XVI INQUA Congress

Paper No. 12
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-4:30 PM

HOW VARIABLE WERE ATMOSPHERIC CO2 LEVELS DURING THE LAST DEGLACIATION? EVIDENCE FROM STOMATAL INDEX MEASUREMENTS OF A SWEDISH HIGH-RESOLUTION LEAF RECORD


RUNDGREN, Mats and BJÖRCK, Svante, Department of Geology, Quaternary Geology, Lund Univ, Tornavägen 13, Lund, SE-223 63, Sweden, mats.rundgren@geol.lu.se

Data from ice cores suggest that Lateglacial and early Holocene atmospheric CO2 variations were rather conservative, the most important change being a gradual Younger Dryas increase. By contrast, palaeo-CO2 records based on the inverse relationship between CO2 partial pressure and stomatal frequency of terrestrial plant leaves reflect a more dynamic CO2 evolution. If correct, stomatal-based CO2 estimates suggest that the global carbon cycle experienced significant reorganization during the last deglaciation.

Here we present a Lateglacial and early Holocene CO2 record based on stomatal index data from leaves preserved in the sediments of Lake Madtjärn, a small lake in southwestern Sweden. Based on an extensive radiocarbon dating programme in combination with lithostratigraphic and palaeobotanical investigations, it was possible to correlate our CO2 record to the INTIMATE event stratigraphy.

Three independent CO2 records constructed from stomatal index data of Salix polaris, Salix herbacea and Betula nana leaves were combined to form a high-resolution reconstruction for the period 12,800-10,800 cal yr BP. Atmospheric CO2 concentrations were found to have decreased rapidly from c. 260 ppmv to 210-215 ppmv within 200 years during the Allerød (GI-1)-Younger Dryas (GS-1) transition. After 100-200 years, CO2 concentration started to gradually increase to 270-290 ppmv at the end of the Younger Dryas stadial (GS-1). CO2 concentrations were relatively stable during the early Holocene, except for a short-lived period of lower (240-250 ppmv) values c. 11,350-11,200 cal yr BP.

The CO2 record from Lake Madtjärn resembles in many respects the GRIP oxygen isotope record, suggesting that atmospheric CO2 may have played an important role in climate dynamics during the last deglaciation. Our CO2 record also partly resembles previous stomatal-based reconstructions, and the overall deglacial trend is almost identical to that seen in ice-core records. The amplitude of change is, however, markedly higher in the Swedish stomatal-based record compared to the ice cores. This difference may partly be accounted for by the inherent smoothing of ice-core CO2 records caused by diffusion, but a major part of the difference in amplitude between ice-core and stomatal-based CO2 records still remains to be explained.