The oceans slow the rate of climate change by absorbing about 25% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions annually. The Southern Ocean makes a substantial contribution to this oceanic carbon sink: more than 40% of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide in the ocean has entered south of 40° S. The rate-limiting step in the oceanic sequestration of anthropogenic carbon dioxide is the transfer of carbon across the base of the surface mixed layer into the ocean interior, a process known as subduction. However, the physical mechanisms responsible for the subduction of anthropogenic carbon dioxide are poorly understood. Here we use observationally based estimates of subduction and anthropogenic carbon concentrations in the Southern Ocean to determine...
The Southern Ocean plays an important role in the exchange of heat, momentum and gases between the d...
The Southern Ocean modulates the climate system by exchanging heat and carbon dioxide (CO2) between ...
The subpolar Southern Ocean is a critical region where CO2 outgassing influences the global mean air...
The Southern Ocean has taken up more than 40% of the total anthropogenic carbon (Cant) stored in the...
Various human activities, including fossil fuel combustion and forest clearing, emit about eight pet...
About a quarter of the total anthropogenic CO2 emissions during the industrial era has been absorbed...
International audienceThe oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon is tightly coupled to carbon subduc...
Uncertainty about the causes of glacial-interglacial CO2 variations demonstrates our incomplete gras...
Global climate is critically sensitive to physical and biogeochemical dynamics in the subpolar South...
PublishedAtmospheric CO2 concentrations over glacial-interglacial cycles closely correspond to Antar...
ArticleThe Southern Ocean is the most important area of anthropogenic carbon (Cant) uptake in the wo...
The Southern Ocean south of 35°S accounts for approximately half of the annual oceanic carbon uptake...
The ocean attenuates global warming by taking up about one quarter of global anthropogenic carbon em...
The Southern Ocean plays an important role in the exchange of heat, momentum and gases between the d...
The Southern Ocean modulates the climate system by exchanging heat and carbon dioxide (CO2) between ...
The subpolar Southern Ocean is a critical region where CO2 outgassing influences the global mean air...
The Southern Ocean has taken up more than 40% of the total anthropogenic carbon (Cant) stored in the...
Various human activities, including fossil fuel combustion and forest clearing, emit about eight pet...
About a quarter of the total anthropogenic CO2 emissions during the industrial era has been absorbed...
International audienceThe oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon is tightly coupled to carbon subduc...
Uncertainty about the causes of glacial-interglacial CO2 variations demonstrates our incomplete gras...
Global climate is critically sensitive to physical and biogeochemical dynamics in the subpolar South...
PublishedAtmospheric CO2 concentrations over glacial-interglacial cycles closely correspond to Antar...
ArticleThe Southern Ocean is the most important area of anthropogenic carbon (Cant) uptake in the wo...
The Southern Ocean south of 35°S accounts for approximately half of the annual oceanic carbon uptake...
The ocean attenuates global warming by taking up about one quarter of global anthropogenic carbon em...
The Southern Ocean plays an important role in the exchange of heat, momentum and gases between the d...
The Southern Ocean modulates the climate system by exchanging heat and carbon dioxide (CO2) between ...
The subpolar Southern Ocean is a critical region where CO2 outgassing influences the global mean air...