4.8 Article

Rapid Soil Production and Weathering in the Southern Alps, New Zealand

期刊

SCIENCE
卷 343, 期 6171, 页码 637-640

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1244908

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资金

  1. NSF East Asia and Pacific Summer Institutes program [OISE-1015454]
  2. Royal Society of New Zealand
  3. NASA Earth and Space Science fellowship program
  4. Geological Society of America
  5. University of Washington Department of Earth and Space Sciences

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Evaluating conflicting theories about the influence of mountains on carbon dioxide cycling and climate requires understanding weathering fluxes from tectonically uplifting landscapes. The lack of soil production and weathering rate measurements in Earth's most rapidly uplifting mountains has made it difficult to determine whether weathering rates increase or decline in response to rapid erosion. Beryllium-10 concentrations in soils from the western Southern Alps, New Zealand, demonstrate that soil is produced from bedrock more rapidly than previously recognized, at rates up to 2.5 millimeters per year. Weathering intensity data further indicate that soil chemical denudation rates increase proportionally with erosion rates. These high weathering rates support the view that mountains play a key role in global-scale chemical weathering and thus have potentially important implications for the global carbon cycle.

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