thaumaturgy
Well-Known Member
I did not and have not called you chicken.
However, I take your reply as a no to my suggestion. That is fine with me.
HA! You are such a ...well, I can't say it here. You suggested by your very statements you wouldn't accept it if I chickened out...well, zippy, I am not chickening out.
I have already in post after post after post after post in this thread alone, presented more science than you have presented in thread after thread after thread.
So, bring it on. You want an accounting of oceanic carbonate, start with this:
Measurement of boron isotope compositions in species of planktonic foraminifera that calciÞed their tests at different depths in the water column are used to reconstruct the pH proÞle of the upper water column of the tropical ocean. Results for five time windows from the middle Miocene to the late Pleistocene indicate pH-depth proÞles similar to that of the modern ocean in this area, which suggests that this method may greatly aid in our understanding of the global carbon cycle.
SOURCE: SOURCE: Science 20 November 1998:
Vol. 282. no. 5393, pp. 1468 - 1471
What are the drivers for carbonate speciation?
The pH of seawater plays an important role in the ocean-atmosphere carbon budget by controlling the speciation of dissolved carbonate species, affecting the depth of the carbonate compensation depth (CCD), and determining the partitioning of gaseous carbon dioxide between the oceans and the atmosphere. As these parameters have varied in the past, the ability to determine the pH of the paleoceans would be of considerable interest to oceanographers as well as climatologists.SOURCE: ibid.
This helps establish the drivers on the system. Now let's get down to some numbers.
THIS LINK provides a table of global carbonate budgets and fluxes from various marine sources.
In addition, the same link contains this important section:
(Emphasis added)Coralline algae, corals, and coccolithophorids have shown reduced calcification under increased pCO[SIZE=-2]2[/SIZE]. In corals, this appears to be a response to reduced CO[SIZE=-2]32-[/SIZE] concentration, rather than to pH or some other carbonate species (Langdon in press). Surface ocean CO[SIZE=-2]32-[/SIZE] is expected to drop about 30% under doubled pCO[SIZE=-2]2[/SIZE]. Additionally, a potential shift in the phytoplankton community favoring non-calcifying organisms, as a result of projected changes in CO[SIZE=-2]2[/SIZE], has been suggested (Riebesell et al. 2000). (SOURCE)
So now the ball's in your court. You bring a challenge to a scientist, expect that the real scientist won't chicken out. You didn't even need to worry that I might.
What do you have?
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