Organic and Inorganic Carbon Sinks Reduce Long‐Term Deep Carbon Emissions in the Continental Collision Margin of the Southern Tibetan Plateau: Implications for Cenozoic Climate Cooling

Author:

Wang Yingchun12ORCID,Quan Sanyu2ORCID,Tang Xin2,Hosono Takahiro34ORCID,Hao Yinlei5ORCID,Tian Jiao6,Pang Zhonghe78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Oil and Gas Reservoir Geology and Exploitation Chengdu University of Technology Chengdu China

2. College of Energy Resources Chengdu University of Technology Chengdu China

3. Faculty of Advanced Science and Technology Kumamoto University Kumamoto Japan

4. International Research Organization for Advanced Science and Technology Kumamoto University Kumamoto Japan

5. Guangdong Open Laboratory of Geospatial Information Technology and Application Guangzhou China

6. Institute of Earthquake Forecasting China Earthquake Administration Beijing China

7. Key Laboratory of Shale Gas and Geoengineering Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

8. Geothermal Research Center Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractThis paper aims to update our understanding of the carbon cycle in the Himalayas, the most intense collisional orogeny globally, by providing new insight into its impact on Cenozoic climate cooling through the use of isotopic variations in both organic and inorganic carbon and an isotopic mass balance model. Our results from 20 selected hot springs show that the relative contributions of dissolved carbon from the mantle, metamorphic decarbonization, aqueous dissolution, and soil organic matter are approximately 2%, 82%, 6%, and 10%, respectively. Approximately 87% ± 5% of CO2 generated in the deep crust precipitates as calcite, while approximately 5.5% ± 1% of this carbon is converted to biomass through microbial chemosynthesis at depths less than 2 km. Our random forests approach yielded a metamorphic carbon flux from the entire Himalayan orogenic belt of approximately 2.7 ∼ 4.5 × 1012 mol/yr. The minor CO2 released into the atmosphere (2.5 ∼ 4.2 × 1011 mol/yr) is comparable to the carbon consumption driven by Himalayan weathering. This paper provides new insights into deep carbon cycling, notably that approximately 93% of deeply sourced carbon is trapped in the shallow crust, rendering orogenic processes carbon neutral and possibly acting as one of the major triggers of long‐term climate cooling in the Cenozoic.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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