Dominance of benthic fluxes in the oceanic beryllium budget and implications for paleo-denudation records | Science Advances
Abstract
The ratio of atmosphere-derived
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Be to continent-derived
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Be in marine sediments has been used to probe the long-term relationship between continental denudation and climate. However, its application is complicated by uncertainty in
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Be transfer through the land-ocean interface. The riverine dissolved load alone is insufficient to close the marine
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Be budget, largely due to substantial removal of riverine
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Be to continental margin sediments. We focus on the ultimate fate of this latter Be. We present sediment pore-water Be profiles from diverse continental margin environments to quantify the diagenetic Be release to the ocean. Our results suggest that pore-water Be cycling is mainly controlled by particulate supply and Mn-Fe cycling, leading to higher benthic fluxes on shelves. Benthic fluxes may help close the
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Be budget and are at least comparable to, or higher (~2-fold) than, the riverine dissolved input. These observations demand a revised model framework, which considers the potentially dominant benthic source, to robustly interpret marine Be isotopic records.