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4589436 
Journal Article 
Redox-controlled carbon and phosphorus burial: A mechanism for enhanced organic carbon sequestration during the PETM 
Komar, N; Zeebe, RE 
2017 
Yes 
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
ISSN: 0012-821X
EISSN: 1385-013X 
Elsevier 
479 
Elsevier 
71-82 
Geological records reveal a major perturbation in carbon cycling during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM, similar to 56 Ma), marked by global warming of more than 5 degrees C and a prominent negative carbon isotope excursion of at least 2.5 parts per thousand within the marine realm. The entire event lasted about 200,000 yr and was associated with a massive release of light carbon into the ocean-atmosphere system over several thousands of years. Here we focus on the terminal stage of the PETM, during which the ocean-atmosphere system rapidly recovered from the carbon cycle perturbation. We employ a carbon cycle box model to examine the feedbacks between surface ocean biological production, carbon, oxygen, phosphorus, and carbonate chemistry during massive CO2 release events, such as the PETM. The model results indicate that the redox-controlled carbon-phosphorus feedback is capable of producing enhanced organic carbon sequestration during large carbon emission events. The locale of carbon oxidation (ocean vs. atmosphere) does not affect the amount of carbon sequestered. However, even though the model produces trends consistent with oxygen, excess accumulation rates of organic carbon(similar to 1700 Pg C during the recovery stage), export production and delta C-13 data, it fails to reproduce the magnitude of change of sediment carbonate content and the CCD over-deepening during the recovery stage. The CCD and sediment carbonate content overshoot during the recovery stage is muted by a predicted increase in CaCO3 rain. Nonetheless, there are indications that the CaCO3 export remained relatively constant during the PETM. If this was indeed true, then an initial pulse of 3,000 Pg C followed by an additional, slow leak of 2,500 Pg C could have triggered an accelerated nutrient supply to the surface ocean instigating enhanced organic carbon export, consequently increasing organic carbon sequestration, resulting in an accelerated restoration of ocean-atmosphere biogeochemistry during the termination phase of the PETM. 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. 
PETM; carbon sequestration; carbon cycle; phosphorus; oxygen; methane hydrate