Physics
Scientific paper
Dec 2005
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2005agufmpp11b1472f&link_type=abstract
American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2005, abstract #PP11B-1472
Physics
0488 Sulfur Cycling, 4806 Carbon Cycling (0428), 4845 Nutrients And Nutrient Cycling (0470, 1050), 4924 Geochemical Tracers, 4948 Paleocene/Eocene Thermal Maximum
Scientific paper
We are comparing nutrient burial, using phosphorus (P, micromol P cm-2 kyr-1) mass accumulation rates (MARs), to export productivity, using barite (BaSO4, micromol BaSO4 cm-2 kyr-1) MARs, across the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) in sediments from the eastern equatorial Pacific (ODP Leg 199 Sites 1221 and 1215), the western equatorial Pacific (ODP Leg 198, Site 1210), and the western equatorial Atlantic (ODP Leg 171B, Site 1051). Reactive phosphorus (the sum of oxide associated, authigenic, and organic P; sequentially extracted from bulk sediment) is used to distinguish the signal of bio-reactive P from detrital P. Barite, correlated with export productivity in the modern ocean, is separated from bulk sediment. The ratio of nutrient burial (phosphorus) to export productivity (barite) may provide an indication of relative organic C burial. Organic C must be efficiently sequestered in the sediments for the proposed PETM global warmth termination by productivity feedback to be effective. We are comparing relative organic C burial rates for sites in both the equatorial Pacific and the equatorial Atlantic. Initial results from ODP Site 1221 in the Pacific indicate that the nutrient burial to export productivity ratio is high before and immediately after the PETM, possibly indicating enhanced relative organic C burial. To better understand the possible relationship of the seawater sulfur isotopic minimum at the time of the PETM to productivity changes, we are measuring S isotopes in marine barite at high resolution. Seawater S isotopic values in marine barite from the PETM section for ODP Leg 199 Site 1221 yield values of ~17 per mil, reflecting the global marine sulfur isotopic value. These preliminary values indicate that minimum sulfur isotopic values occurred before the C isotopic excursion associated with the PETM, and are probably unrelated to short-term productivity and/or relative organic C burial changes occurring during the PETM.
Faul K.
Gray Evan
Paytan Adina
Sayo J.
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