Earth Science Frontiers ›› 2022, Vol. 29 ›› Issue (4): 1-9.DOI: 10.13745/j.esf.sf.2022.6.28

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Deep-sea sediments and global change: Research frontiers and challenges

LIU Zhifei1,*(), CHEN Jianfang2, SHI Xuefa3   

  1. 1. State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China
    2. Key Laboratory of Marine Ecosystem Dynamics, Second Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, Hangzhou 310012, China
    3. Key Laboratory of Marine Geology and Metallogeny, First Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources, Qingdao 266061, China
  • Received:2022-06-15 Revised:2022-06-26 Online:2022-07-25 Published:2022-07-28
  • Contact: LIU Zhifei

Abstract:

Present-day oceans are experiencing the effects of global change such as warming and acidification caused by human activities. Deep-sea sediments store a detailed archive of past global changes driven by nature during Earth’s evolution. By exploring today’s and past global change processes, we can reveal the characteristics and laws of global change and provide a basis for predicting future changes. The outstanding research progresses made in recent years were the discovery in the deep-sea of a variety of analogous scenarios that humans, when choosing future greenhouse gas emission trajectories, can reference to for evaluating future changes—their processes and consequences —in the Earth system. Among such scenarios, millennium-scale climate events, represented by the Dansgaard-Oeschger oscillation, and decadal-scale climate events, represented by the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), are the closest rapid climate change analogues to today’s global warming. The Earth system is currently at the beginning of a “Hothouse Earth” emission trajectory. If the system passes the “tipping points”, it will follow an irreversible path to a “Hothouse Earth” state; whereas an alternative path may lead to a “Stabilized Earth” state. Analogous scenarios in the deep-sea sedimentary archive can provide societies with valuable information in choosing future emission trajectories. The major challenges for researchers are to fully understand the mechanisms of the key processes of global change. Taking the example of ocean warming and acidification’s influence on diatom and coccolithophore functioning as marine biological pump. The conventional knowledge has suggested that acidification is beneficial to diatom formation; but recent mesocosm experiments have found that global diatom output is significantly reduced. Likewise, the suggestion that acidification leads to calcification crisis in marine life has also been proven wrong, as recent black shale studies of Mesozoic oceanic anoxic events showed that calcium carbonate output from coccolithophores increased significantly during ocean acidification. The above examples demonstrate that conventional knowledges of the key processes of global change are under serious challenge.

Key words: deep-sea sediments, global change, ocean warming, ocean acidification, rapid climate change, tipping points

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