Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf

In September 2009, a series of sediment cores were collected across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea shelf-slope. Sediment and porewater organic carbon (OC) concentrations and stable carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) were measured to investigate spatial variations in sediment organic matter (OM) sources and dist...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Energies
Main Authors: Richard Coffin, Joseph Smith, Brandon Yoza, Thomas Boyd, Michael Montgomery
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/en10091265
id ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/1996-1073/10/9/1265/
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/1996-1073/10/9/1265/ 2023-08-20T04:05:32+02:00 Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf Richard Coffin Joseph Smith Brandon Yoza Thomas Boyd Michael Montgomery 2017-08-25 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/en10091265 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en10091265 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Energies; Volume 10; Issue 9; Pages: 1265 Beaufort Sea methane tundra organic carbon stable isotopes sediment porewater Text 2017 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/en10091265 2023-07-31T21:12:31Z In September 2009, a series of sediment cores were collected across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea shelf-slope. Sediment and porewater organic carbon (OC) concentrations and stable carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) were measured to investigate spatial variations in sediment organic matter (OM) sources and distribution of these materials across the shelf. Cores were collected along three main nearshore (shelf) to offshore (slope) sampling lines (transects) from east-to-west along the North Slope of Alaska: Hammerhead (near Camden Bay), Thetis Island (near Prudhoe Bay), and Cape Halkett (towards Point Barrow). Measured sediment organic carbon (TOC) and porewater dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations and their respective δ13C values were used to investigate the relative contribution of different OM sources to sediment OC pool cycled at each location. Sources of OM considered included: water column-sourced phytodetritus, deep sediment methane (CH4), and terrestrial, tundra/river-sourced OM. Results of these measurements, when coupled with results from previous research and additional analyses of sediment and porewater composition, show a pattern of spatial variation in sediment OC concentrations, OM source contributions, and OM cycled along the Alaskan Beaufort Sea shelf. In general, measured sediment total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations, δ13CTOC values, porewater DOC concentrations, and δ13CDOC values are consistent with an east-to-west transport of modern Holocene sediments with higher OC concentrations primarily sourced from relatively labile terrestrial, tundra OM sources and phytodetritus along the Alaskan Beaufort shelf. Sediment transport along the shelf results in the medium-to-long term accumulation and burial of sediment OM focused to the west which in turn results in higher biogenic CH4 production rates and higher upward CH4 diffusion through the sediments resulting in CH4−AMO-sourced contribution to sediment OC westward along the shelf. Understanding current OM sources and distributions along the ... Text Barrow Beaufort Sea north slope Point Barrow Prudhoe Bay Tundra Alaska MDPI Open Access Publishing Beaufort Shelf ENVELOPE(-142.500,-142.500,70.000,70.000) Cape Halkett ENVELOPE(-100.253,-100.253,76.752,76.752) Energies 10 9 1265
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic Beaufort Sea
methane
tundra
organic carbon
stable isotopes
sediment
porewater
spellingShingle Beaufort Sea
methane
tundra
organic carbon
stable isotopes
sediment
porewater
Richard Coffin
Joseph Smith
Brandon Yoza
Thomas Boyd
Michael Montgomery
Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf
topic_facet Beaufort Sea
methane
tundra
organic carbon
stable isotopes
sediment
porewater
description In September 2009, a series of sediment cores were collected across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea shelf-slope. Sediment and porewater organic carbon (OC) concentrations and stable carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) were measured to investigate spatial variations in sediment organic matter (OM) sources and distribution of these materials across the shelf. Cores were collected along three main nearshore (shelf) to offshore (slope) sampling lines (transects) from east-to-west along the North Slope of Alaska: Hammerhead (near Camden Bay), Thetis Island (near Prudhoe Bay), and Cape Halkett (towards Point Barrow). Measured sediment organic carbon (TOC) and porewater dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations and their respective δ13C values were used to investigate the relative contribution of different OM sources to sediment OC pool cycled at each location. Sources of OM considered included: water column-sourced phytodetritus, deep sediment methane (CH4), and terrestrial, tundra/river-sourced OM. Results of these measurements, when coupled with results from previous research and additional analyses of sediment and porewater composition, show a pattern of spatial variation in sediment OC concentrations, OM source contributions, and OM cycled along the Alaskan Beaufort Sea shelf. In general, measured sediment total organic carbon (TOC) concentrations, δ13CTOC values, porewater DOC concentrations, and δ13CDOC values are consistent with an east-to-west transport of modern Holocene sediments with higher OC concentrations primarily sourced from relatively labile terrestrial, tundra OM sources and phytodetritus along the Alaskan Beaufort shelf. Sediment transport along the shelf results in the medium-to-long term accumulation and burial of sediment OM focused to the west which in turn results in higher biogenic CH4 production rates and higher upward CH4 diffusion through the sediments resulting in CH4−AMO-sourced contribution to sediment OC westward along the shelf. Understanding current OM sources and distributions along the ...
format Text
author Richard Coffin
Joseph Smith
Brandon Yoza
Thomas Boyd
Michael Montgomery
author_facet Richard Coffin
Joseph Smith
Brandon Yoza
Thomas Boyd
Michael Montgomery
author_sort Richard Coffin
title Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf
title_short Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf
title_full Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf
title_fullStr Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf
title_full_unstemmed Spatial Variation in Sediment Organic Carbon Distribution across the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Shelf
title_sort spatial variation in sediment organic carbon distribution across the alaskan beaufort sea shelf
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.3390/en10091265
long_lat ENVELOPE(-142.500,-142.500,70.000,70.000)
ENVELOPE(-100.253,-100.253,76.752,76.752)
geographic Beaufort Shelf
Cape Halkett
geographic_facet Beaufort Shelf
Cape Halkett
genre Barrow
Beaufort Sea
north slope
Point Barrow
Prudhoe Bay
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Barrow
Beaufort Sea
north slope
Point Barrow
Prudhoe Bay
Tundra
Alaska
op_source Energies; Volume 10; Issue 9; Pages: 1265
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/en10091265
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/en10091265
container_title Energies
container_volume 10
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1265
_version_ 1774716083147636736