Litcius/Paper detail

Dominance of benthic fluxes in the oceanic beryllium budget and implications for paleo-denudation records

Kai Deng, Jörg Rickli, Tim Jesper Suhrhoff, Jianghui Du, Florian Scholz, Silke Severmann, Shouye Yang, James McManus, Derek Vance

2023Science Advances24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The ratio of atmosphere-derived 10 Be to continent-derived 9 Be in marine sediments has been used to probe the long-term relationship between continental denudation and climate. However, its application is complicated by uncertainty in 9 Be transfer through the land-ocean interface. The riverine dissolved load alone is insufficient to close the marine 9 Be budget, largely due to substantial removal of riverine 9 Be to continental margin sediments. We focus on the ultimate fate of this latter Be. We present sediment pore-water Be profiles from diverse continental margin environments to quantify the diagenetic Be release to the ocean. Our results suggest that pore-water Be cycling is mainly controlled by particulate supply and Mn-Fe cycling, leading to higher benthic fluxes on shelves. Benthic fluxes may help close the 9 Be budget and are at least comparable to, or higher (~2-fold) than, the riverine dissolved input. These observations demand a revised model framework, which considers the potentially dominant benthic source, to robustly interpret marine Be isotopic records.

Topics & Concepts

Benthic zoneContinental marginDenudationOceanographyGeologyDominance (genetics)Antarctic Bottom WaterSedimentary budgetSedimentSediment–water interfaceDiagenesisEnvironmental scienceContinental shelfBioturbationWater massSediment transportPaleontologyChemistryGeneTectonicsBiochemistryGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchGeochemistry and Elemental AnalysisGeological and Geochemical Analysis