Last Glacial Maximum and deglacial abyssal seawater oxygen isotopic ratios

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Abstract

An earlier analysis of pore-water salinity (chlorinity) in two deep-sea cores, using terminal constraint methods of control theory, concluded that although a salinity amplification in the abyss was possible during the LGM, it was not required by the data. Here the same methodology is applied to δ18Ow in the upper 100m of four deep-sea cores. An ice volume amplification to the isotopic ratio is, again, consistent with the data but not required by it. In particular, results are very sensitive, with conventional diffusion values, to the assumed initial conditions at-100 ky and a long list of noise (uncertainty) assumptions. If the calcite values of δ18O are fully reliable, then published enriched values of the ratio in seawater are necessary to preclude sub-freezing temperatures, but the seawater δ18O in pore fluids does not independently require the conclusion.

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Wunsch, C. (2016). Last Glacial Maximum and deglacial abyssal seawater oxygen isotopic ratios. Climate of the Past, 12(6), 1281–1296. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-12-1281-2016

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