Reactive-transport modeling of neodymium and its radiogenic isotope in deep-sea sediments: The roles of authigenesis, marine silicate weathering and reverse weathering


Date

2022-10

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Dissolved Rare Earth Elements (REE) and radiogenic neodymium (Nd) isotope composition (εNd) of seawater are widely used geochemical tools in studying marine processes, but their modern ocean budgets are poorly understood. Recent discoveries of large benthic fluxes of REE with unique εNd signatures from marine sediments, particularly in the deep-sea, have led to a “bottom-up” hypothesis, which suggests that early diagenesis below the sediment-water interface (SWI) controls the ocean’s REE and εNd budgets. To investigate such sedimentary processes, we created a reactive-transport model for the biogeochemical cycling of Nd and εNd in marine sediments. Here, we attempt to quantify the roles of authigenesis, marine silicate weathering and reverse weathering in the diagenetic cycling of Nd and εNd at a deep-sea (3000 m) site on the Oregon margin. Our model predicts that, at this site, Nd carried by Fe/Mn oxides into sediments eventually transforms to authigenic Nd-phosphate, during which ∼9% of the incoming solid Nd flux is released as a dissolved benthic flux back to the overlying bottom water. We also find that the classic reversible scavenging formulation applied to Nd co-cycling with Fe/Mn oxides is inconsistent with the data. Rather, a coprecipitation formulation, assuming Nd is structurally incorporated into Fe/Mn oxides, successfully simulates the data. The model also shows that authigenesis alone cannot explain the pore water and authigenic εNd, which are both more radiogenic than bottom water at this site. However, the weathering of volcanic silicates sourced from the local subduction zone can successfully explain εNd. We suggest that, because reverse weathering by authigenic clay formation maintains the under-saturation of primary silicates in pore water, marine silicate weathering can proceed. The processes we model likely affect the sedimentary cycling of many other trace elements and isotopes, with much broader implications for the understanding of ocean biogeochemistry.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

596

Pages / Article No.

117792

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

reactive-transport model; Rare Earth Elements; radiogenic neodymium isotope; authigenesis; marine silicate weathering; reverse weathering

Organisational unit

03956 - Vance, Derek / Vance, Derek check_circle
02725 - Institut für Geochemie und Petrologie / Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology

Notes

Funding

891489 - The critical role of sedimentary trace element fluxes in ocean biogeochemistry (EC)

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