4.7 Article

Barium-isotopic fractionation in seawater mediated by barite cycling and oceanic circulation

期刊

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
卷 430, 期 -, 页码 511-522

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2015.07.027

关键词

barium; isotopic fractionation; barite; seawater; biogeochemistry

资金

  1. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [3782]
  2. Postdoctoral Scholar Program at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
  3. Doherty Foundation
  4. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Endowed Fund for Innovative Research

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The marine biogeochemical cycle of Ba is thought to be controlled by particulate BaSO4 (barite) precipitation associated with the microbial oxidation of organic carbon and its subsequent dissolution in the BaSO4-undersaturated water column. Despite many of these processes being largely unique to Ba cycling, concentrations of Ba and Si in seawater exhibit a strong linear correlation. The reasons for this correlation are ambiguous, as are the depth ranges corresponding to the most active BaSO4 cycling and the intermediate sources of Ba to particulate BaSO4. Stable isotopic analyses of dissolved Ba in seawater should help address these issues, as Ba-isotopic compositions are predicted to be sensitive to the physical and biogeochemical process that cycle Ba. We report a new methodology for the determination of dissolved Ba-isotopic compositions in seawater and results from a 4500 m depth profile in the South Atlantic at 39.99 degrees S, 0.92 degrees E that exhibit oceanographically-consistent variation with depth. These data reveal that water masses obtain their [Ba] and Ba-isotopic signatures when at or near the surface, which relates to the cycling of marine BaSO4. The shallow origin of these signatures requires that the substantial Ba-isotopic variations in the bathypelagic zone were inherited from when those deep waters were last ventilated. Indeed, the water column below 600 m is well explained by conservative mixing of water masses with distinct [Ba] and Ba-isotopic compositions. This leads us to conclude that large scale oceanic circulation is important for sustaining the similar oceanographic distributions of Ba and Si in the South Atlantic, and possibly elsewhere. These data demonstrate that the processes of organic carbon oxidation, BaSO4 cycling, and Ba-isotopic fractionation in seawater are closely coupled, such that Ba-isotopic analyses harbor great potential as a tracer of the carbon cycle in the modern and paleo-oceans. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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