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Anthropogenic Asian aerosols provide Fe to the North Pacific Ocean

Paulina Pinedo‐González, Nicholas J. Hawco, Randelle M. Bundy, E. Virginia Armbrust, Michael J. Follows, B. B. Cael, Angelicque White, Sara Ferrón, David M. Karl, Seth G. John

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences102 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Mineral dust has long been considered an important source of Fe to the surface ocean, especially in remote areas away from continental margins. However, anthropogenic Fe derived from fossil-fuel burning may also contribute Fe to surface waters. Here we show in situ evidence of anthropogenic Fe in seawater, based on the concentrations and isotopic composition of Fe measured during a springtime cruise which transected the North Pacific Ocean. Our results suggest that anthropogenic Fe could play a globally important role in marine productivity and carbon cycling.

Topics & Concepts

OceanographyEnvironmental scienceSeawaterPacific oceanProductivityCarbon cycleCarbon fibersGeologyEcosystemEcologyBiologyComposite numberComposite materialMaterials scienceEconomicsMacroeconomicsMarine and coastal ecosystemsMercury impact and mitigation studiesMarine Biology and Ecology Research
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