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Outline:
Global processes
Sediment burial of organic matter is the source for atmospheric oxygen, it links the cycles of C, S and O. About 0.1% of the carbon in the upper crust is active. The greatest reservoir is the seawater. Rivers provide the major conduit towards the preservation of terrigenous organic substances in marine sediment.
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Carbon reservoirs:
Reservoir type Sedimentary rocks Inorganic Carbonates Organic Kerogen Active (surficial) pools Inorqanic Marine DIC Soil carbonate Atmospheric CO2 Organic Soil humus Land plant tissue Seawater DOC Unit = 10^18 gC Amount 60,000 15,000
Marine sediments:
Most marine organic matter production is by phytoplankton. Most production occurs in the open ocean. About 90% of organic matter is preserved along the continental margins. Less than 10% of the organic matter reaching the ocean floor and less than 0.5% of the global productivity is preserved in marine sediments.
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Oxygen
Preservation of Organic Carbon allows a comparable amount of photoynthetically produced oxygen to escape respiration and accumulate in the atmosphere. This means that there must be an outflux for oxygen as well.
Patterns in OM preservation
Degradation and preservation are opposite processes. Patterns can be found by relating various aspects of organic matter degradation and burial to the physical or dynamic characteristics of depositional environments.
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Accumulation rate:
The sediment accumulation rate has a great effect on the reactivity and preservation of the sediment.
Measuring with sediment traps. Estimation from local primary production using an empirical function. Calculation from the sum of OM that is mineralized above and preserved below a specified sediment horizon.
Organic burial efficiency = The accumulation rate of organic matter below the diagenetically active surficial sediment divided by the organic flux to the sea floor.
Efficiencies range from less than 1% to almost 80%.
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Burial efficiency:
The burial efficiency is used as an indicator for preservation. It correlates directly with the sedimentation rate. Looking at the burial efficiencies is only useful if the organic matter is deposited for the first time. Recycled material will be more refractory.
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Local primary production. Organic matter composition and input to the sea floor. Sediment accumulation. Bioturbation rates, irrigation and reaction rates (both oxic and anoxic)
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Period of exposure to O2
The period of exposure to O2, can be determined by:
Mean depth of O2 penetration Average accumulation rate
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Most organic matter is adsorbed to mineral surfaces, they are only degradable under oxic to suboxic conditions. Surface area seems to be the most important factor in organic matter content along the continental shelves and slopes.
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Deep sea sediments show that some mechanism must overpower surface area protection.
The reason for that is long term exposure to oxygen and other electron acceptors.
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Oxic degradation:
All sediments receive: Totally refractory organic matter Oxygen sensitive organic matter Hydrolyzable organic matter
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Transition zone
A transition zone from sorptive protection along coastal marine margins to oxic degradation in the deep sea should be expected. Grain size of the particles decreases while going upwards. Accumulation rates decrease towards the sea.
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Nitrification
Denitrification is the primary mode of organic matter respiration in marine suboxic waters. Nitrification occurs most around 150 to 350 m depth.
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Degradation index:
vari AVG vari DI [ ] * fac * coef i STD var i
Var = mole percentage of the amino acid AVG + STD = mean and standard deviation Fac*coef = the factor coefficient for the amino acid
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Sedimentary organic matter preservation: an assessment and speculative synthesis. John I. Hedges, Richard G. Keil (1995) Impact of suboxia on sinking particulate organic carbon: Enhanced carbon flux and preferential degradation of amino acidsvia denitrification. Benjamin A.S. et.al (2001) Linking diagenetic alteration of amino acids and bulk organic matter reactivity. Dauwe et.al (1999)
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