Accumulation of organic carbon in the Laptev Sea

Composition and accumulation rates of organic carbon in Holocene sediments provided data to calculate an organic carbon budget for the Laptev Sea continental margin. Mean Holocene accumulation rates in the inner Laptev Sea vary between 0.14 and 2.7 g C cm**2/ky; maximum values occur close to the Len...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stein, Ruediger, Fahl, Kirsten
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2000
Subjects:
BC
C-4
C-7
C-8
GKG
KAL
MUC
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.711774
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.711774
Description
Summary:Composition and accumulation rates of organic carbon in Holocene sediments provided data to calculate an organic carbon budget for the Laptev Sea continental margin. Mean Holocene accumulation rates in the inner Laptev Sea vary between 0.14 and 2.7 g C cm**2/ky; maximum values occur close to the Lena River delta. Seawards, the mean accumulation rates decrease from 0.43 to 0.02 g C cm**2/ky. The organic matter is predominantly of terrigenous origin. About 0.9*10**6 t/year of organic carbon are buried in the Laptev Sea, and 0.25*10**6 t/year on the continental slope. Between about 8.5 and 9 ka, major changes in supply of terrigenous and marine organic carbon occur, related to changes in coastal erosion, Siberian river discharge, and/or Atlantic water inflow along the Eurasian continental margin.