Measurements on air trapped in old polar ice have revealed that the pre-industrial atmosphere contained 280 ppm of CO2 and that δ13C of atmospheric CO2 decreased by about 1.1”, until 1980. These measurements show that considerable amounts of non-fossil CO2 must have already been emitted into the atmosphere in the 19th century. Quantitative estimates of the emission rates were performed by deconvolving the CO2 and δ13C records, using models of the global carbon cycle (box-diffusion and outcrop-diffusion ocean, four-box biosphere). Depending on the structure of the ocean submodel, deconvolution of the CO2 record yields a cumulative non-fossil production of about 90 to 150 Gt C until 1980, of which more than 50% were released prior to 1900. Ac...
International audienceGlobal biosphere productivity is the largest uptake flux of atmospheric carbon...
Studies on ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland revealed variations in the concentration and δ^C ...
The gradual cooling of the climate during the Cenozoic has generally been attributed to a decrease ...
We have updated earlier deconvolution analyses using most recent high-precision ice core data for th...
Land-use changes until the beginning of the 20th century made the terrestrial biosphere a net source...
The CO2 content of the atmosphere has increased during the past two centuries as a result of the com...
The high-resolution CO2 record from Law Dome ice core reveals that atmospheric CO2 concentration sta...
International audienceThe high-resolution CO 2 record from Law Dome ice core reveals that atmospheri...
Today, a monitoring network measures atmospheric CO2 at high temporal and spatial resolution. Atmosp...
The long-term variability in the terrestrial and oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon is investiga...
Precise and continuous measurements of atmospheric CO2 concentration were first begun in 1958 and sh...
Precise measurements in air are helping to clarify the fate of CO<sub>2</sub> released by human acti...
In order to study in detail the pre-industrial CO2 level (back to about 900 AD) and its temporal var...
International audienceGlobal biosphere productivity is the largest uptake flux of atmospheric carbon...
Studies on ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland revealed variations in the concentration and δ^C ...
The gradual cooling of the climate during the Cenozoic has generally been attributed to a decrease ...
We have updated earlier deconvolution analyses using most recent high-precision ice core data for th...
Land-use changes until the beginning of the 20th century made the terrestrial biosphere a net source...
The CO2 content of the atmosphere has increased during the past two centuries as a result of the com...
The high-resolution CO2 record from Law Dome ice core reveals that atmospheric CO2 concentration sta...
International audienceThe high-resolution CO 2 record from Law Dome ice core reveals that atmospheri...
Today, a monitoring network measures atmospheric CO2 at high temporal and spatial resolution. Atmosp...
The long-term variability in the terrestrial and oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon is investiga...
Precise and continuous measurements of atmospheric CO2 concentration were first begun in 1958 and sh...
Precise measurements in air are helping to clarify the fate of CO<sub>2</sub> released by human acti...
In order to study in detail the pre-industrial CO2 level (back to about 900 AD) and its temporal var...
International audienceGlobal biosphere productivity is the largest uptake flux of atmospheric carbon...
Studies on ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland revealed variations in the concentration and δ^C ...
The gradual cooling of the climate during the Cenozoic has generally been attributed to a decrease ...