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Composition and provenance of terrigenous organic matter transported along submarine canyons in the Gulf of Lion (NW Mediterranean Sea)

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Title Composition and provenance of terrigenous organic matter transported along submarine canyons in the Gulf of Lion (NW Mediterranean Sea)
Names Pasqual, Catalina (creator)
Goñi, Miguel A. (creator)
Tesi, Tommaso (creator)
Sanchez-Vidal, Anna (creator)
Calafat, Antoni (creator)
Canals, Miguel (creator)
Date Issued 2013-11 (iso8601)
Note This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published article is copyrighted by Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/progress-in-oceanography/.
Abstract Previous projects in the Gulf of Lion have investigated the path of terrigenous material
in the Rhone deltaic system, the continental shelf and the nearby canyon heads. This
study focuses on the slope region of the Gulf of Lion to further describe particulate
exchanges with ocean’s interior through submarine canyons. Nine sediment traps were
deployed from the heads to the mouths of Lacaze-Duthiers and Cap de Creus submarine
canyons and on the southern open slope from October 2005 to October 2006. Sediment
trap samples were analyzed by CuO oxidation to investigate spatial and temporal
variability in the yields and compositional characteristics of terrigenous biomarkers
such as lignin-derived phenols and cutin acids.
Sediment trap data show that the Dense Shelf Water Cascading event that took place in
the months of winter 2006 (January, February and March) had a profound impact on
particle fluxes in both canyons. This event was responsible for the majority of lignin
phenol (55.4%) and cutin acid (42.8%) inputs to submarine canyons, with lignin
compositions similar to those measured along the mid- and outer- continental shelf,
which is consistent with the resuspension and lateral transfer of unconsolidated shelf
sediment to the canyons. The highest lithogenic-normalized lignin-derived phenols
contents in sediment trap samples were found during late spring and summer at all
stations (i.e., 193.46 μg VP g⁻¹ lithogenc at deep slope station), when river flow, wave
energy and total particle fluxes were relatively low. During this period, lignin
compositions were characterized by elevated cinnamyl to vanillyl phenol ratios (>3) at
almost all stations, high p-coumaric to ferulic acid ratios (>3) and high yields of cutin
acids relative to vanillyl phenols (>1), all trends that are consistent with high pollen
inputs. Our results suggest marked differences in the sources and transport processes
responsible for terrigenous material export along submarine canyons, mainly consisting
of fluvial and shelf sediments during winter and atmospheric dust inputs during spring
and summer.
Genre Article
Topic Terrigenous organic matter
Identifier Pasqual, C., Goñi, M. A., Tesi, T., Sanchez-Vidal, A., Calafat, A., & Canals, M. (2013). Composition and provenance of terrigenous organic matter transported along submarine canyons in the Gulf of Lion (NW Mediterranean Sea). Progress in Oceanography, 118, 81-94. doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2013.07.013

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