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Journal ArticleDOI

Production and accumulation of calcium carbonate in the ocean: Budget of a nonsteady state

John D. Milliman
- 01 Dec 1993 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 4, pp 927-957
TLDR
In this article, it was shown that the oceans are not presently in a steady state, suggesting that outputs have been overestimated or inputs underestimated, that one or more other inputs have not been identified, and/or that one of the missing calcium sources might be groundwater, although its presentday input is probably much smaller than that of rivers.
Abstract
Present-day production of CaCO3 in tne world ocean is calculated to be about 5 billion tons (bt) per year, of which about 3 bt accumulate in sediments; the other 40% is dissolved. Nearly half of the carbonate sediment accumulates on reefs, banks, and tropical shelves, and consists largely of metastable aragonite and magnesian calcite. Deep-sea carbonates, predominantly calcitic coccoliths and planktonic foraminifera, have orders of magnitude lower productivity and accumulation rates than shallow-water carbonates, but they cover orders of magnitude larger basin area. Twice as much calcium is removed from the oceans by present-day carbonate accumulation as is estimated to be brought in by rivers and hydrothermal activity (1.6 bt), suggesting that outputs have been overestimated or inputs underestimated, that one or more other inputs have not been identified, and/or that the oceans are not presently in steady state. One “missing” calcium source might be groundwater, although its present-day input is probably much smaller than that of rivers. If, as seems likely, CaCO3 accumulation presently exceeds terrestial and hydrothermal input, this imbalance presumably is offset by decreased accumulation and increased input during lowered sea level: shallow-water accumulation decreases by an order of magnitude with a 100 m drop in sea level, while groundwater influx increases because of heightened piezometric head and the diagenesis of metastable aragonite and magnesian calcite from subaerially exposed shallow-water carbonates.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Land–sea carbon and nutrient fluxes and coastal ocean CO2 exchange and acidification: Past, present, and future

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the role of atmospheric CO2 and seawater CO2 in ocean acidification during the Phanerozoic at various time scales and found that the changes include a rapid decline in pH and carbonate saturation state, a shift toward dissolution of carbonate substrates exceeding production, potentially leading to the “demise of the coral reefs, and enhanced biological production and burial of organic C, a small sink of anthropogenic CO2, accompanied by a continuous trend toward increasing autotrophy in coastal waters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial community of oolitic carbonate sediments of the Bahamas Archipelago

TL;DR: The ubiquitousness of photosynthetizers, along with the presence of aerobic/anaerobic heterotrophic microbes and the gradient increase in biofilm production on ooid grains from active to mat-stabilized environments, support the potential involvement of these communities in biomineralization and carbonate precipitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mg isotopes in chlorophyll-a and coccoliths of cultured coccolithophores (Emiliania huxleyi) by MC-ICP-MS

TL;DR: There was a significant correlation between the δ 26 Mg values of coccoliths and chlorophyll-a, suggesting that a growth rate-dependent step occurs during the initial acquisition of Mg from the culture medium, and that Mg isotopic fractionation could be influenced by the growth rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of marine sediment diagenesis in the modern oceanic magnesium cycle.

TL;DR: This analysis provides the best constraints to date on the sources and sinks that define the oceanic magnesium cycle, including new constraints on the output flux of magnesium and isotopic fractionation during low-temperature ridge flank hydrothermal circulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Progress toward a multi-basin calibration for quantifying deep sea calcite preservation in the tropical/subtropical world ocean

TL;DR: In this article, the Globorotalia menardii Fragmentation Index (MFI) has been used to trace deep sea CaCO3 dissolution quantitatively across the tropical/subtropical world ocean.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A 17,000-year glacio-eustatic sea level record: influence of glacial melting rates on the Younger Dryas event and deep-ocean circulation

TL;DR: In this paper, a global oxygen isotope record for ocean water has been calculated from the Barbados sea level curve, allowing separation of the ice volume component common to all isotope records measured in deep-sea cores.
Journal ArticleDOI

The carbonate-silicate geochemical cycle and its effect on atmospheric carbon dioxide over the past 100 million years

TL;DR: In this article, a computer model has been constructed that considers the effects on the CO/sub 2/ level of the atmosphere, and the Ca, Mg, and HCO/sub 3/ levels of the ocean, of the following processes: weathering on the continents of calcite, dolomite, and calcium-and-magnesium-containing silicates; biogenic precipitation and removal of CaCO 3/from the ocean; removal of Mg from the ocean via volcanic-seawater reaction; and the metamorphic-magmatic decarbon
Journal ArticleDOI

Vostok ice core provides 160,000-year record of atmospheric CO2

TL;DR: In this article, direct evidence of past atmospheric CO2 changes has been extended to the past 160,000 years from the Vostok ice core, showing an inherent phenomenon of change between glacial and interglacial periods.
Journal ArticleDOI

A biogeochemical study of the coccolithophore, Emiliania huxleyi, in the North Atlantic

TL;DR: The biogeochemical properties of an extensive bloom (∼250,000 km2) of the coccolithophore, Emiliania huxleyi, in the north east Atlantic Ocean were investigated in June 1991.
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