Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour

This study presents new concentration measurements of dissolved REEs (dREEs) along a full-depth east-west section across the tropical South Atlantic (~12°S), and uses these data to investigate the oceanic cycling of the REEs. Enrichment of dREEs, associated with the redox cycling of Fe-Mn oxides, is...

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Main Authors: Zheng, X, Plancherel, Y, Saito, M, Scott, P, Henderson, G
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2016
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author Zheng, X
Plancherel, Y
Saito, M
Scott, P
Henderson, G
author_facet Zheng, X
Plancherel, Y
Saito, M
Scott, P
Henderson, G
author_sort Zheng, X
collection OXFORD
description This study presents new concentration measurements of dissolved REEs (dREEs) along a full-depth east-west section across the tropical South Atlantic (~12°S), and uses these data to investigate the oceanic cycling of the REEs. Enrichment of dREEs, associated with the redox cycling of Fe-Mn oxides, is observed in the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) off the African shelf. For deeper-waters, a multi-parameter mixing model was developed to deconvolve the relative importance of physical transport (i.e. water mass mixing) from biogeochemical controls on the dREE distribution in the deep Atlantic. This approach enables chemical processes involved in REE cycling, not apparent from the measurements alone, to be distinguished and quantified. Results show that the measured dREE concentrations below ~1000 m are dominantly controlled (>75%) by preformed REE concentrations resulting from water mass mixing. This result indicates that the linear correlation between dREEs and dissolved Si observed in Atlantic deep waters results from the dominantly conservative behaviour of these tracers, rather than from similar chemical processes influencing both dREEs and Si. Minor addition of dREEs (~10% of dNd and ~5% of dYb) is observed in the deep (>~4000 m) Brazil Basin, resulting from either remineralization of particles in-situ or along the flow path. Greater addition of dREEs (up to 25% for dNd and 20% for dYb) is found at ~1500 m and below ~4000 m in the Angola Basin near the African continental margin. Cerium anomalies suggest that different sources are responsible for these dREE addition plumes. The 1500 m excess is most likely attributed to dREE release from Fe oxides, whereas the 4000 m excess may be due to remineralization of calcite. Higher particulate fluxes and a more sluggish ocean circulation in the Angola Basin may explain why the dREE excesses in this basin are significantly higher than that observed in the Brazil Basin. Hydrothermal venting over the mid-Atlantic ridge acts as a regional net sink for light REEs, but has little influence on the net budget of heavy REEs. The combination of dense REE measurements with water mass deconvolution is shown to provide quantitative assessment of the relative roles of physical and biogeochemical processes in the oceanic cycling of REEs.
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spelling oxford-uuid:dc445462-5b06-4bca-a164-7113f440d0952022-03-27T09:16:31ZRare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviourJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:dc445462-5b06-4bca-a164-7113f440d095Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2016Zheng, XPlancherel, YSaito, MScott, PHenderson, GThis study presents new concentration measurements of dissolved REEs (dREEs) along a full-depth east-west section across the tropical South Atlantic (~12°S), and uses these data to investigate the oceanic cycling of the REEs. Enrichment of dREEs, associated with the redox cycling of Fe-Mn oxides, is observed in the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) off the African shelf. For deeper-waters, a multi-parameter mixing model was developed to deconvolve the relative importance of physical transport (i.e. water mass mixing) from biogeochemical controls on the dREE distribution in the deep Atlantic. This approach enables chemical processes involved in REE cycling, not apparent from the measurements alone, to be distinguished and quantified. Results show that the measured dREE concentrations below ~1000 m are dominantly controlled (>75%) by preformed REE concentrations resulting from water mass mixing. This result indicates that the linear correlation between dREEs and dissolved Si observed in Atlantic deep waters results from the dominantly conservative behaviour of these tracers, rather than from similar chemical processes influencing both dREEs and Si. Minor addition of dREEs (~10% of dNd and ~5% of dYb) is observed in the deep (>~4000 m) Brazil Basin, resulting from either remineralization of particles in-situ or along the flow path. Greater addition of dREEs (up to 25% for dNd and 20% for dYb) is found at ~1500 m and below ~4000 m in the Angola Basin near the African continental margin. Cerium anomalies suggest that different sources are responsible for these dREE addition plumes. The 1500 m excess is most likely attributed to dREE release from Fe oxides, whereas the 4000 m excess may be due to remineralization of calcite. Higher particulate fluxes and a more sluggish ocean circulation in the Angola Basin may explain why the dREE excesses in this basin are significantly higher than that observed in the Brazil Basin. Hydrothermal venting over the mid-Atlantic ridge acts as a regional net sink for light REEs, but has little influence on the net budget of heavy REEs. The combination of dense REE measurements with water mass deconvolution is shown to provide quantitative assessment of the relative roles of physical and biogeochemical processes in the oceanic cycling of REEs.
spellingShingle Zheng, X
Plancherel, Y
Saito, M
Scott, P
Henderson, G
Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour
title Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour
title_full Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour
title_fullStr Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour
title_short Rare Earth Elements (REEs) in the tropical South Atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non-conservative behaviour
title_sort rare earth elements rees in the tropical south atlantic and quantitative deconvolution of their non conservative behaviour
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AT plancherely rareearthelementsreesinthetropicalsouthatlanticandquantitativedeconvolutionoftheirnonconservativebehaviour
AT saitom rareearthelementsreesinthetropicalsouthatlanticandquantitativedeconvolutionoftheirnonconservativebehaviour
AT scottp rareearthelementsreesinthetropicalsouthatlanticandquantitativedeconvolutionoftheirnonconservativebehaviour
AT hendersong rareearthelementsreesinthetropicalsouthatlanticandquantitativedeconvolutionoftheirnonconservativebehaviour