4.8 Article

K isotopes as a tracer for continental weathering and geological K cycling

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1811282116

Keywords

continental weathering; K isotopes; rivers; fractionation; K cycling

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China Project [2017YFC0602801]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [41622301, 41873004, 41730101]
  3. NASA Astrobiology Institute Grant [NNA13AA94A]
  4. National Science Foundation [1741048-EAR]
  5. NASA [NNA13AA94A, 475509] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The causal effects among uplift, climate, and continental weathering cannot be fully addressed using presently available geochemical proxies. However, stable potassium (K) isotopes can potentially overcome the limitations of existing isotopic proxies. Here we report on a systematic investigation of K isotopes in dissolved load and sediments from major rivers and their tributaries in China, which have drainage basins with varied climate, lithology, and topography. Our results show that during silicate weathering, heavy K isotopes are preferentially partitioned into aqueous solutions. Moreover, delta K-41 values of riverine dissolved load vary remarkably and correlate negatively with the chemical weathering intensity of the drainage basin. This correlation allows an estimate of the average K isotope composition of global riverine runoff (delta K-41 = -0.22 parts per thousand), as well as modeling of the global K cycle based on mass balance calculations. Modeling incorporating K isotope mass balance better constrains estimated K fluxes for modern global K cycling, and the results show that the delta K-41 value of seawater is sensitive to continental weathering intensity changes. Thus, it is possible to use the delta K-41 record of paleo-seawater to infer continental weathering intensity through Earth's history.

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