Drill core evidence adds credence to iron fertilization hypothesis regarding last ice age

Dust in the wind drove iron fertilization during ice age
The image shows the emission and transport of dust and other important aerosols to the Southern Ocean on Dec. 30, 2006. Dust is represented with orange to red colors, sea salt with blue, organic and black carbon with green to yellow, and sulfates with ash brown to white. In the image, a plume of dust has been emitted from southern South America and is being transported eastward over the Subantarctic Atlantic Ocean. Credit: William Putman and Arlindo da Silva, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

(Phys.org) —An international team of researchers has found evidence in drill core samples taken near Antarctica that adds credence to the iron fertilization hypothesis. In their paper published in the journal Science, the team describes how lowered nitrogen levels found in core samples helps bolster the idea that increased iron in the oceans during the last ice age caused a decrease in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels.

Twenty years ago, oceanographer John Martin found evidence linking a decrease in levels during the last ice age, with an increase in ocean levels. It occurred, scientists reasoned, because iron is a vital nutrient for phytoplankton—when there is more iron, phytoplankton levels rise causing a fall in carbon dioxide levels because they pull it from the atmosphere. Until now however, there has been scant evidence to prove that the hypothesis is correct, though one group did try seeding a small part of the ocean and found localized phytoplankton levels increased along with a corresponding reduction in carbon dioxide levels. In this new effort, the researchers studied sea floor sediment taken from the Sub-Antarctic Zone of the Southern Ocean.

In studying the core samples, the researchers analyzed the fossilized remains of tiny sea animals, specifically those with shells. Those shells hold evidence of what the creatures ate. The researchers found nitrogen levels that were lower than in similar creatures alive today. Lower nitrogen levels suggest a higher density of nitrate eating phytoplankton, which would have occurred due to higher levels of iron in the ocean. That iron, the researchers suggest made its way to the ocean via two separate avenues during the last . The first was from the wind—dust from South America and Patagonia (due to different environmental conditions) blew across the ocean leaving iron deposits. The second was from river runoff.

Dust in the wind drove iron fertilization during ice age
Nitrogen is a critical building block for marine algae, yet the plankton in the Southern Ocean north of Antarctica leave much of it unused partly because they lack another needed nutrient, iron. The late John Martin hypothesized that dust-borne iron carried to the region by winds during ice ages may have fertilized the marine algae, allowing more of the Southern Ocean nitrogen to be used for growth and thus drawing CO2 into the ocean. To confirm Martin's hypothesis, the researchers measured isotopes of nitrogen in a sediment sample collected from a site that lies within the path of the winds that deposit iron-laden dust in the Subantarctic zone of the Southern Ocean (labeled ODP Site 1090). They found that the ratios of the types of nitrogen in the sample coincided with the predictions of Martin's hypothesis. The colors indicate simulated ice-age dust deposition from low to high (blue to red). The black contour lines show the concentrations of nitrate (a form of nitrogen) in modern surface waters. Credit: Alfredo Martínez-García of ETH Zurich and Science/American Association for the Advancement of Science

While the research results do add credence to the iron fertilization hypotheses, they likely also close the door on the possibly of dumping iron into the ocean to help reduce modern atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, as some scientists have suggested. The core samples indicate it would take approximately 1000 years of an increase in iron in the world's oceans to cause enough of an increase in phytoplankton to lower atmospheric carbon levels by just 40 parts per million.

More information: Iron Fertilization of the Subantarctic Ocean During the Last Ice Age, Science 21 March 2014: Vol. 343 no. 6177 pp. 1347-1350 DOI: 10.1126/science.1246848

ABSTRACT
John H. Martin, who discovered widespread iron limitation of ocean productivity, proposed that dust-borne iron fertilization of Southern Ocean phytoplankton caused the ice age reduction in atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). In a sediment core from the Subantarctic Atlantic, we measured foraminifera-bound nitrogen isotopes to reconstruct ice age nitrate consumption, burial fluxes of iron, and proxies for productivity. Peak glacial times and millennial cold events are characterized by increases in dust flux, productivity, and the degree of nitrate consumption; this combination is uniquely consistent with Subantarctic iron fertilization. The associated strengthening of the Southern Ocean's biological pump can explain the lowering of CO2 at the transition from mid-climate states to full ice age conditions as well as the millennial-scale CO2 oscillations.

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