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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kadko, David
Format: Dataset Open Access
Language:en
Published: PANGAEA 1980
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.880552
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author Kadko, David
author_facet Kadko, David
collection Datos científicos de ciencias marinas y ambientales
contents A model that predicts the flux of 222Rn out of deep-sea sediment is presented. The radon is ultimately generated by 230Th which is stripped from the overlying water into the sediment. It is shown that the continental contribution of ionium is not significant, and that at low sedimentation rates, biological mixing and erosional processes strongly affect the surface concentration of the ionium. Two cores from areas of slow sediment accumulation, one from a manganese nodule region of the central Pacific and one from the Rio Grande Rise in the Atlantic were analyzed at closely spaced intervals for 230Th, 226Ra, and 210Pb. The Pacific core displayed evidence of biological mixing down to 12 cm and had a sedimentation rate of only 0.04 cm/kyr. The Atlantic core seemed to be mixed to 8 cm and had a sedimentation rate of 0.07 cm/kyr. Both cores had less total excess 230Th than predicted. Radium sediment profiles are generated from the 230Th model. Adsorbed, dissolved, and solid-phase radium is considered. According to the model, diffusional losses of radium are especially important at low sedimentation rates. Any particulate, or excess radium input is ignored in this model. The model fits the two analyzed cores if the fraction of total radium available for adsorption-desorption is about 0.5-0.7, and if K, the distribution coefficient, is about 1000. The flux of radon out of the sediments is derived from the model-generated radium profiles. It is shown that the resulting standing crop of SUP-222 Rn in the overlying water may be considered as an added constraint in budgeting 230Th and 226Ra in deep-sea sediments.
format Dataset Open Access
id pangaea_https___doi_org_10_1594_PANGAEA_880552
institution PANGAEA
language en
publishDate 1980
publisher PANGAEA
record_format pangaea
spellingShingle Annotated record and Pb, Th, U and Ra isotope concentrations for two cores of the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean
Kadko, David
NOAA and MMS Marine Minerals Geochemical Database; NOAA-MMS
A model that predicts the flux of 222Rn out of deep-sea sediment is presented. The radon is ultimately generated by 230Th which is stripped from the overlying water into the sediment. It is shown that the continental contribution of ionium is not significant, and that at low sedimentation rates, biological mixing and erosional processes strongly affect the surface concentration of the ionium. Two cores from areas of slow sediment accumulation, one from a manganese nodule region of the central Pacific and one from the Rio Grande Rise in the Atlantic were analyzed at closely spaced intervals for 230Th, 226Ra, and 210Pb. The Pacific core displayed evidence of biological mixing down to 12 cm and had a sedimentation rate of only 0.04 cm/kyr. The Atlantic core seemed to be mixed to 8 cm and had a sedimentation rate of 0.07 cm/kyr. Both cores had less total excess 230Th than predicted. Radium sediment profiles are generated from the 230Th model. Adsorbed, dissolved, and solid-phase radium is considered. According to the model, diffusional losses of radium are especially important at low sedimentation rates. Any particulate, or excess radium input is ignored in this model. The model fits the two analyzed cores if the fraction of total radium available for adsorption-desorption is about 0.5-0.7, and if K, the distribution coefficient, is about 1000. The flux of radon out of the sediments is derived from the model-generated radium profiles. It is shown that the resulting standing crop of SUP-222 Rn in the overlying water may be considered as an added constraint in budgeting 230Th and 226Ra in deep-sea sediments.
title Annotated record and Pb, Th, U and Ra isotope concentrations for two cores of the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean
topic NOAA and MMS Marine Minerals Geochemical Database; NOAA-MMS
url https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.880552