RETHINKING THE GLOBAL CARBON CYCLE WITH A LARGE, DYNAMIC AND MICROBIALLY MEDIATED GAS HYDRATE CAPACITOR

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Dickens G.R.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-11-28T04:25:38Z
dc.date.available 2021-11-28T04:25:38Z
dc.date.issued 2003
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14261091
dc.identifier.citation Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2003, 213, 3-4, 169-183
dc.identifier.issn 0012-821X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/32579
dc.description.abstract Prominent negative δ13C excursions characterize several past intervals of abrupt (<100 kyr) environmental change. These anomalies, best exemplified by the >2.5‰ drop across the Paleocene/Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) ca. 55.5 Ma, command our attention because they lack explanation with conventional models for global carbon cycling. Increasingly, Earth scientists have argued that they signify massive release of CH4 from marine gas hydrates, although typically without considering the underlying process or the ensuing ramifications of such an interpretation. At the most basic level, a large, dynamic ‘gas hydrate capacitor’ stores and releases 13C-depleted carbon at rates linked to external conditions such as deep ocean temperature. The capacitor contains three internal reservoirs: dissolved gas, gas hydrate, and free gas. Carbon enters and leaves these reservoirs through microbial decomposition of organic matter, anaerobic oxidation of CH4 in shallow sediment, and seafloor gas venting; carbon cycles between these reservoirs through several processes, including fluid flow, precipitation and dissolution of gas hydrate, and burial. Numerical simulations show that simple gas hydrate capacitors driven by inferred changes in bottom water warming during the PETM can generate a global δ13C excursion that mimics observations. The same modeling extended over longer time demonstrates that variable CH4 fluxes to and from gas hydrates can partly explain other δ13C excursions, rapid and slow, large and small, negative and positive. Although such modeling is rudimentary (because processes and variables in modern and ancient gas hydrate systems remain poorly constrained), acceptance of a vast, externally regulated gas hydrate capacitor forces us to rethink δ13C records and the operation of the global carbon cycle throughout time.
dc.subject gashydrates
dc.subject carbon cycle
dc.subject methane
dc.subject carbon isotopes
dc.subject global change
dc.subject Paleocene-Eocene
dc.subject Phanerozoic
dc.title RETHINKING THE GLOBAL CARBON CYCLE WITH A LARGE, DYNAMIC AND MICROBIALLY MEDIATED GAS HYDRATE CAPACITOR
dc.type Статья
dc.subject.age Cenozoic::Paleogene::Eocene
dc.subject.age Cenozoic::Paleogene::Paleocene
dc.subject.age Кайнозой::Палеоген::Палеоцен ru
dc.subject.age Кайнозой::Палеоген::Эоцен ru


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • ELibrary
    Метаданные публикаций с сайта https://www.elibrary.ru

Show simple item record