Abstract Reconstructing past oxygen fluctuations in oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) is crucial for understanding their response to climate change. Numerous studies suggest better oxygenation in the Arabian Sea OMZ during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) compared to the Holocene. However, bottom water oxygen (BWO) variability during the Penultimate Glacial Cycle (Marine Isotope Stage [MIS] 6 to MIS 5e, ∼140–115 ka B.P.) remains poorly constrained. This study reconstructs BWO variations during this period from sediment core TN041‐8JPC in the western Arabian Sea OMZ, utilizing proxies including benthic foraminiferal surface porosity, redox‐sensitive trace metal enrichment factors (e.g., UEF), and U/Ba ratios. Bottom water oxygen concentrations were 24.4 ± 5.9 μmol/kg during MIS 6 and 16.8 ± 6.5 μmol/kg during MIS 5e, with all proxies indicating higher BWO in MIS 6 than in MIS 5e. However, these proxies show different patterns within MIS 5e, indicating that UEFand U/Ba ratios may be limited to recording average BWO in glacial and interglacial (quasi)steady states. We propose that the intensified OMZ during MIS 5e, relative to MIS 6, was driven by higher productivity, temperature‐induced reductions in oxygen solubility, and reduced delivery of Southern‐sourced intermediate waters. In contrast, the intensified OMZ during the Holocene, compared to the LGM, was likely influenced by lower oxygen solubility, reduced Southern water delivery, and winter convective mixing rather than productivity. This study highlights a general trend of weaker OMZs in glacial than interglacial periods, though the mechanisms may not be identical, offering insights into OMZ dynamics under climate change in the past.
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This content will become publicly available on June 12, 2026
Orbital Influences on Deep Ocean Oxygen Concentrations and Respired Carbon Storage
Abstract Quantitative records of bottom water oxygen (BWO) are critical for understanding deep ocean change through time. Because of the stoichiometric relationship between oxygen and carbon, BWO records provide insight into the physical and biogeochemical processes that control the air‐sea partitioning of both gases with important implications for climate over Quaternary glacial‐interglacial cycles. Here, we present new geochemical data sets from Ocean Discovery Program Site 1240 in the eastern equatorial Pacific to constrain paleoproductivity (Baxsflux) and BWO using a multiproxy approach (aU, Mn/Al, Δδ13C, and U/Ba). This combination of approaches allows us to quantitatively identify changes in BWO and to parse local and basin‐wide contributions to the signal. We find that upwelling, not dust input, is responsible for driving productivity changes at the site. Changes in local carbon export are not the primary driver of changes in BWO, which instead reflect basin‐wide changes driven by processes in the Southern Ocean. Our BWO results provide direct evidence for the role of orbital precession and obliquity in driving deep sea respired carbon and oxygen concentrations. We find variations in BWO on the order of ∼50 μmol/kg that occur with ∼23 kyr periodicity during the substages of Marine Isotope Stage 5, and variations of ∼100 μmol/kg on glacial‐interglacial timescales. These findings have important implications for the role of insolation in driving deep ocean respired oxygen and carbon concentrations, and point to physical and biogeochemical changes in the Southern Ocean as key drivers of planetary‐scale carbon change.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2103000
- PAR ID:
- 10601997
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Global Biogeochemical Cycles
- Volume:
- 39
- Issue:
- 6
- ISSN:
- 0886-6236
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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