How Do Subduction Zones Regulate the Carbon Cycle?

M. Galvez, M. Pubellier
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引用次数: 24

Abstract

10.1 Carbon Distribution on Earth The core, mantle, and crust contain more than 99% of Earth’s carbon stocks. The remaining 1% is in the fluid Earth, split between the biosphere, atmosphere, and oceans. But this distribution must be considered as a snapshot in time, not a fixed property of the Earth system. Continuous exchange of carbon between fluid (ocean, atmosphere, and biosphere) and solid Earth (mainly mantle and crust) has modified the size of the fluid and solid carbon reservoirs over geological time, regulating atmospheric composition and climate. The subduction zone, where converging tectonic plates sink below one another or collide, is the main pathway for this exchange. It will be the focus of this chapter. Geologists believe that a long-term shift in regime of subduction carbon cycling is underway. Following an ecological innovation – the evolution of open-ocean calcifiers (e.g. coccolithophores and foraminifera) in the Mesozoic, marine regression and other changes – it is thought that the accumulation of carbonates on the seafloor (pelagic) has increased over the Cenozoic to reach about 50–60% of the global rate today (Table 10.1). Most of the carbonate that has accumulated over the last 100 Myr has not subducted yet (Table 10.1) and should do so sometime in the coming hundreds of millions of years. But when this will happen is unknown because there is no direct link between the precipitation of carbon on the seafloor and the birth of a subduction zone. Irrespective of when it happens, because the fates of shelf and deep-sea carbon materials differ, it has been proposed that intensification of deep-ocean carbonate deposition may eventually affect the prevailing regime of geological carbon cycling. To understand the link between oceanic carbon deposition centers and modes of longterm carbon cycling, we need to consider the fate of sedimentary carbon. Shelf and oceanic island carbon mostly escapes subduction and is accreted to continents during continental subduction and collision. While a fraction of pelagic carbon can also be thrusted within accretionary wedges and accreted, most is bound to be subducted, dissolved, or molten at various depths (Figure 10.1) within the sinking plate, before being released in the forearc, arc, or back-arc regions, or mechanically incorporated deeper into the mantle. The contrasted fate distinguishes two principal modes of tectonic carbon cycling: the shallow accretionary carbon cycle and the relatively deeper subduction zone carbon cycle (Figure 10.1). What is not clear yet is how fast those cycles operate and how they interact.
俯冲带如何调节碳循环?
10.1地球上的碳分布地核、地幔和地壳占地球碳储量的99%以上。剩下的1%在流动的地球上,分布在生物圈、大气和海洋中。但是这种分布必须被看作是时间上的一个快照,而不是地球系统的一个固定属性。流体(海洋、大气和生物圈)与固体地球(主要是地幔和地壳)之间的持续碳交换改变了地质时期流体和固体碳储层的大小,调节了大气成分和气候。在汇聚的构造板块相互下沉或碰撞的俯冲带是这种交换的主要途径。这将是本章的重点。地质学家认为,俯冲碳循环的长期变化正在发生。随着生态的革新——中生代开放海洋钙化物(如颗石藻和有孔虫)的进化、海洋退化和其他变化——人们认为,海底(远洋)碳酸盐的积累在新生代增加,达到今天全球速率的50-60%左右(表10.1)。在过去100 Myr积累的大部分碳酸盐尚未俯冲(表10.1),在未来数亿年的某个时候应该会这样做。但这种情况何时发生尚不清楚,因为海底碳的沉淀与俯冲带的形成之间没有直接联系。无论何时发生,由于陆架和深海碳物质的命运不同,有人提出,深海碳酸盐沉积的加剧可能最终影响地质碳循环的现行制度。为了理解海洋碳沉积中心与长期碳循环模式之间的联系,我们需要考虑沉积碳的命运。陆架和海洋岛屿碳大多在大陆俯冲和碰撞过程中脱离俯冲而被吸积到大陆上。虽然小部分的海洋碳也可以被推入增生楔并被吸积,但大多数必然会在下沉板块内的不同深度被俯冲、溶解或熔化(图10.1),然后在弧前、弧后或弧后区域被释放,或机械地并入更深的地幔中。对比的命运区分了两种主要的构造碳循环模式:浅层增生碳循环和相对较深的俯冲带碳循环(图10.1)。目前尚不清楚的是,这些周期的运行速度有多快,以及它们是如何相互作用的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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