Climate of the Past (Jun 2008)

Modeling variations of marine reservoir ages during the last 45 000 years

  • J. Franke,
  • A. Paul,
  • M. Schulz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 125 – 136

Abstract

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When dating marine samples with <sup>14</sup>C, the reservoir-age effect is usually assumed to be constant, although atmospheric <sup>14</sup>C production rate and ocean circulation changes cause temporal and spatial reservoir-age variations. These lead to dating errors, which can limit the interpretation of cause and effect in paleoclimate data. We used a global ocean circulation model forced by transient atmospheric &Delta;<sup>14</sup>C variations to calculate reservoir ages for the last 45 000 years for a present day-like and a last glacial maximum-like ocean circulation. A ~30% reduced Atlantic meridonal overturning circulation leads to increased reservoir ages by up to ~500 years in high latitudes. Temporal variations are proportional to the absolute value of the reservoir age; regions with large reservoir age also show large variation. Temporal variations range between ~300 years in parts of the subtropics and ~1000 years in the Southern Ocean. For tropical regions, which are generally assumed to have nearly stable reservoir ages, the model suggests variations of several hundred years.