4.7 Article

The zinc isotope composition of late Holocene open-ocean marine sediments

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 605, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2022.120971

Keywords

Seawater residence time; Non-traditional isotopes; Marine geochemistry; Sedimentary geochemistry; International Ocean Discovery Programme

Funding

  1. Royal Society [RGS\R2\180369]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The controls on Zn burial fluxes into marine sediments are not well understood, but new Zn-isotope data from late-Holocene age sediments show that Zn associated with organic matter burial and oxyhydroxide burial accounts for a large portion of the non-detrital Zn content. However, additional burial flux of Zn is needed to balance the sedimentary budget.
The controls on Zn burial fluxes into marine sediments are not well constrained by existing datasets. To address this problem, new Zn-isotope data have been generated from a globally distributed array of late-Holocene age sediments that accumulated in open ocean settings underneath a diverse range of depositional conditions (Namibian margin, West African margin, Arabian margin, Californian margin, Peruvian margin, Southern Ocean, Indian Ocean, North and South Atlantic Oceans, South China Sea). The mean non-detrital isotopic composition of Zn in the whole dataset (??66/64Zn = 0.37 ?? 0.25 %o, 2. S.D., n = 33) is only slightly lower than the modern deepocean composition (0.45 ?? 0.14 %o). Locations with total organic carbon >1 wt% have greater non-detrital enrichments of Zn and higher Zn isotope compositions than organic-poor sites, although the uncertainties overlap. Zinc associated with organic matter burial (using Zn/C ratios) and/or oxyhydroxide burial (using Zn/Fe and Zn/Mn ratios) account for a combined total of -16???73% of the total non-detrital Zn content of the investigated sediments, therefore requiring an additional burial flux of Zn to balance the sedimentary budget. This flux is probably related to ZnS formation although Zn incorporation into authigenic clays is also possible. The new data indicate that open-ocean marine sediments track the deep-ocean Zn isotope composition to within 0.1???0.2 %o, except in areas where isotopically distinct Zn fractions dominate the non-detrital Zn budget. The fraction of Zn removed into different sedimentary components is used to calculate Zn residence times ranging from -2.7 kyr to 13.5 kyr that are within the range of previous estimates based on input fluxes to the ocean.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available