Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean

Despite the potential of stable chromium (Cr) isotope compositions as a proxy for past changes in oceanic redox condi- tions, a detailed understanding of the processes that govern their spatial distribution in the modern ocean is still lacking. Here, we report seawater Cr isotope compositions and co...

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Main Authors: Rickli, Jörg, Janssen, David J., Hassler, Christel, Ellwood, Michael, Jaccard, Samuel L.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Science 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.132629
https://boris.unibe.ch/132629/
id ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.132629
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spelling ftdatacite:10.7892/boris.132629 2023-05-15T13:42:08+02:00 Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean Rickli, Jörg Janssen, David J. Hassler, Christel Ellwood, Michael Jaccard, Samuel L. 2019 application/pdf https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.132629 https://boris.unibe.ch/132629/ en eng Elsevier Science info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess 550 Earth sciences & geology Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.132629 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Despite the potential of stable chromium (Cr) isotope compositions as a proxy for past changes in oceanic redox condi- tions, a detailed understanding of the processes that govern their spatial distribution in the modern ocean is still lacking. Here, we report seawater Cr isotope compositions and concentrations from the uppermost 1000 m of the water column in the South- ern Ocean. The survey includes a cross-frontal transect from Tasmania to Antarctica, sites near the Antarctic ice-edge and in the vicinity of the Balleny Islands, as well as sites in the Drake Passage. Although a coastal influence is clearly visible in the silicon-nitrate relationship at the stations neighbouring the Balleny Islands, close to the Mertz Glacier and adjacent to the western Antarctic Peninsula, seawater d53Cr and Cr concentrations remain largely unaffected. As for the coastal sites, Cr depletion and isotopic shifts are also virtually absent in Antarctic and Subantarctic surface waters of the open ocean. Biological uptake of Cr and/or scavenging of Cr onto sinking particles are apparently not strong enough to induce water column variability. Contrasting with the small variations in d53Cr and Cr concentrations at each site, there are, however, systematic meridional changes. The seawater samples show an increase in Cr concentrations and a parallel decrease in d53Cr southwards from the Subantarctic across the Polar Frontal into the Antarctic Zone. Chromium concentrations and d53Cr are, however, uniform at all stations south of the Polar Front. The spa- tial pattern is consistent with the mixing of Southern Ocean sourced Cr with an isotopically heavier Cr pool from northward of the studied area, as evidenced by strong correlations of Cr and d53Cr with salinity at the level of Subantarctic Mode Water and at shallower levels. The heavy d53Cr signature of the northerly Cr pool could either result from Cr cycling in the subtrop- ical gyre or originate in oxygen minimum zones. On a regional scale, d53Cr is strongly correlated with phosphate concentra- tions, which may hint at a time-integrated effect of major nutrient drawdown on d53Cr. Southern Ocean data support previous work demonstrating a strong relationship between seawater Cr concentrations and d53Cr. At the studied sites, this relationship reflects mixing of isotopically distinct Cr pools. The end-members observed in the studied area are, however, consistent with the previously described closed-system Rayleigh type fractionation of Cr in seawa- ter characterized by a single fractionation factor. The underlying processes, which produce the observed fractionation, are not fully constrained to date. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica Balleny Islands Drake Passage Mertz Glacier Southern Ocean DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Drake Passage Balleny Islands Mertz Glacier ENVELOPE(144.500,144.500,-67.667,-67.667)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic 550 Earth sciences & geology
spellingShingle 550 Earth sciences & geology
Rickli, Jörg
Janssen, David J.
Hassler, Christel
Ellwood, Michael
Jaccard, Samuel L.
Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean
topic_facet 550 Earth sciences & geology
description Despite the potential of stable chromium (Cr) isotope compositions as a proxy for past changes in oceanic redox condi- tions, a detailed understanding of the processes that govern their spatial distribution in the modern ocean is still lacking. Here, we report seawater Cr isotope compositions and concentrations from the uppermost 1000 m of the water column in the South- ern Ocean. The survey includes a cross-frontal transect from Tasmania to Antarctica, sites near the Antarctic ice-edge and in the vicinity of the Balleny Islands, as well as sites in the Drake Passage. Although a coastal influence is clearly visible in the silicon-nitrate relationship at the stations neighbouring the Balleny Islands, close to the Mertz Glacier and adjacent to the western Antarctic Peninsula, seawater d53Cr and Cr concentrations remain largely unaffected. As for the coastal sites, Cr depletion and isotopic shifts are also virtually absent in Antarctic and Subantarctic surface waters of the open ocean. Biological uptake of Cr and/or scavenging of Cr onto sinking particles are apparently not strong enough to induce water column variability. Contrasting with the small variations in d53Cr and Cr concentrations at each site, there are, however, systematic meridional changes. The seawater samples show an increase in Cr concentrations and a parallel decrease in d53Cr southwards from the Subantarctic across the Polar Frontal into the Antarctic Zone. Chromium concentrations and d53Cr are, however, uniform at all stations south of the Polar Front. The spa- tial pattern is consistent with the mixing of Southern Ocean sourced Cr with an isotopically heavier Cr pool from northward of the studied area, as evidenced by strong correlations of Cr and d53Cr with salinity at the level of Subantarctic Mode Water and at shallower levels. The heavy d53Cr signature of the northerly Cr pool could either result from Cr cycling in the subtrop- ical gyre or originate in oxygen minimum zones. On a regional scale, d53Cr is strongly correlated with phosphate concentra- tions, which may hint at a time-integrated effect of major nutrient drawdown on d53Cr. Southern Ocean data support previous work demonstrating a strong relationship between seawater Cr concentrations and d53Cr. At the studied sites, this relationship reflects mixing of isotopically distinct Cr pools. The end-members observed in the studied area are, however, consistent with the previously described closed-system Rayleigh type fractionation of Cr in seawa- ter characterized by a single fractionation factor. The underlying processes, which produce the observed fractionation, are not fully constrained to date.
format Text
author Rickli, Jörg
Janssen, David J.
Hassler, Christel
Ellwood, Michael
Jaccard, Samuel L.
author_facet Rickli, Jörg
Janssen, David J.
Hassler, Christel
Ellwood, Michael
Jaccard, Samuel L.
author_sort Rickli, Jörg
title Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean
title_short Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean
title_full Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean
title_fullStr Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the Southern Ocean
title_sort chromium biogeochemistry and stable isotope distribution in the southern ocean
publisher Elsevier Science
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.132629
https://boris.unibe.ch/132629/
long_lat ENVELOPE(144.500,144.500,-67.667,-67.667)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Drake Passage
Balleny Islands
Mertz Glacier
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Drake Passage
Balleny Islands
Mertz Glacier
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Balleny Islands
Drake Passage
Mertz Glacier
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica
Balleny Islands
Drake Passage
Mertz Glacier
Southern Ocean
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7892/boris.132629
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