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  • 2010-2014  (16)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-08-28
    Description: Iron limits phytoplankton growth and hence the biological carbon pump in the Southern Ocean1. Models assessing the impacts of iron on the global carbon cycle generally rely on dust input and sediment resuspension as the predominant sources2, 3. Although it was previously thought that most iron from deep-ocean hydrothermal activity was inaccessible to phytoplankton because of the formation of particulates4, it has been suggested that iron from hydrothermal activity5, 6, 7 may be an important source of oceanic dissolved iron8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13. Here we use a global ocean model to assess the impacts of an annual dissolved iron flux of approximately 9×108 mol, as estimated from regional observations of hydrothermal activity11, 12, on the dissolved iron inventory of the world’s oceans. We find the response to the input of hydrothermal dissolved iron is greatest in the Southern Hemisphere oceans. In particular, observations of the distribution of dissolved iron in the Southern Ocean3 (Chever et al., manuscript in preparation; Bowie et al., manuscript in preparation) can be replicated in our simulations only when our estimated iron flux from hydrothermal sources is included. As the hydrothermal flux of iron is relatively constant over millennial timescales14, we propose that hydrothermal activity can buffer the oceanic dissolved iron inventory against shorter-term fluctuations in dust deposition.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-09-26
    Description: Radiogenic isotopes of hafnium (Hf) and neodymium (Nd) are powerful tracers for water mass transport and trace metal cycling in the present and past oceans. However, due to the scarcity of available data the processes governing their distribution are not well understood. Here we present the first combined dissolved Hf and Nd isotope and concentration data from surface waters of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. The samples were collected along the Zero Meridian, in the Weddell Sea and in the Drake Passage during RV Polarstern expeditions ANTXXIV/3 and ANTXXIII/3 in the frame of the International Polar Year (IPY) and the GEOTRACES program. The general distribution of Hf and Nd concentrations in the region is similar. However, at the northernmost station located 200 km southwest of Cape Town a pronounced increase of the Nd concentration is observed, whereas the Hf concentration is minimal, suggesting much less Hf than Nd is released by the weathering of the South African Archean cratonic rocks. From the southern part of the Subtropical Front (STF) to the Polar Front (PF) Hf and Nd show the lowest concentrations (〈0.12 pmol/kg and 10 pmol/kg, respectively), most probably due to the low terrigenous flux in this area and efficient scavenging of Hf and Nd by biogenic opal. In the vicinity of landmasses the dissolved Hf and Nd isotope compositions are clearly labeled by terrigenous inputs. Near South Africa Nd isotope values as low as εNd = −18.9 indicate unradiogenic inputs supplied via the Agulhas Current. Further south the isotopic data show significant increases to εHf = 6.1 and εNd = −4.0 documenting exchange of seawater Nd and Hf with the Antarctic Peninsula. In the open Southern Ocean the Nd isotope compositions are relatively homogeneous (εNd ∼ −8 to −8.5) towards the STF, within the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, in the Weddell Gyre, and the Drake Passage. The Hf isotope compositions in the entire study area only show a small range between εHf = + 6.1 and +2.8 support Hf to be more readily released from young mafic rocks compared to old continental ones. The Nd isotope composition ranges from εNd = −18.9 to −4.0 showing Nd isotopes to be a sensitive tracer for the provenance of weathering inputs into surface waters of the Southern Ocean.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-03-13
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 11 (2010): Q03016, doi:10.1029/2009GC002869.
    Description: Realistic models of past climate and ocean chemistry depend on reconstructions of the Earth's surface environments in the geologic past. Among the critical parameters is the geologic makeup of continental drainage. Here we show, for the present, that the isotope composition of dissolved strontium in rivers increases linearly with the age of bedrock in drainage basins, with the notable exception of the drainage area of Arabia, India, and Southeast Asia that is affected by unusually radiogenic dissolved Sr from the Himalaya. We also demonstrate that the neodymium isotope compositions of suspended matter in rivers as well as clastic sediments deposited along the ocean margins decrease linearly with the bedrock ages of river drainage basins and large-scale continental drainage regions, as determined from digital geologic maps. These correlations are used to calculate the present-day input of dissolved Sr (4.7 × 1010 mol yr−1, 87Sr/86Sr of ∼0.7111) and particulate Nd isotopes (ɛNd of approximately −7.3 ± 2.2) to the oceans. The fact that the regionally averaged ɛNd of the global detrital input to the global coastal ocean is identical to globally averaged seawater (ɛNd of −7.2 ± 0.5) lends credence to the importance of “boundary exchange” for the Nd isotope composition of water masses. Regional biases in source areas of detrital matter and runoff are reflected by the observation that the average age of global bedrock, weighted according to the riverine suspended sediment flux, is significantly younger (∼336 Myr) than the age of global bedrock weighted according to water discharge (394 Myr), which is younger than the average bedrock age of the nonglaciated, exorheic portions of the continents (453 Myr). The observation that the bedrock age weighted according to Sr flux is younger (339 Myr) than that weighted according to water flux reflects the disproportionate contribution from young sedimentary and volcanic rocks to the dissolved Sr load. Neither the isotope composition of the dissolved nor the particulate continental inputs to the ocean provide unbiased perspectives of the lithologic makeup of the Earth's surface. Temporal changes in bedrock geology as well as the shifting focal points of physical erosion and water discharge will undoubtedly have exerted strong controls on temporal and spatial changes in the isotope chemistry of past global runoff and thus seawater.
    Description: NSF grants EAR‐ 0125873, EAR‐0519387, and OCE‐0851015 to B.P.‐E. and a CNRS‐funded “poste rouge” position for B.P.‐E. at the Observatoire Midi‐Pyrénées in Toulouse supported this work.
    Keywords: Seawater ; River ; Strontium ; Neodymium ; Isotope ; Continental runoff
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: text/plain
    Format: application/vnd.ms-excel
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  • 6
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Stichel, Torben; Frank, Martin; Rickli, Jörg Dominik; Hathorne, Ed C; Haley, Brian A; Jeandel, Catherine; Pradoux, Catherine (2012): Sources and input mechanisms of hafnium and neodymium in surface waters of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 94, 22-37, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2012.07.005
    Publication Date: 2023-02-24
    Description: Radiogenic isotopes of hafnium (Hf) and neodymium (Nd) are powerful tracers for water mass transport and trace metal cycling in the present and past oceans. However, due to the scarcity of available data the processes governing their distribution are not well understood. Here we present the first combined dissolved Hf and Nd isotope and concentration data from surface waters of the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. The samples were collected along the Zero Meridian, in the Weddell Sea and in the Drake Passage during RV Polarstern expeditions ANT-XXIV/3 and ANT-XXIII/3 in the frame of the International Polar Year (IPY) and the GEOTRACES program. The general distribution of Hf and Nd concentrations in the region is similar. However, at the northernmost station located 200 km southwest of Cape Town a pronounced increase of the Nd concentration is observed, whereas the Hf concentration is minimal, suggesting much less Hf than Nd is released by the weathering of the South African Archean cratonic rocks. From the southern part of the Subtropical Front (STF) to the Polar Front (PF) Hf and Nd show the lowest concentrations (〈0.12 pmol/kg and 10 pmol/kg, respectively), most probably due to the low terrigenous flux in this area and efficient scavenging of Hf and Nd by biogenic opal. In the vicinity of landmasses the dissolved Hf and Nd isotope compositions are clearly labelled by terrigenous inputs. Near South Africa Nd isotope values as low as epsilon-Nd = -18.9 indicate unradiogenic inputs supplied via the Agulhas Current. Further south the isotopic data show significant increases to epsilon-Hf = 6.1 and epsilon-Nd = -4.0 documenting exchange of seawater Nd and Hf with the Antarctic Peninsula. In the open Southern Ocean the Nd isotope compositions are relatively homogeneous (epsilon-Nd ~ -8 to -8.5) towards the STF, within the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, in the Weddell Gyre, and the Drake Pasage. The Hf isotope compositions in the entire study area only show a small range between epsilon-Hf = +6.1 and +2.8 support Hf to be more readily released from young mafic rocks compared to old continental ones. The Nd isotope composition ranges from epsilon-Nd = -18.9 to -4.0 showing Nd isotopes to be a sensitive tracer for the provenance of weathering inputs into surface waters of the Southern Ocean.
    Keywords: GEOTRACES; Global marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements and their isotopes
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-02-24
    Keywords: ANT-XXIV/3; CT; CTD/Rosette; CTD/Rosette, ultra clean; CTD-RO; CTD-UC; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Device type; Drake Passage; ECHO; Echosounder; Event label; GEOTRACES; Global marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements and their isotopes; Hafnium, dissolved; IFISH; Iron fish; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; MULT; Multiple investigations; Neodymium, dissolved; Polarstern; PS71; PS71/096-1; PS71/097-1; PS71/098-1; PS71/101-3; PS71/104-3; PS71/105-1; PS71/113-4; PS71/116-1; PS71/133-1; PS71/142-1; PS71/151-1; PS71/153-1; PS71/154-1; PS71/156-1; PS71/161-2; PS71/186-3; PS71/191-2; PS71/210-1; PS71/222-1; PS71/222-4; PS71/223-1; PS71/230-4; PS71/241-7; PS71/244-8; PS71/250-1; PS71/3-track; Salinity; Sample code/label; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; see reference(s); South Atlantic Ocean; Temperature, water; Underway cruise track measurements; Weddell Sea; ε-Hafnium; ε-Hafnium, standard deviation; ε-Neodymium; ε-Neodymium, standard deviation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 298 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-02-24
    Keywords: ANT-XXIII/3; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Date/Time of event; DEPTH, water; Elevation of event; Event label; GEOTRACES; Global marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements and their isotopes; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Neodymium, dissolved; Polarstern; PS69; PS69/132-1; PS69/137-1; PS69/161-1; PS69/183-1; PS69/193-3; Salinity; Sample code/label; see reference(s); Temperature, water; ε-Neodymium; ε-Neodymium, standard deviation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 28 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-02-24
    Keywords: ANT-XXIV/3; Area/locality; Calculated; Cerium, dissolved; Cerium anomaly; CT; CTD/Rosette; CTD/Rosette, ultra clean; CTD-RO; CTD-UC; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Device type; Drake Passage; Dysprosium, dissolved; Erbium, dissolved; Europium, dissolved; Event label; Gadolinium, dissolved; GEOTRACES; Global marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements and their isotopes; Holmium, dissolved; ICP-MS, Elemental Scientific, seaFAST; ID-ICP-MS, Isotope dilution - inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry; IFISH; Iron fish; Lanthanum, dissolved; Lanthanum/Ytterbium ratio; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Lutetium, dissolved; MULT; Multiple investigations; Neodymium, dissolved; Polarstern; Praseodymium, dissolved; PS71; PS71/096-1; PS71/098-1; PS71/101-3; PS71/104-3; PS71/105-1; PS71/113-4; PS71/116-1; PS71/133-1; PS71/142-1; PS71/151-1; PS71/153-1; PS71/154-1; PS71/156-1; PS71/161-2; PS71/186-3; PS71/191-2; PS71/210-1; PS71/222-4; PS71/230-4; PS71/241-7; PS71/244-8; PS71/3-track; Samarium, dissolved; Sample code/label; Scotia Sea, southwest Atlantic; South Atlantic Ocean; Terbium, dissolved; Thulium, dissolved; Underway cruise track measurements; Weddell Sea; Ytterbium, dissolved
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 617 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Keywords: Alkalinity, total; Biogeochemical Processes in the Oceans and Fluxes; Bottle, Niskin; Date/Time of event; Density, sigma-theta (0); DEPTH, water; Event label; JGOFS; Joint Global Ocean Flux Study; KERFIX; KERFIX_19900127; KERFIX_19900221; KERFIX_19900330; KERFIX_19900426; KERFIX_19900630; KERFIX_19900730; KERFIX_19901218; Kerguelen; NIS; ORFOIS; Origin and Fate of Biogenic Particle Fluxes in the Ocean; Oxygen; Pressure, water; PROOF; Salinity; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS; Temperature, water; Temperature, water, potential; Time-series station
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 659 data points
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