From bedrock to burial: the evolution of particulate organic carbon across coupled watershed-continental margin systems

被引:139
|
作者
Blair, NE
Leithold, EL
Aller, RC
机构
[1] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Marine Earth & Atmospher Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
[2] SUNY Stony Brook, Marine Sci Res Ctr, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA
关键词
organic carbon; carbon isotopes; river; continental margin; soil; kerogen; delta;
D O I
10.1016/j.marchem.2004.06.023
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Deltas sequester nearly half of the organic carbon (OC) buried in the marine environment. The composition of the buried organic matter reflects both watershed and seabed processes. A conceptual model is presented that describes the evolution of particulate organic carbon (POC) as it travels from its terrestrial source to its burial at sea. Alterations to the POC occur primarily in bioactive reservoirs, such as soils and the surface mixed layer (SML) of the seabed, where new organic matter can be added and older material degraded. Bypassing or rapid passage through the reservoirs is a key parameter because it avoids change. The Eel River of northern California and the Amazon River systems illustrate the importance of reservoir transit time and storage in determining the character of POC delivered to the continental margin. The Eel exemplifies a bypass system. Mass-wasting processes on land deliver unaltered bedrock along with OC derived from extant vegetation directly to the river channel without significant storage in soils. Rapid burial on the shelf occurs as a result of flood events. As a consequence, the buried material appears to be a simple mixture of carbon derived from kerogen (bedrock C), and modem terrestrial and marine sources. This is predicted to be a characteristic of the many similar short rivers on active margins that supply >40% of the fluvial sediment to the world's ocean. Extensive storage and processing of OC in lowland soils is a characteristic of the large Amazon watershed. Upland POC compositions are either overprinted or replaced by lowland sources. Upon delivery to the shelf, over half of the riverine POC is lost as a result of residence in sediment layers that are periodically reworked over time scales of days to months. The addition of fresh reactive marine OC, exposure to oxygen, and the regeneration of metal oxidants during resuspension events fuel the oxidation of the niverme organic matter. The nature of the watershed-shelf processes likely produce a complex mixture of organics possessing a continuum of ages and reactivities. The model illustrates the need to develop tools to measure residence times of particles in the various reservoirs so that the behavior of POC can be calibrated as it moves through a sedimentary system. The ultimate goal is to be able to use the organic geochemistry of soils and sediments to quantitatively infer the history of processes that determine both the composition and amount of POC present in different depositional environments. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:141 / 156
页数:16
相关论文
共 34 条
  • [21] Release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from sediments of the NW European Continental Margin (Goban Spur) and its significance for benthic carbon cycling
    Otto, S
    Balzer, W
    PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 1998, 42 (1-4) : 127 - 144
  • [22] Organic fraction of the total carbon burial flux deduced from carbon isotopes across the permo-triassic boundary at Meishan, Zhejiang province
    Huang, Jun-Hua
    Luo, Gen-Ming
    Bai, Xiao
    Tang, Xin-Yan
    Diqiu Kexue - Zhongguo Dizhi Daxue Xuebao/Earth Science - Journal of China University of Geosciences, 2007, 32 (06): : 767 - 773
  • [23] EVOLUTION OF ALGAL AND DETRITAL COMPONENTS IN THE PARTICULATE ORGANIC-CARBON OF 3 RIVERS FROM THE BASSIN PARISIEN
    DESSERY, S
    DULAC, C
    LAURENCEAU, JM
    MEYBECK, M
    ARCHIV FUR HYDROBIOLOGIE, 1984, 100 (02): : 235 - 260
  • [24] Coupled and decoupled responses of continental and marine organic-sedimentary systems through the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, New Jersey margin, USA
    Schneider-Mor, Aya
    Bowen, Gabriel J.
    PALEOCEANOGRAPHY, 2013, 28 (01): : 105 - 115
  • [25] Organic fraction of the total carbon burial flux deduced from carbon isotopes across the Permo-Triassic boundary at Meishan, Zhejiang Province, China
    Huang J.
    Luo G.
    Bai X.
    Tang X.
    Frontiers of Earth Science in China, 2007, 1 (4): : 425 - 430
  • [26] Long-term suspended sediment and particulate organic carbon yields from the Reynolds Creek Experimental Watershed and Critical Zone Observatory
    Glossner, Kayla L.
    Lohse, Kathleen A.
    Appling, Alison P.
    Cram, Zane K.
    Murray, Erin
    Godsey, Sarah E.
    Van Vactor, Steve
    McCorkle, Emma P.
    Seyfried, Mark S.
    Pierson, Fredrick B.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2022, 36 (02)
  • [27] Anthropogenic control of coupled changes in organic and inorganic carbon burial in karst landscape: Sediment evidence from two lakes of subtropical China
    Han, Qiaohua
    Wang, Lu
    Huang, Linpei
    Li, Rui
    Li, Ping
    Zhang, Tao
    Zhou, Qi
    Chen, Guangjie
    ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2022, 138
  • [28] Assessing Soil Organic Carbon Stocks and Particle-Size Fractions across Cropping Systems in the Kiti Sub-Watershed in Central Benin
    Ahogle, Arcadius Martinien Agassin
    Alladassi, Felix Kouelo
    Akplo, Tobi Moriaque
    Azontonde, Hessou Anastase
    Houngnandan, Pascal
    C-JOURNAL OF CARBON RESEARCH, 2022, 8 (04):
  • [29] Export fluxes of dissolved, colloidal and particulate organic carbon, major and trace elements from the Ob River and its tributaries across seasons
    Krickov, Ivan, V
    Vorobyev, Sergey N.
    Kolesnichenko, Larisa G.
    Kolesnichenko, Yuri
    Zinchenko, Dmitri
    Shirokova, Liudmila S.
    Pokrovsky, Oleg S.
    WATER RESEARCH, 2025, 275
  • [30] Modern organic carbon burial fluxes, recent sedimentation rates, and particle mixing rates from the upper continental slope near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina (USA)
    Alperin, MJ
    Suayah, IB
    Benninger, LK
    Martens, CS
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART II-TOPICAL STUDIES IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2002, 49 (20) : 4645 - 4665