge event Heinrich 1.
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