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Mechanisms controlling dissolved iron distribution in the North Pacific : a model study
Authors
Archer
Aumont
+73 more
Barbeau
Barth
Berman-Frank
Boyle
Clegg
Collins
Conkright
Craig
Cullen
D. Tsumune
Danabasoglu
de Baar
Doney
Doney
Doney
Duce
Elrod
F. O. Bryan
Falkowski
Falkowski
Fung
Gregg
H. Mitsudera
Huffman
Hunter
J. K. Moore
J. Nishioka
Johnson
K. Lindsay
K. Misumi
K. Uchimoto
Kalnay
Key
Kustka
Large
Lefevre
Locarnini
Luo
Martin
Martin
Martin
Measures
Michaels
Mills
Moore
Moore
Moore
Morel
Nakamura
Nakamura
Nishioka
Nishioka
Ohshima
Parekh
Parekh
Parekh
Rue
S. C. Doney
Shcherbina
Smith
Steele
T. Nakamura
Tagliabue
Takata
Thompson
Uchimoto
Vink
Vraspir
Xie
Y. Yoshida
Yasuda
Yeager
Zhang
Publication date
22 July 2011
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2011. 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 116 (2011): G03005, doi:10.1029/2010JG001541.Mechanisms controlling the dissolved iron distribution in the North Pacific are investigated using the Biogeochemical Elemental Cycling (BEC) model with a resolution of approximately 1° in latitude and longitude and 60 vertical levels. The model is able to reproduce the general distribution of iron as revealed in available field data: surface concentrations are generally below 0.2 nM; concentrations increase with depth; and values in the lower pycnocline are especially high in the northwestern Pacific and off the coast of California. Sensitivity experiments changing scavenging regimes and external iron sources indicate that lateral transport of sedimentary iron from continental margins into the open ocean causes the high concentrations in these regions. This offshore penetration only appears under a scavenging regime where iron has a relatively long residence time at high concentrations, namely, the order of years. Sedimentary iron is intensively supplied around continental margins, resulting in locally high concentrations; the residence time with respect to scavenging determines the horizontal scale of elevated iron concentrations. Budget analysis for iron reveals the processes by which sedimentary iron is transported to the open ocean. Horizontal mixing transports sedimentary iron from the boundary into alongshore currents, which then carry high iron concentrations into the open ocean in regions where the alongshore currents separate from the coast, most prominently in the northwestern Pacific and off of California.This work was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (EF‐0424599)
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Last time updated on 08/06/2012
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eScholarship - University of California
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Last time updated on 01/04/2019