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The Marine Radiocarbon Bomb Pulse across the Temperate North Atlantic: A Compilation of Δ14C Time Histories from Arctica islandica Growth Increments
Radiocarbon
  • James D. Scourse, Bangor University
  • Alan D. Wanamaker, Jr., Iowa State University
  • Chris Weidman, Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve
  • Jan Heinemeier, Aarhus University
  • Paula J. Reimer, Queen’s University Belfast
  • Paul G. Butler, Bangor University
  • Rob Witbaard, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ)
  • Christopher A. Richardson, Bangor University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2012
Abstract

Marine radiocarbon bomb-pulse time histories of annually resolved archives from temperate regions have been underexploited. We present here series of Δ14C excess from known-age annual increments of the long-lived bivalve mollusk Arctica islandica from 4 sites across the coastal North Atlantic (German Bight, North Sea; Troms⊘, north Norway; Siglufjordur, north Icelandic shelf; Grimsey, north Icelandic shelf) combined with published series from Georges Bank and Sable Bank (NW Atlantic) and the Oyster Ground (North Sea). The atmospheric bomb pulse is shown to be a step-function whose response in the marine environment is immediate but of smaller amplitude and which has a longer decay time as a result of the much larger marine carbon reservoir. Attenuation is determined by the regional hydrographic setting of the sites, vertical mixing, processes controlling the isotopic exchange of 14C at the air-sea boundary, 14C content of the freshwater flux, primary productivity, and the residence time of organic matter in the sediment mixed layer. The inventories form a sequence from high magnitude-early peak (German Bight) to low magnitude-late peak (Grimsey). All series show a rapid response to the increase in atmospheric Δ14C excess but a slow response to the subsequent decline resulting from the succession of rapid isotopic air-sea exchange followed by the more gradual isotopic equilibration in the mixed layer due to the variable marine carbon reservoir and incorporation of organic carbon from the sediment mixed layer. The data constitute calibration scries for the use of the bomb pulse as a high-resolution dating tool in the marine environment and as a tracer of coastal ocean water masses.

Comments

This article is published as Scourse, James D., Alan D. Wanamaker Jr, Chris Weidman, Jan Heinemeier, Paula J. Reimer, Paul G. Butler, Rob Witbaard, and Christopher A. Richardson. "The Marine Radiocarbon Bomb Pulse across the Temperate North Atlantic: A Compilation of Δ 14 C Time Histories from Arctica islandica Growth Increments." Radiocarbon 54, no. 2 (2012): 165-186. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
James D. Scourse, Alan D. Wanamaker, Chris Weidman, Jan Heinemeier, et al.. "The Marine Radiocarbon Bomb Pulse across the Temperate North Atlantic: A Compilation of Δ14C Time Histories from Arctica islandica Growth Increments" Radiocarbon Vol. 54 Iss. 2 (2012) p. 165 - 186
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/alan-wanamaker/29/