4.7 Article

Massive atmospheric nitrate accumulation in a continental interior desert, northwestern China

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 623-626

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G32953.1

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40543013, 40873003]
  2. Ministry of Land and Resources of China [K0926]

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Large-scale nitrate deposits are rare on Earth's surface due to the high solubility of nitrate minerals. Exceptions are found in extremely old (to 14 m.y.) and hyperarid deserts such as the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, or the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica. The nitrate in both of these regions has been determined to originate from atmospheric oxidation of NOx. Here we report a new type of massive atmospheric nitrate deposit, with resources equivalent to the Atacama deposits, in the Turpan-Hami area, northwestern China. This deposit is characterized by (1) a location in the center of a large continent; (2) young age (Pleistocene); (3) general enrichment near the surface rather than at depth; and (4) high spatial variability in the nitrogen and triple oxygen isotope composition within this arid region, the delta N-15 ranging from 0.7 parts per thousand to 27.6 parts per thousand, delta O-18 from 30.2 parts per thousand to 46.7 parts per thousand, and Delta O-17 from 5.9 parts per thousand to 20.7 parts per thousand. The Turpan-Hami nitrate deposit nitrogen and triple oxygen isotope composition is closely between those of the Mojave Desert (southwestern United States) and the Atacama Desert, suggesting that (1) Earth's low-middle latitudes (i.e., non-polar sites) have been receiving atmospheric nitrate deposition of similar nitrogen and triple oxygen isotope composition; and (2) local or regional isotope differences in nitrate deposits can be attributed to postdepositional processes, namely the difference in aridity and associated microbial activities.

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