Geochemical evidence of the indirect pathway of terrestrial particulate material transport to the Okinawa Trough

Abstract

The major source of particulate matter in the East China Sea (ECS) is the Changjiang (Yangtze) River. Sediment types, the geochemical indices of terrigenous and biogenic inputs (TOC, CaCO3 and Sc), and biomarker indices such as the carbon preference index (CPI) of long-chain n-alkanes and the cinnamyli vanillyl ratio (C/V) in surface sediments, all reveal that the influence of terrestrial material initially declines away from the mouth of the Changjiang River across the ECS continental shelf. However, the influence then strengthens from the middle ECS shelf toward the continental slope and the Okinawa Trough, because when the northeast winds prevail from September to April, the Changjiang River plume flows southwestward along the coast of China. Part of this flow turns eastward in the northern Taiwan Strait, and then joins the northeastwardly flowing Kuroshio to reach the Okinawa Trough. As the central ECS is bypassed, the sediments accumulated there are geologically older, carbonate-rich and organic poor than those found off the coast of China and in the Okinawa Trough

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Institutional Repository of Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research, CAS

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Last time updated on 03/12/2017

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