PhD ceremony Mr. S.M.A.C. van Heuven: Determination of the rate of oceanic storage of anthropogenic CO 2 from measurements in the ocean interior: the South Atlantic Ocean
When: | Fr 08-02-2013 at 12:45 |
PhD ceremony: Mr. S.M.A.C. van Heuven, 12.45 uur, Academiegebouw, Broerstraat 5, Groningen
Dissertation: Determination of the rate of oceanic storage of anthropogenic CO2 from measurements in the ocean interior: the South Atlantic Ocean
Promotor(s): prof. H.J.W. de Baar, prof. H.A.J. Meijer
Faculty: Mathematics and Natural Sciences
Carbon dioxide, CO2, is exchanged between – and within – the oceans, the land and the atmosphere. By the burning of oil, coal and gas, humanity is adding additional CO2 (‘anthropogenic’ CO2, CO2 ant) to the natural carbon cycle. In order to better constrain the changing carbon cycle, a better understanding is required of the rate of uptake of CO2 ant by the oceans, which was the aim of the thesis research of Steven van Heuven.
The research consisted of (i) collecting new CO2-related measurements from the ocean interior, (ii) compiling a data base of the new and historic measurements and (iii) using the resulting data base to assess the rate of increase of CO2 ant in the South Atlantic Ocean. This ocean region is considered to be of great importance for the uptake of CO2 ant from the atmosphere and its subsequent transport into the ocean interior.
During several seagoing expeditions, many thousands of ocean samples have been successfully analyzed. The subsequent research illustrates that it is very well possible to combine ~40 years of oceanographic data into a high-quality data base. Additionally, it is shown that it is possible to convincingly assess the increasing amounts of CO2 ant in the ocean interior – particularly in an ocean that exhibits strong biological and hydrographical variability and for which not many data are available. The results strengthen the evidence for the idea that the South Atlantic Ocean is responsible for the storage of circa 400 million tonnes of CO2 ant per year, or ~20% of the total oceanic uptake from the atmosphere.