Vance Derek, Teagle Damon A H, Foster Gavin L
Bristol Isotope Group, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Bristol BS8 1RJ, UK.
Nature. 2009 Mar 26;458(7237):493-6. doi: 10.1038/nature07828.
Rivers are the dominant source of many elements and isotopes to the ocean. But this input from the continents is not balanced by the loss of the elements and isotopes through hydrothermal and sedimentary exchange with the oceanic crust, or by temporal changes in the marine inventory for elements that are demonstrably not in steady state. To resolve the problem of the observed imbalance in marine geochemical budgets, attention has been focused on uncertainties in the hydrothermal and sedimentary fluxes. In recent Earth history, temporally dynamic chemical weathering fluxes from the continents are an inevitable consequence of periodic glaciations. Chemical weathering rates on modern Earth are likely to remain far from equilibrium owing to the physical production of finely ground material at glacial terminations that acts as a fertile substrate for chemical weathering. Here we explore the implications of temporal changes in the riverine chemical weathering flux for oceanic geochemical budgets. We contend that the riverine flux obtained from observations of modern rivers is broadly accurate, but not representative of timescales appropriate for elements with oceanic residence longer than Quaternary glacial-interglacial cycles. We suggest that the pulse of rapid chemical weathering initiated at the last deglaciation has not yet decayed away and that weathering rates remain about two to three times the average for an entire late Quaternary glacial cycle. Taking into account the effect of the suggested non-steady-state process on the silicate weathering flux helps to reconcile the modelled marine strontium isotope budget with available data. Overall, we conclude that consideration of the temporal variability in riverine fluxes largely ameliorates long-standing problems with chemical and isotopic mass balances in the ocean.
河流是海洋中许多元素和同位素的主要来源。但是,来自大陆的这种输入,并未因通过与洋壳的热液和沉积交换而导致的元素和同位素损失,或者因明显处于非稳态的元素在海洋中的存量随时间变化而得到平衡。为了解决海洋地球化学收支中观测到的不平衡问题,人们将注意力集中在热液和沉积通量的不确定性上。在近代地球历史中,大陆上随时间变化的动态化学风化通量是周期性冰川作用不可避免的结果。由于在冰川末期物理作用产生的细磨物质为化学风化提供了肥沃的基质,现代地球上的化学风化速率可能仍远未达到平衡。在这里,我们探讨河流化学风化通量的时间变化对海洋地球化学收支的影响。我们认为,从现代河流观测中获得的河流通量大致准确,但对于海洋停留时间长于第四纪冰期 - 间冰期循环的元素来说,并不代表适合的时间尺度。我们认为,上一次冰消期开始的快速化学风化脉冲尚未衰减,风化速率仍约为整个晚第四纪冰期循环平均速率的两到三倍。考虑到所提出的非稳态过程对硅酸盐风化通量的影响,有助于使模拟的海洋锶同位素收支与现有数据相吻合。总体而言,我们得出结论,考虑河流通量的时间变异性在很大程度上缓解了海洋化学和同位素质量平衡方面长期存在的问题。