• Title of article

    Global connections between aeolian dust, climate and ocean biogeochemistry at the present day and at the last glacial maximum

  • Author/Authors

    Maher، نويسنده , , B.A. and Prospero، نويسنده , , J.M. and Mackie، نويسنده , , D. and Gaiero، نويسنده , , D. and Hesse، نويسنده , , P.P. and Balkanski، نويسنده , , Y.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    37
  • From page
    61
  • To page
    97
  • Abstract
    Palaeo-dust records in sediments and ice cores show that wind-borne mineral aerosol (‘dust’) is strongly linked with climate state. During glacial climate stages, for example, the world was much dustier, with dust fluxes two to five times greater than in interglacial stages. However, the influence of dust on climate remains a poorly quantified and actively changing element of the Earthʹs climate system. Dust can influence climate directly, by the scattering and absorption of solar and terrestrial radiation, and indirectly, by modifying cloud properties. Dust transported to the oceans can also affect climate via ocean fertilization in those regions of the worldʹs oceans where macronutrients like nitrate are abundant but primary production and nitrogen fixation are limited by iron scarcity. Dust containing iron, as fine-grained iron oxides/oxyhydroxides and/or within clay minerals, and other essential micronutrients (e.g. silica) may modulate the uptake of carbon in marine ecosystems and, in turn, the atmospheric concentration of CO2. Here, in order to critically examine past fluxes and possible climate impacts of dust in general and iron-bearing dust in particular, we consider present-day sources and properties of dust, synthesise available records of dust deposition at the last glacial maximum (LGM); evaluate the evidence for changes in ocean palaeo-productivity associated with, and possibly caused by, changes in aeolian flux to the oceans at the LGM; and consider the radiative forcing effects of increased LGM dust loadings.
  • Keywords
    Radiative forcing , Iron fertilization , aerosols , climate change , palaeoclimatology , dust
  • Journal title
    EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
  • Record number

    2334390