Radionuclides in Arctic sea ice: Tracers of sources, fates and ice transit time scales
Arctic sea ice can incorporate sediment and associated chemical species during its formation in shallow shelf environments and can also intercept atmospherically transported material during transit. Release of this material in ice ablation areas (e.g. the Fram Strait) enhances fluxes of both sedimen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Deep-sea research. Part I, Oceanographic research papers Oceanographic research papers, 2007-08, Vol.54 (8), p.1289-1310 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Arctic sea ice can incorporate sediment and associated chemical species during its formation in shallow shelf environments and can also intercept atmospherically transported material during transit. Release of this material in ice ablation areas (e.g. the Fram Strait) enhances fluxes of both sediments and associated species in such areas. We have used a suite of natural (
7Be,
210Pb) and anthropogenic (
137Cs,
239Pu,
240Pu) radionuclides in sea ice, sea-ice sediments (SIS), sediment trap material and bottom sediments from the Fram Strait to estimate transit times of sea ice from source to ablation areas, calculate radionuclide fluxes to the Fram Strait and investigate the role of sea-ice entrained sediments in sedimentation processes. Sea ice intercepts and transports the atmospherically supplied radionuclides
7Be and
210Pb, which are carried in the ice and are scavenged by any entrained SIS. All of the
7Be and most of the excess
210Pb measured in SIS collected in the Fram Strait are added to the ice during transit through the Arctic Ocean, and we use these radionuclides as chronometers to calculate ice transit times for individual ice floes. Transit times estimated from the
210Pb inventories in two ice cores are 1–3 years. Values estimated from the
7Be/
210Pb
excess activity ratio of SIS are about 3–5 years. Finally, equilibrium values of the activity ratio of
210Pb to its granddaughter
210Po in the ice cores indicate transit times of at least 2 years. These transit times are consistent with back-trajectory analyses of the ice floes. The latter, as well as the clay-mineral assemblage of the SIS (low smectite and high illite content), suggest that the sampled sea-ice floes originated from the eastern Siberian Arctic shelf seas such as the eastern Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea. This result is in agreement with the relatively low activities of
239,240Pu and
137Cs and the
240Pu/
239Pu atom ratios (∼0.18, equivalent to that in global fallout) in SIS, indicating that prior global atmospheric fallout, rather than nuclear fuel reprocessing facilities, forms the main source of these anthropogenic radionuclides reaching the western Fram Strait at the time of sampling (1999). Transport of radionuclides by sea ice through the Arctic Ocean, either associated with entrained SIS or dissolved in the ice, accounts for a significant flux in ablation areas such as the Fram Strait, up to several times larger than the current atmospheric flux in the area. Calculated fl |
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ISSN: | 0967-0637 1879-0119 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.dsr.2007.04.016 |