Continental slopes north of the East Siberian Sea
potentially hold large amounts of methane (CH4) in sediments as gas
hydrate and free gas. Although release of this CH4 to the ocean and
atmosphere has become a topic of discussion, the region remains sparingly
explored. Here we present pore water chemistry results from 32 sediment
cores taken during Leg 2 of the 2014 joint Swedish–Russian–US Arctic Ocean Investigation of
Climate–Cryosphere–Carbon Interactions (SWERUS-C3) expedition. The cores come
from depth transects across the slope and rise extending between the
Mendeleev and the Lomonosov ridges, north of Wrangel Island and the New
Siberian Islands, respectively. Upward CH4 flux towards the seafloor, as
inferred from profiles of dissolved sulfate (SO42−), alkalinity,
and the δ13C of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), is negligible
at all stations east of 143° E longitude. In the upper
8 m of these cores, downward SO42− flux never exceeds
6.2 mol m−2 kyr−1,
the upward alkalinity flux never exceeds 6.8 mol m−2 kyr−1, and δ13C composition of DIC (δ13C-DIC) only moderately decreases with
depth (−3.6 ‰ m−1 on average). Moreover, upon addition of
Zn acetate to pore water samples, ZnS did not precipitate, indicating a lack
of dissolved H2S. Phosphate, ammonium, and metal profiles reveal that
metal oxide reduction by organic carbon dominates the geochemical
environment and supports very low organic carbon turnover rates. A single
core on the Lomonosov Ridge differs, as diffusive fluxes for SO42− and
alkalinity were 13.9 and 11.3 mol m−2 kyr−1, respectively, the δ13C-DIC gradient was 5.6 ‰ m−1, and Mn2+
reduction terminated within 1.3 m of the seafloor. These are among the first
pore water results generated from this vast climatically sensitive region,
and they imply that abundant CH4, including gas hydrates, do not
characterize the East Siberian Sea slope or rise along the investigated
depth transects. This contradicts previous modeling and discussions, which
due to the lack of data are almost entirely based on assumption
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