Record Details

Biogenic matter diagenesis on the sea floor: A comparison between two continental margin transects

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Biogenic matter diagenesis on the sea floor: A comparison between two continental margin transects
Names Berelson, William M. (creator)
McManus, James (creator)
Coale, Kenneth H. (creator)
Johnson, Kenneth S. (creator)
Kilgore, Tammy (creator)
Burdige, David (creator)
Pilskaln, Cynthia (creator)
Date Issued 1996-07-01 (iso8601)
Abstract Benthic chamber measurements of the reactants and products involved with biogenic matter diagenesis (oxygen, ammonium, nitrate, silicate, phosphate, TCO₂, alkalinity) were used to define
fluxes of these solutes into and out of the sediments off southern and central California. Onshore to
offshore transects indicate many similarities in benthic fluxes between these regions. The pattern of
benthic organic carbon oxidation as a function of water depth, combined with published sediment
trap records, suggest that the supply of organic carbon from vertical rain can just meet the
sedimentary carbon oxidation + burial demand for the central California region between the depths
100-3500 m. However, there is not enough organic carbon raining through the upper water column to
support its oxidation and burial in the basins off southern California. Lateral transport and focusing of
refractory carbon within these basins is proposed to account for the carbon buried. The organic
carbon burial efficiency is greater off southern California (40-60%) compared to central California
(2-20%), even though carbon rain rates are comparable. Oxygen uptake rates are not sensitive to
bottom water oxygen concentrations nor to the bulk wt. % organic carbon in surficial sediments.
Nitrate uptake rates are well defined by the depth of oxygen penetration into the sediments and the
overlying water column nitrate concentration. Nitrate uptake accounts for about 50% of the total
denitrification taking place in shelf sediments and denitrification (0.1-1.0 mmolN/m²d) occurs
throughout the entire study region. The ratio of carbon oxidized to opal dissolved on the sea floor is
constant (0.8 ± 0.2) through a wide range of depths, supporting the hypothesis that opal dissolution
kinetics may be dominated by a highly reactive phase. Sea floor carbonate dissolution is negligible
within the oxygen minimum zone and reaches maximal rates just above and below this zone
(0.2-2.0 mmol/m²d).
Genre Article
Identifier Berelson, W. M., McManis, J., Coale, K. H., Johnson, K. S., Kilgore, T., Burdige, D., & Pilskaln, C. (1996). Biogenic matter diagenesis on the sea floor: A comparison between two continental margin transects [Electronic version]. Journal of Marine Research, 54(4), 731-762.

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