The exact value of the CCD depends on the solubility of calcium carbonate which is determined by
temperature,
pressure and the chemical composition of the water – in particular the amount of dissolved in the water. Calcium carbonate is more soluble at lower temperatures and at higher pressures. It is also more soluble if the concentration of dissolved is higher. Adding a reactant to the above chemical equation pushes the equilibrium towards the right producing more products:
Ca2+ and
HCO3−, and consuming more reactants and
calcium carbonate according to
Le Chatelier's principle. At the present time the CCD in the
Pacific Ocean is about 4200–4500 metres except beneath the equatorial
upwelling zone, where the CCD is about 5000 m. In the
temperate and
tropical Atlantic Ocean the CCD is at approximately 5000 m. In the
Indian Ocean it is intermediate between the Atlantic and the Pacific at approximately 4300 meters. The variation in the depth of the CCD largely results from the length of time since the bottom water has been exposed to the surface; this is called the "age" of the
water mass.
Thermohaline circulation determines the relative ages of the water in these basins. Because organic material, such as fecal pellets from
copepods, sink from the surface waters into deeper water, deep water masses tend to accumulate dissolved carbon dioxide as they age. The oldest water masses have the highest concentrations of and therefore the shallowest CCD. The CCD is relatively shallow in high
latitudes with the exception of the
North Atlantic and regions of
Southern Ocean where
downwelling occurs. This downwelling brings young, surface water with relatively low concentrations of carbon dioxide into the deep ocean, depressing the CCD. In the
geological past the depth of the CCD has shown significant variation. In the
Cretaceous through to the
Eocene the CCD was much shallower globally than it is today; due to intense volcanic activity during this period atmospheric concentrations were much higher. Higher concentrations of resulted in a higher
partial pressure of over the ocean. This greater pressure of atmospheric leads to increased dissolved in the ocean mixed surface layer. This effect was somewhat moderated by the deep oceans' elevated temperatures during this period. In the late Eocene the transition from a
greenhouse to an icehouse Earth coincided with a deepened CCD.
John Murray investigated and experimented on the dissolution of calcium carbonate and was first to identify the carbonate compensation depth in oceans.
Climate change impacts Increasing
atmospheric concentration of from combustion of
fossil fuels are causing the CCD to rise, with zones of
downwelling first being affected.
Ocean acidification, which is also caused by increasing carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere, will increase such dissolution and shallow the carbonate compensation depth on timescales of tens to hundreds of years. == Sedimentary ooze ==