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The oceans absorb and store a significant portion of anthropogenic CO2 emissions, but large uncertainties remain in the quantification of this sink. An improved assessment of the present and future oceanic carbon sink is therefore necessary to provide recommendations for long-term global carbon cycle and climate policies. The formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) is a unique fast track for transporting anthropogenic CO2 into the ocean's interior, making the deep waters rich in anthropogenic carbon. Thus the Atlantic is presently estimated to hold 38% of the oceanic anthropogenic CO2 inventory, although its volume makes up only 25% of the world ocean. Here we analyze the inventory change of anthropogenic CO2 in the Atlantic between 1997 and 2003 and its relationship to NADW formation. For the whole region between 20°S and 65°N the inventory amounts to 32.5 ± 9.5 Petagram carbon (Pg C) in 1997 and increases up to 36.0 ± 10.5 Pg C in 2003. This result is quite similar to earlier studies. Moreover, the overall increase of anthropogenic carbon is in close agreement with the expected change due to rising atmospheric CO2 levels of 1.69% a?1. On the other hand, when considering the subpolar region only, the results demonstrate that the recent weakening in the formation of Labrador Sea Water, a component of NADW, has already led to a decrease of the anthropogenic carbon inventory in this water mass. As a consequence, the overall inventory for the total water column in the western subpolar North Atlantic increased only by 2% between 1997 and 2003, much less than the 11% that would be expected from the increase in atmospheric CO2 levels.

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ODP Leg 131 recovered nannofossil-bearing sediments from Site 808 in the Nankai Trough, western Pacific Ocean. Three holes were examined for nannofossils, 808A, 808B, and 808C. A total of 22 nannofossil events were recognized, of which 10 are used as zonal markers. The sediments recovered from Hole 808A (0-111.4 mbsf) contain Pleistocene nannofossil assemblages that are mostly well preserved. All samples from this hole were assigned to nannofossil Zone NN21. The nannofossil assemblages observed in Hole 808B (111.0-358.8 mbsf) are poorly to well preserved and were all assigned to the Pleistocene. The NN21/NN20 Boundary is placed at 230.7 ± 4.4 mbsf. Hole 808C was cored from 298.5 to 1327 mbsf and basalt was reached at 1289.9 mbsf. The sediments recovered range in age from the upper part of Zone NN20 of the Pleistocene to Zone NN5 of the middle Miocene and contain poorly to well-preserved nannofossil assemblages. The Pliocene/Pleistocene Boundary, marked by the FO Gephyrocapsa caribbeanica, was placed at 776.3 ±1.6 mbsf, and the Miocene/Pliocene Boundary is tentatively placed at 955.9 ±1.5 mbsf. The lowermost sediments above basement as well as a sediment sample intercalated between basalt flows are assigned to Zone NN5, with an age of approximately 15 Ma. Age estimates provided by nannofossils show that the sedimentation rate in the trench-fill deposits of the Nankai Trough was very high, 800-1350 m/m.y (0-0.46 Ma), whereas in the Shikoku Basin deposits (> 0.46 Ma), the sedimentation rate was much lower (24-200 m/m.y). These age estimates also provide an extrapolated age of approximately 15 Ma for the basaltic basement at Site 808.

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