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Lecture 3 Trace Metals in Seawater What are trace elements? Why are they important? Principal of Oceanographic Consistency. Profiles shapes as clues for.

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 3 Trace Metals in Seawater What are trace elements? Why are they important? Principal of Oceanographic Consistency. Profiles shapes as clues for."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 3 Trace Metals in Seawater What are trace elements? Why are they important? Principal of Oceanographic Consistency. Profiles shapes as clues for controlling processes.

2 A first look at spatial variation What are the different “types” of elements?

3 Trace elements in seawater Definition: Those elements that do not contribute to salinity All elements less than 1 mg kg -1. But usually use mole units! Why are they important? 1. many are micronutrients (e.g. Fe, Cu) – speciation is important 2. others are toxic (e.g. Cu, Hg) 3. some are tracers for redox conditions (Mn, Fe, Cr, I, Re, Mo, V, U) 4. some are enriched in economic deposits such as manganese nodules (e.g. Cu, Co, Ni, Cd) 5. some have man made sources and are tracers of pollution (e.g. Pb, Pu, Ag) ** Difficult to collect samples for without contamination and difficult to analyze.

4 Oceanographic consistency Acceptance of data must satisfy two criteria: 1.Vertical profiles should be smooth, not spiky. Ocean mixing produces smooth profiles 2. Correlations should exist with other elements that share the same controlling mechanisms. First Example – Cu in surface waters south of New Zealand (Boyle and Edmond, 1975, Nature, 253, 107) SST - Si PO4 NO3

5 Classification of elements Conservative (or “bio-unlimited”) Bio-limiting (and “biointermediate”) Scavenged Some have a style of their own (e.g. O, Ar, Bi, Hg)

6 Shapes of Profiles – clues for controls Conservative - Cesium (Cs); Molybdenum (Mo) - under oxic conditions Nutrient Like – Biological control Shallow (soft parts) and Deep (hard parts) Regeneration Zinc Cadmium Nickel Copper Barium Surface Enrichment – Atm input, River/Coastal inputs Lead Manganese Mid-depth Maximum – Hydrothermal inputs, Oxygen minimum Sediment Source Manganese Iron Near Bottom Enrichment – sediment source North Sea Metals (Cd, Cu, Mn) Deep Depletion - scavenging Lead-210 Aluminum Manganese

7 Superposition of vertical biological flux on horizontal circulation Results in low surface water and high deep water concentrations. Results in higher concentrations in the older deep Pacific than the younger deep Atlantic Nutrient Like Profiles

8 Example: Comparison of vertical profiles of nutrients from the Atlantic and Pacific PO 4 Shallow Si Deep

9 Nutrient Like Examples Cd, Zn, Cu, Ni But what about Mn, Pb ??

10 Ba and Si strongly correlated. But Why?? Ba Nutrient Like- Deep Regeneration- Hard Parts

11 Cd and PO 4 strongly correlated. But Why?? Cd Nutrient Like- Shallow Regeneration- Soft Parts

12 Use the Cd-PO 4 correlation as a tool to determine paleo PO 4 concentrations. Modern Data Paleo Reconstruction

13 Al profiles Mediterranean to Atlantic to Pacific Al Atmospheric Input and Scavenging

14 Depth (km) Mid-depth Maximum (~200 – 1000m) Mn Murray et al (1981) Dissolved Total Oxygen Minimum Zone - ETNP

15 MOR Hydrothermal System – Mid-Depth Maximum and Scavenging

16 Fe and Mn Hydrothermal plume from the Juan de Fuca Ridge Fe Mn T anomaly particles Coale et al (1991) Nature, 352, 325 Mid-Depth Maximum (~2000m)

17 Atmospheric input Pb in Greenland snow Pb

18 Atmospheric Input Anthropogenic Origin Pb Surface Maximum Flegal and Patterson, 1983

19 Sediment Source High Trace Metal Concentrations on the Continental Shelf Kremling (1983) Nature 303, 225 Cd Cu Mn Si PO4 S

20 pCu = - log Cu 2+ Cu total = Cu 2+ + inorganic complexes + organic complexes Metal Limitation and Toxicity – Cu – Role of Free Metal Ion Cu Speciation and Plankton Growth

21 Cu Speciation – Ocean Distributions Total Copper Strong Organic Ligands Free Cu 2+ Total Cu

22 All Fe data as of 1997 (Johnson et al) Quiz – What processes control the distribution of Fe in seawater?

23 Ocean Periodic Table (from Ken Johnson, MBARI) http://www.mbari.org/chemsensor/pteo.htm Then click on any element of interest for example profiles.

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