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External forcing, reservoirs, and processes

The role of weathering for the Earth`s climate was first described by Walker et al.[7]. In particular, the potential of weathering to stabilize the Earth's surface temperature by a negative feedback mechanism that is strongly modulated by the biosphere has gained recent interest (see, e.g., [6, 8, 9]). Compared to subareal weathering, silicate-rock weathering on land primarily controls long-term atmospheric COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 content [10]. The question of to what extent the biota are actually able to play an active role in stimulating the strength of the main carbon sink through weathering is crucial for an understanding of the dynamic properties of the overall Earth system.

The total process of weathering embraces first the reaction of silicate minerals with carbon dioxide, second the transport of weathering products, and third the deposition of carbonate minerals in sediments. The availability of cations plays the main role in these processes and is the limiting factor in the carbonate-sediments-forming reaction (third process) between cations (Catex2html_wrap_inline1280 and Mgtex2html_wrap_inline1280) and carbonate anions (COtex2html_wrap_inline1284). Therefore, for the mathematical formulation we have only to take into consideration the amount of released cations and their runoff (first and second process), respectively. Following Walker et al.[7], the weathering rate tex2html_wrap_inline1286, as a global average value, is the product of cations concentration in water (in mass per unit volume) and runoff (in volume per unit area per unit time). Therefore, the weathering rate is the mass of cations formed per unit area and unit time. Combining the direct temperature effect on the weathering reaction, the weak temperature effect on river runoff, and the dependence of weathering on soil COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 concentration [7, 1], the global mean silicate-rock weathering rate can be formulated via the following implicit equation:
 equation29

Here the pre-factor outlines the role of the COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 concentration in the soil, tex2html_wrap_inline1292; tex2html_wrap_inline1294 is the activity of tex2html_wrap_inline1296 in fresh soil-water and depends on tex2html_wrap_inline1292 and the global mean surface temperature tex2html_wrap_inline1300. The quantities tex2html_wrap_inline1302, tex2html_wrap_inline1304, and tex2html_wrap_inline1306 are the present-day values for the weathering rate, the tex2html_wrap_inline1296 activity, and the surface temperature, respectively. The activity tex2html_wrap_inline1294 is itself a function of the temperature and the COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 concentration in the soil. The equilibrium constants for the chemical activities of the carbon and sulfur systems involved have been taken from Stumm and Morgan[12]. Note that the sulfur content in the soil also contributes to the global weathering rate, but its influence does not depend on temperature. It can be regarded as an overall weathering bias, which has to be taken into account for the estimation of the present-day value.

Eq. 1 is the key relation for our models. For any given weathering rate the surface temperature and the COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 concentration in the soil can be calculated self-consistently, as will be shown below. tex2html_wrap_inline1292 can be assumed to be linearly related to the terrestrial biological productivity tex2html_wrap_inline1318 (see [13]) and the atmospheric COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 concentration tex2html_wrap_inline1322. Thus we have


 equation51
where tex2html_wrap_inline1324, tex2html_wrap_inline1326 and tex2html_wrap_inline1328 are again present-day values. Biologically enhanced Hadean and Archaean weathering processes would have been very different from the modern ones, although the purely inorganic processes are the same. Nevertheless, in our calculations we assume that at least as far back to the Proterozoic, the biosphere generates the same effects as today, namely the enhancement of COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 concentration in soil compared to the atmospheric value.

Besides the biotic influence, which will be discussed later, the Earth`s surface temperature plays a dominant role in influencing the intensity of weathering as a massive carbon sink, as explained above. Caldeira and Kasting[1] have introduced the following simplified climate model for calculating tex2html_wrap_inline1300: The time dependence of the solar luminosity I(t) is fitted for the interval tex2html_wrap_inline1336 by the function
 equation67
The energy balance between incoming and outgoing radiation is given by
 equation73
where a is the planetary albedo, tex2html_wrap_inline1340 is the Stefan-Boltzmann constant, and tex2html_wrap_inline1342 is the effective black-body radiation temperature which has to be increased by the greenhouse warming tex2html_wrap_inline1344 as function of the atmospheric carbon dioxide value tex2html_wrap_inline1322. For an explicit formulation of the logarithmic dependence, see Caldeira and Kasting[1]. Then the global surface temperature tex2html_wrap_inline1300 is given by the following implicit equation
equation80
This greenhouse model is valid for a very broad range of temperatures and COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 partial pressures tex2html_wrap_inline1352 and tex2html_wrap_inline1354). Nevertheless, if we wish to investigate the very early terrestrial atmosphere at about 4 Ga ago that is believed to have had a tex2html_wrap_inline1322 between tex2html_wrap_inline1360 and tex2html_wrap_inline1362 ppm [14], an extended greenhouse model working within a larger range of even higher COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 partial pressures is necessary. Such an improved greenhouse model is presented for example by Williams[15].

The main role of the biosphere in the context of our model is to increase tex2html_wrap_inline1292 in relation to the atmospheric COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 partial pressure and proportional to the biologic productivity tex2html_wrap_inline1318. tex2html_wrap_inline1318 is itself a function of various parameters such as water supply, photosynthetic active radiation (PHAR), nutrients (e.g., N, P and C), tex2html_wrap_inline1322, and tex2html_wrap_inline1300. In the framework of our Earth system model the biological productivity tex2html_wrap_inline1318 is considered to be a function of temperature and COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 partial pressure in the atmosphere only. According to Liebig's principle, tex2html_wrap_inline1318 can be cast into a multiplicative form, i.e.
 equation95
The maximum productivity, tex2html_wrap_inline1384, is estimated to be twice the present value [13], thus tex2html_wrap_inline1386. Following Volk[13], Michaelis-Menten hyberbolas (see, e.g.,[16]) are suitable for describing the functional behaviour of tex2html_wrap_inline1388:
 equation107
where tex2html_wrap_inline1392 is the value at which tex2html_wrap_inline1394, and tex2html_wrap_inline1396 ppm. Eq. 7 evidently tends to 1 for tex2html_wrap_inline1398. Experiments of plant growth under increased tex2html_wrap_inline1322 have shown an upper tolerance limit with respect to tex2html_wrap_inline1322 [17]. Therefore, following Kump and Volk[18], we investigate a second class of Earth system models with a parabolic relation of the COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 dependent growth function tex2html_wrap_inline1388 in analogy to the Daisyworld models of Watson and Lovelock[19] (see also:[20]):
 equation133
where tex2html_wrap_inline1410 is the optimum COtex2html_wrap_inline1266 partial pressure for photosynthesis, tex2html_wrap_inline1414.

The temperature dependence of tex2html_wrap_inline1416 is described by a parabolic function used already by Caldeira and Kasting[1]. It has a maximum at tex2html_wrap_inline1418:
 equation156
The resulting function tex2html_wrap_inline1422 is in any case a good description of the so-called net primary productivity (NPP) for the present biosphere. Let us emphasize that we do not consider the role of the carbon storage pool of biosphere in this paper. Within our approach, the biosphere productivity provides a measure for the biotic pump increasing tex2html_wrap_inline1292 with respect to the abiotic diffusive equilibrium between tex2html_wrap_inline1322 and tex2html_wrap_inline1292. As a consequence, we need not take into account the net productivity containing both the production and the decomposition of biomass. On the other hand, it is still unclear whether the ansatz for tex2html_wrap_inline1422 is strictly valid for the Archaean and Proterozoic eras when biomass was produced by primitive organisms like algo-bacterial mats. Our Eq. 9 can be extended to temperatures even higher than tex2html_wrap_inline1432 in order to incorporate hyperthermophiles [21]. Nevertheless, in order to facilitate comparability of our results with those found by Caldeira and Kasting[1], we will use the temperature-dependent term given in Eq. 9.


next up previous
Next: Weathering and continental growth Up: Model description Previous: Model description

Werner von Bloh (Data & Computation)
Mon Jul 10 15:15:10 MEST 2000