4.7 Article

Temporal and spatial variability of cobalt in the Atlantic Ocean

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 66, Issue 11, Pages 1943-1953

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0016-7037(02)00829-3

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The spatial and temporal variability of cobalt in the Atlantic Ocean was investigated by means of adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry. A vertical profile of total dissolved cobalt at the Bermuda Atlantic Time Series station ranged from 17 to 73 pM and displayed surface depletion indicative of biological utilization. This profile when compared with a cobalt profile from the northeast Pacific shows no increase in deep-water concentrations with thermohaline circulation through the deep ocean basins. Moreover, the middepth maximum observed in northeast Pacific profiles is not present in the Sargasso Sea, perhaps because of the lack of cobalt scavenging by particulate manganese oxides in surface waters and to the absence of a suboxic oxygen minimum zone, which, if present, could dissolve the manganese oxides. Total dissolved cobalt measurements were also made on a surface transect from the Sargasso Sea to coastal Massachusetts, USA, and on time-series samples from the Moored In Situ Trace Element Serial Sampler. Dissolved cobalt on this transect correlated strongly with salinity (r(2) = 0.93) and ranged from 19 to 133 pM, indicating mixing of cobalt from shelf waters into the Sargasso Sea. Time-series samples near Bermuda did not show an obvious response to the summer maximum in aeolian dust deposition, with an annual average of 20 10 pM at 40- to 47-m depths. By use of this annual value and particulate cobalt data from the literature, 100-m surface-water residence times were calculated to be as low as 0.32 yr for cobalt. Several sharp decreases in cobalt were observed in the time series that occurred simultaneously with a shallowing of the thermocline depth. These decreases could be caused by nutrient drawdown associated with higher productivity mesoscale eddy events. A west-east surface transect across the South Atlantic showed high cobalt concentrations at the boundaries of the transect and low concentrations in the center despite the high precipitation rates in the intertropical convergence zone. Phosphate measurements showed the similar trends as the total cobalt transect. A regression of cobalt vs. phosphate reveals a slope that is an order of magnitude higher than that of the northeast Pacific and that is similar to the slopes observed for zinc vs. phosphate in the Pacific. Copyright (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd.

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