I would not call this
solved at all. We now speculate that the
coincident flush of fresh water from the swiftly melting Ice Age stimulated a
huge burst of productivity. However, the
Iron hypothesis is also toast. We should
be able to study what is happening in other glacial environments to decide if
these ideas work at all. In short, a
literature review and enough case studies just might make the case.
This may also be an
artifact of poor resolution of the time lines.
After all the sea level rose slowly over three thousands of years
allowing a continuously changing band of shallow waters to briefly thrive. We may be discovering nothing more.
Change was taking place
and the Ice Age did end.
Scientists solve a
14,000-year-old ocean mystery
by Staff Writers
Cape
Cod MA (SPX) Jul 16, 2013
This
satellite image shows a large phytoplankton bloom, about 150 miles in diameter,
that occurred in the Northwest Pacific Ocean off the coast of Hokkaido, Japan
in May 2009. Researchers have assumed that such blooms were driven by iron in
the post-Ice Age ocean, but a new study by WHOI scientists suggests that a
"perfect storm" of light and nutrients spurred an explosion of
phytoplankton and other tiny creatures in the North Pacific 14,000 years ago.
(Photo by Norman Kuring, MODIS Ocean Color Team/NASA).
At
the end of the last Ice Age, as the world began to warm, a swath of the North
Pacific Ocean came to life. During a brief pulse of biological productivity
14,000 years ago, this stretch of the sea teemed with phytoplankton,
amoeba-like foraminifera and other tiny creatures, who thrived in large numbers
until the productivity ended-as mysteriously as it began-just a few hundred
years later.
Researchers
have hypothesized that iron sparked this surge of ocean life, but a new study
led by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) scientists and colleagues at
the University of Bristol (UK), the University of Bergen (Norway), Williams
College and the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University
suggests iron may not have played an important role after all, at least in some
settings.
The
study, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, determines that a different
mechanism-a transient "perfect storm" of nutrients and light-spurred
life in the post-Ice Age Pacific. Its findings resolve conflicting ideas about
the relationship between iron and biological productivity during this time
period in the North Pacific-with potential implications for geo-engineering efforts
to curb climate change by seeding the ocean with iron.
"A
lot of people have put a lot of faith into iron-and, in fact, as a modern ocean
chemist, I've built my career on the importance of iron-but it may not always
have been as important as we think," says WHOI Associate Scientist Phoebe
Lam, a co-author of the study.
Because
iron is known to cause blooms of biological activity in today's North Pacific
Ocean, researchers have assumed it played a key role in the past as well. They
have hypothesized that as Ice Age glaciers began to melt and sea levels rose,
they submerged the surrounding continental shelf, washing iron into the rising
sea and setting off a burst of life.
Past
studies using sediment cores-long cylinders drilled into the ocean floor that
offer scientists a look back through time at what has accumulated there-have
repeatedly found evidence of this burst, in the form of a layer of increased
opal and calcium carbonate, the materials that made up phytoplankton and
foraminifera shells. But no one had searched the fossil record specifically for
signs that iron from the continental shelf played a part in the bloom.
Lam
and an international team of colleagues revisited the sediment core data to
directly test this hypothesis. They sampled GGC-37, a core taken from a site
near Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, about every 5 centimeters, moving back
through time to before the biological bloom began.
Then
they analyzed the chemical composition of their samples, measuring the relative
abundance of the isotopes of the elements neodymium and strontium in the
sample, which indicates which variant of iron was present.
The
isotope abundance ratios were a particularly important clue, because they could
reveal where the iron came from-one variant pointed to iron from the ancient
Loess Plateau of northern China, a frequent source of iron-rich dust in the
northwest Pacific, while another suggested the younger, more volcanic
continental shelf was the iron source.
What
the researchers found surprised them.
"We
saw the flux of iron was really high during glacial times, and that it dropped
during deglaciation," Lam says. "We didn't see any evidence of a
pulse of iron right before this productivity peak."
The
iron the researchers did find during glacial times appeared to be supplemented
by a third source, possibly in the Bering Sea area, but it didn't have a
significant effect on the productivity peak. Instead, the data suggest that
iron levels were declining when the peak began.
Based
on the sediment record, the researchers propose a different cause for the peak:
a chain of events that created ideal conditions for sea life to briefly
flourish. The changing climate triggered deep mixing in the North Pacific
ocean, which stirred nutrients that the tiny plankton depend on up into the
sea's surface layers, but in doing so also mixed the plankton into deep, dark
waters, where light for photosynthesis was too scarce for them to thrive.
Then
a pulse of freshwater from melting glaciers-evidenced by a change in the amount
of a certain oxygen isotope in the foraminifera shells found in the
core-stopped the mixing, trapping the phytoplankton and other small creatures
in a thin, bright, nutrient-rich top layer of ocean. With greater exposure to
light and nutrients, and iron levels that were still relatively high, the
creatures flourished.
"We
think that ultimately this is what caused the productivity peak-that all these
things happened all at once," Lam says. "And it was a transient
thing, because the iron continued to drop and eventually the nutrients ran
out."
The
study's findings disprove that iron caused this ancient bloom, but they also
raise questions about a very modern idea. Some scientists have proposed seeding
the world's oceans with iron to trigger phytoplankton blooms that could trap
some of the atmosphere's carbon dioxide and help stall climate change.
This
idea, sometimes referred to as the "Iron Hypothesis," has met with
considerable controversy, but scientific evidence of its potential
effectiveness to sequester carbon and its impact on ocean life has been mixed.
"This
study shows how there are multiple controls on ocean phytoplankton blooms, not
just iron," says Ken Buesseler, a WHOI marine chemist who led a workshop
in 2007 to discuss modern iron fertilization. "Certainly before we think
about adding iron to the ocean to sequester carbon as a geoengineering tool, we
should encourage studies like this of natural systems where the conditions of
adding iron, or not, on longer and larger time scales have already been done
for us and we can study the consequences."
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