197 research outputs found
The marine geochemistry of the rare earth elements
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 1983Novel methods were developed for the determination of 12 of the 14
Rare Earth Elements (REE) in seawater. Initial extractions of the REE by
chelating ion exchange chromatography is followed by cation exchange for
removal of co-extracted U and remaining traces of major ions. Finally
traces of U are removed by anion exchange before irradiation for 8 hours
at a flux of 5 x 1013 neutrons.cm-2.sec-l. After post-irradiation
separation of 24 Na, the gamma spectra are recorded over four different
time intervals with a Ge(Li) detector. An internal standard (144Ce) is
carried all along the procedure for improved precision by avoidance of
counting geometry errors. Vertical profiles are reported for three stations in respectively the
Northwest Atlantic Ocean, the Eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean and the
Cariaco Trench, an anoxic basin. This data set represents the first
detailed profiles of Pr, Tb, Ho, Tm and Lu in seawater, together with
profiles of La, Ce, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd and Yb. The first observations of
positive Ce anomalies in seawater are ascribed to regeneration of Ce
under reducing conditions. The first reported positive Gd anomalies are
ascribed to the unique chemical properties of the Gd(III)-cation, which
has an exactly half-filled 4f electron shell. Concentrations of the REE range from 0.3 pmol.kg-l (Lu) to 86
pmol.kg-l (Ce) and are among the lowest reported so far for trace
elements in seawater. The REE as a group typically exhibit a quasi-linear
increase with depth. In the deep water there appears to be some degree of
correlation with silicate. Concentration levels in the deep Pacific Ocean
are 2-4 times those in deep Atlantic waters. Ce has an opposite
behaviour, with very strong depletions in deep Pacific waters. In the
Cariaco Trench all REE, but especially Ce, are strongly affected by the
chemical changes across the oxic/anoxic interface. The REE distributions normalized versus shales (crustal abundance)
exhibit four major features:
i) a gradual enrichment of the heavy REE, most strongly developed
in the deep Pacific Ocean. This is compatible with the
stabilization of heavy REE by stronger inorganic complexation in
seawater as predicted by the TURNER- WHITFIELD-DICKSON
speciation model.
ii) the first description of positive Gd anomalies, in agreement
with the anomalously strong complexation of the Gd(III)-cation
predicted by the same speciation model.
iii) most commonly negative, but sometimes positive, Ce anomalies.
iv) a linear Eu/Sm relation for all samples. Distributions of the dissolved REE in ocean waters seem to be
dominated by their internal cycling within the ocean basins. With a few
notable exceptions, the ultimate external sources (riverine, aeolian,
hydrothermal) and sinks (authigenic minerals) appear to have little
impact on the spatial distribution of the REE in oceanic water masses.
Analogies with distributions of other properties within the oceans
suggest that the REE as a group are controlled by two simultaneous
processes:
A) cycling like or identical to opal and calcium-carbonate, with
circumstantial evidence in support of the latter as a possible carrier.
B) adsorptive scavenging, possibly by manganese-oxide phases on settling
particles. The latter mechanism is strongly supported by the parallels between
REE(III) speciation in seawater and the 'typical 1 seawater REE pattern.
This general correspondence is highlighted by the very distinct
excursions of Gd in both Gd(III) speciation and the observed seawater REE
patterns.
Combination of both apparent mechanisms, for instance scavenging of
REE by adsorptive coatings (Mn oxides) on settling skeletal material, is
very well conceivable. Upon dissolution of the shells at or near the
seafloor the adsorbed REE fraction would be released into the bottom
waters. The observations of
positive Ce anomalies in Northwest Atlantic surface waters,
enhanced Ce anomalies and Mn levels in the OZ-minimum zone of the
Eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean, and
enhanced Ce concentrations in anoxic waters
all support the contention that a vigorous cycling driven by oxidation
and reduction reactions dominates both Ce and Mn in the ocean basins.
Under conditions of thermodynamic equilibrium, Ce tends to become
depleted in well-oxygenated open ocean waters, and normal or enriched in
waters below a pOZ threshold of about 0.001-0.010 atm partial pressure.
The latter threshold level generally lies below the sediment/water
interface.
However, the kinetics of oxidation (and reduction) of Ce appears to
be slow relative to various transport processes. This leads to
disequilibria, i.e. a major uncoupling of the pOZ threshold level and
the Ce anomaly distribution. The REE are definitely non-conservative in seawater and in general
the REE pattern or 143Nd/144Nd isotopic ratio cannot be treated as
ideal water mass tracers. The continuous redistribution of Ce within the
modern ocean, combined with the likelihood of active diagenesis,
precludes the use of Ce anomalies as indicators of oxic versus anoxic
conditions in ancient oceans. On the other hand, the Eu/Sm ratio,
possibly combined with 143Nd/144Nd , would have potential as a tracer
for understanding modern and ancient processes of hydrothermal
circulation.This research was supported by Department of Energy contract
DE-AS02-76EV03566 and Office of Naval Research Contract NOOOl 4-82-C-00l 9
NR 083-004
Vertical flux of fatty acids in the North Atlantic Ocean
The quantitative and qualitative composition of fatty acids in particulate material collected in traps deployed during 98 days at 389, 988, 3755 and 5068 m depths in the equatorial North Atlantic was determined. The fatty acid composition indicates a predominantly marine source (14:0, 16:0, 16:1, 18:0, 18:1, 20:5, 20:4, 22:6, 22:5) with possibly a minor terrigenous component in the bathypelagic traps. The vertical fluxes of fatty acids and lipids decrease rapidly with depth. The rate of net loss of carboxylic acids increases with number of double bonds and decreases with number of carbon atoms. Iso- and anteiso- as well as some monoenoic fatty acids are more persistent, probably due to enhanced microbial synthesis during settling which counteracts degradation
Mechanisms controlling the air-sea CO2 flux in the North Sea
The mechanisms driving the air–sea exchange of carbon dioxide (CO2CO2) in the North Sea are investigated using the three-dimensional coupled physical–biogeochemical model ECOHAM (ECOlogical-model, HAMburg). We validate our simulations using field data for the years 2001–2002 and identify the controls of the air–sea CO2CO2 flux for two locations representative for the North Sea's biogeochemical provinces. In the seasonally stratified northern region, net CO2CO2 uptake is high (View the MathML source2.06molm-2a-1) due to high net community production (NCP) in the surface water. Overflow production releasing semi-labile dissolved organic carbon needs to be considered for a realistic simulation of the low dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentrations observed during summer. This biologically driven carbon drawdown outcompetes the temperature-driven rise in CO2CO2 partial pressure (pCO2pCO2) during the productive season. In contrast, the permanently mixed southern region is a weak net CO2CO2 source (View the MathML source0.78molm-2a-1). NCP is generally low except for the spring bloom because remineralization parallels primary production. Here, the pCO2pCO2 appears to be controlled by temperature
Whole season net community production in the Weddell Sea
Abstract Depletions of total CO 2 , nitrate, phosphate and silicate in the surface layer were calculated for cruise ANT XXII/3 with FS Polarstern in March 2005 for estimating the annual net community production. East-west across the Weddell Sea the variation of all depletions is similar, but this holds to a lesser extent for silicate. Depletions in March 2005 are 2-3 times larger than those in January 1993 for the same transect. Very low N:P and C:P depletion ratios seem to point to dominance of diatoms, in the central Weddell Sea more than in the margin. Estimates of annual net community productions are about 1.8 and 3.5 mol C m ¡2 year ¡1 for the interior Weddell Sea and a near-margin region, respectively. The region does not comply with the classical view of a marginal ice zone with high productivity. Net community production is similar to annual export production, implying that remineralization in the ensuing winter be minor
Ocean acidification and calcium carbonate saturation states in the coastal zone of the West Antarctic Peninsula
The polar oceans are particularly vulnerable to ocean acidification; the lowering of seawater pH and carbonate mineral saturation states due to uptake of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). High spatial variability in surface water pH and saturation states (Ω) for two biologically-important calcium carbonate minerals calcite and aragonite was observed in Ryder Bay, in the coastal sea-ice zone of the West Antarctic Peninsula. Glacial meltwater and melting sea ice stratified the water column and facilitated the development of large phytoplankton blooms and subsequent strong uptake of atmospheric CO2 of up to 55 mmol m-2 day-1 during austral summer. Concurrent high pH (8.48) and calcium carbonate mineral supersaturation (Ωaragonite ~3.1) occurred in the meltwater-influenced surface ocean. Biologically-induced increases in calcium carbonate mineral saturation states counteracted any effects of carbonate ion dilution. Accumulation of CO2 through remineralisation of additional organic matter from productive coastal waters lowered the pH (7.84) and caused deep-water corrosivity (Ωaragonite ~0.9) in regions impacted by Circumpolar Deep Water. Episodic mixing events enabled CO2-rich subsurface water to become entrained into the surface and eroded seasonal stratification to lower surface water pH (8.21) and saturation states (Ωaragonite ~1.8) relative to all surface waters across Ryder Bay. Uptake of atmospheric CO2 of 28 mmol m-2 day-1 in regions of vertical mixing may enhance the susceptibility of the surface layer to future ocean acidification in dynamic coastal environments. Spatially-resolved studies are essential to elucidate the natural variability in carbonate chemistry in order to better understand and predict carbon cycling and the response of marine organisms to future ocean acidification in the Antarctic coastal zone
Fluxes and gas transfer rates of the biogenic trace gas DMS derived from atmospheric gradients
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2004. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 109 (2004): C08S10, doi:10.1029/2003JC001795.Gas transfer rates were determined from vertical profile measurements of atmospheric dimethylsulfide (DMS) gradients over the equatorial Pacific Ocean obtained during the GasEx-2001 cruise. A quadratic relationship between gas transfer velocity and wind speed was derived from the DMS flux measurements; this relationship was in close agreement with a parameterization derived from relaxed eddy accumulation measurements of DMS over the northeastern Pacific Ocean. However, the GasEx-2001 relationship results in gas transfer rates that are a factor 2 higher than gas transfer rates calculated from a parameterization that is based on coincident eddy correlation measurements of CO2 flux. The measurement precision of both the profiling and eddy correlation techniques applied during GasEx-2001 is comparable; the two gas transfer data sets are in agreement within their uncertainty. Differences in the number of samples and the wind speed range over which CO2 and DMS fluxes were measured are likely causes for the observed discrepancy.Funding for this work came
from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) and from
the NOP project 951203: ‘‘Micrometeorology of air/sea fluxes of carbon
dioxide. This work was supported by the Global Carbon Cycle project of
the NOAA Office of Global Programs grant NA17RJ1223, National
Science Foundation grant OCE-9986724, and NSF grant ATM-0120569
Rapid decline of the CO2 buffering capacity in the North Sea and implications for the North Atlantic Ocean
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Global Biogeochemical Cycles 21 (2007): GB4001, doi:10.1029/2006GB002825.New observations from the North Sea, a NW European shelf sea, show that between 2001 and 2005 the CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) in surface waters rose by 22 μatm, thus faster than atmospheric pCO2, which in the same period rose approximately 11 μatm. The surprisingly rapid decline in air-sea partial pressure difference (ΔpCO2) is primarily a response to an elevated water column inventory of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), which, in turn, reflects mostly anthropogenic CO2 input rather than natural interannual variability. The resulting decline in the buffering capacity of the inorganic carbonate system (increasing Revelle factor) sets up a theoretically predicted feedback loop whereby the invasion of anthropogenic CO2 reduces the ocean's ability to uptake additional CO2. Model simulations for the North Atlantic Ocean and thermodynamic principles reveal that this feedback should be stronger, at present, in colder midlatitude and subpolar waters because of the lower present-day buffer capacity and elevated DIC levels driven either by northward advected surface water and/or excess local air-sea CO2 uptake. This buffer capacity feedback mechanism helps to explain at least part of the observed trend of decreasing air-sea ΔpCO2 over time as reported in several other recent North Atlantic studies.S. Doney
and I. Lima were supported by NSF/ONR NOPP (N000140210370) and
NASA (NNG05GG30G)
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