Sources and sinks of unradiogenic osmium runoff from Papua New Guinea

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The Fly and Sepik are two of the largest rivers draining the island of New Guinea and among the world's large rivers in discharge and sediment yield. Sediment from the upper Fly River and its delta have low 187Os/188Os of 0.511-0.560, and sediments from the upper and lower Sepik River have even lower ratios of 0.294-0.418. Filtered waters (<0.45 μm) from the Fly and Sepik rivers have 187Os/188Os of 0.616 and 0.335, respectively. Osmium isotopic compositions of surficial sediments from the Gulf of Papua (187Os/188Os of 0.394-0.961) further demonstrate that the sediment currently supplied to the oceans from New Guinea is unradiogenic. The particulate and dissolved loads supplied by these rivers are significantly less radiogenic than that contributed to the oceans by rivers draining regions of old continental crust (187Os/188Os>1.2). Burial of Os of both seawater and riverine derivation occurs in conjunction with organic carbon burial in the Gulf of Papua. There is a negative correlation between the Os isotopic composition of the bulk sediment and the fraction of organic matter of terrestrial origin based on C isotopes. The systematic relationship between C and Os isotopic compositions in these samples indicates that organic matter is the major host of Os in tropical estuarine sediments. The Os/Corg of Gulf of Papua surface sediments is intermediate between that of other modern and ancient sediments. Approximately 1011 mol/yr of Corg and 20-57 mol/yr of Os are buried in the inner shelf (<50 m depth) of the Gulf of Papua over an area of only 21000 km2, corresponding to 1-3% of the global marine Os burial flux in 0.006% of the total sea surface area. These results suggest that a large proportion of the global burial flux of Os may take place in conjunction with the deposition of low-Corg sediments. Lowering of the Os isotopic composition of ambient seawater due to a large flux of unradiogenic riverine Os may be indicated by the Os isotopic composition of water from the Coral Sea (187Os/188Os=0.844) and marine sediments within the Gulf of Papua. The island of New Guinea is estimated to provide 4-5% of the global riverine Os flux. Given the very large particulate and dissolved flux to the oceans from rivers in the wet tropics, the effect of the weathering of young arc-related crust in the SW Pacific is an important source of unradiogenic Os to modern seawater.

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