The causes of the variations in CO2 of the past million
years remain poorly understood. Imbalances between the input of elements
from rock weathering and their removal from the
atmosphere-ocean-biosphere system to the lithosphere likely contributed
to reconstructed changes. We employ the Bern3D Earth system model of
intermediate complexity to investigate carbon-climate responses to
step-changes in the weathering input of phosphorus, alkalinity, carbon,
and carbon isotope ratio (δ13C) in simulations
extending up to 600,000 years.
CO2 and climate approach a new equilibrium within a few
ten thousand years, whereas the equilibration lasts several hundred
thousand years for δ13C. These timescales represent a
challenge for the initialization of sediment-enabled models and
unintended drifts may be larger than forced signals in simulations of
the last glacial-interglacial cycle. Changes in dissolved
CO2 change isotopic fractionation during marine
photosynthesis and δ13C of organic matter. This
mechanism and changes in the organic matter export cause distinct
spatio-temporal perturbations in δ13C of dissolved
inorganic carbon.
A cost-efficient emulator is built with the Bern3D responses and applied
in contrasting literature-based weathering histories for the past
800,000 years. Differences between scenarios for carbonate rock
weathering reach around a third of the glacial-interglacial
CO2 amplitude, 0.05 ‰ for δ13C, and
exceed reconstructed variations in marine carbonate ion. Plausible input
from the decomposition of organic matter on shelves causes variations of
up to 10 ppm in CO2 , 4 mmol m−3 in
CO2−3, and 0.09‰ in
δ13C. Our results demonstrate that weathering-burial
imbalances are important for past climate variations.