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New directions in limnology and oceangraphy using cosmogenic radionuclides Erik Brown Large Lakes Observatory Department of Geological Sciences University of Minnesota Duluth
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Cosmic radiation High energy subatomic particles Nuclear interactions with matter Produces “cosmogenic nuclides” 10 Be, 14 C, 36 Cl, 3 He, 32 P, 33 P Cosmogenic nuclide production Atmosphere (mostly) Earth’s surface Decreases exponentially 10x higher at 4500m than at sealevel 2x lower 40 cm into rock than at surface Cosmic ray interaction on Earth
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Radiocarbon Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) has become the method of choice. Sample size ~1 mg. High precision until uncertainty in instrument background becomes significant, typically for materials older than ~40,000 years. -counting. Requires larger samples (~4 g), but can provide good precision in older samples.
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Where is this useful?? 40 ka > age > 80 ka. Large samples available (~ grams of carbon) Ancient coral. Calibration of radiocarbon timescale.
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Typically U-series dates
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Biological productivity in Lake Superior Limited by phosphate availability Knowledge of P cycling is key to understanding ecosystem Cosmogenic P isotopes have been used in marine systsms. C. Benitez-Nelson (U. South Carolina)
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32 P t ½ =14.3 d 33 P t ½ = 25 d 32 P/ 33 P t ½ = 33.4 d Advantages: P is a nutrient used by all living organisms. Radioisotope half-lives relevant to biological timescales. In-situ tracers avoid issues associated with ‘bottle effects.’ Ratio of isotopes minimizes changes due to dilution. Disadvantages: Large sample volumes and extensive purification: 5 tons per sample!!! Several hour shiptime. 32 P, 33 P formed by spallation reactions in the atmosphere
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Background: 32 P t ½ = 14.3 days Emax = 1.71 MeV Strong Beta Emitter. Gas proportional counter with background count rates of 0.18-0.20 cpm 33 P t ½ = 25. 3 days Emax = 0.249 MeV Weak Beta Emitter. Suffers from high self absorption and can’t separate from stable P. Requires measurement with LSS counter with typical backgrounds of 0.85 – 1.25 cpm depending on quench levels 32 P and 33 P activities in RAIN water: 0.5 to 4 dpm/L Fluxes (dependent on rain): Range from 800 to 2000 dpm/m 2 /y 32 P and 33 P activities in Seawater: 0.5 – 4.0 dpm/1000 L 32 P and 33 P activities in particles: 0.05 – 0.4 dpm/1000 L
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DOP HPO 4 2- CO 2 Upwelling of Inorganic Nutrients Heterotrophic Protozoa Bacteria Phytoplankton Zooplankton Sinking Particles Atmospheric Deposition 32 P, 33 P 33 P/ 32 P ratio avoids complications with changes in flux.
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Increasing Age All errors are 2
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H 2 PO 4 DOP H 2 PO 4 DOP Part. P H 2 PO 4 DOP Part. P H 2 PO 4 DOP Part. P 33 P/ 32 P = 0.82 33 P/ 32 P = 1.05 33 P/ 32 P = 0.95 33 P/ 32 P = 1.15 33 P/ 32 P = 1.4 33 P/ 32 P ratios in dissolved and particulate P result from the source ratio (i.e. you are what you eat) and the P residence time.
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Increasing Age 60 days 30 days All errors are 2
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HPO 4 = + Total Diss. P Low 33 P/ 32 P Ratio Rapid Turnover Low 33 P/ 32 P Ratio “Large molecules” Slow Turnover High 33 P/ 32 P Ratio “Small” molecules Rapid Turnover Low 33 P/ 32 P Ratio HPO 4 = + Rapid Turnover Low 33 P/ 32 P Ratio “Large molecules” Slow Turnover High 33 P/ 32 P Ratio PhosphateDissolved Organic P = Total Diss. P High 33 P/ 32 P Ratio =
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Conclusions A range of questions in ocean/lake science can be addressed using cosmogenic nuclides. Radiocarbon dating for large samples older than 40 kyr can provide important complement to AMS, if 14 C: 12 C background is <10 -16. Many major questions regarding P-cycling (and hence overall marine or lake productivity) remain unresolved. Some of these can be addressed using cosmogenic P isotopes, but present approaches limit sampling. Decreasing background can reduce sampling requirements 5-fold, permitting more innovation in field strategies.
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Note that the residence time of P INCREASES with increasing primary production. This is not intuitive. One might expect that as more organisms grow and consume nutrients that the residence time of P within the dissolved phase would DECREASE. The Increase appears to be due to the different forms of P in the water. The more bioaviable, low 33P/32P ratio compounds are being consumed first, leaving the older, higher 33P/32P compounds in solution. Combined, this causes an INCREASE in the 33P/32P ratio in the dissolved phase. The particle 33P/32P ratios are always low, supporting this theory.
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Lake Superior Extremely low soluble reactive P Low productivity, mostly limited by P (but also by Fe) Annual input of P supplies less than 10% of that required for biological activity Bacteria play a major role
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Increasing Age All errors are 2 30 days
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Rain at Sta. ALOHA 33 P/ 32 P = 0.55 0.19 PO 4 33 P/ 32 P = 0.55 DOP 1 33 P/ 32 P = 0.55 DOP 2 33 P/ 32 P = 0.75 DOP n 33 P/ 32 P > 0.75 “Normal” Growth“P-Stressed”“P-Starved” Bacteria and Algae High Bioavailability Low Bioavailability Short Residence Time Long Residence Time Bjorkman and Karl (2003) measured SRP turnover rates: 10 - 14 days BAP turnover rates: 4 - 21 days PP turnover rates: < 2 - 10 days
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This work suggests two important points: 1)Open ocean organisms are responding rapidly to their environment, and in times of stress will consume both inorganic and organic P REGARDLESS of the inorganic P present in the system. 2)Particulate P has a surprisingly short residence time regardless of the P source in the upper ocean Wouldn’t it be nice to do this on volumes less than 5000 L and collect samples over both depth and region? Reducing background by 10x will reduce sample volume requirements to ~1000L.
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Increasing Age All errors are 2
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1.If there is abundant sample material, b-counting can provide better precision than AMS for samples older than ~40ka 2.There is a diminishing return for reducing background
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