75 / 2024-09-05 23:40:52
Sources of mercury in the Mariana Trench since the Last Deglaciation
Mariana Trench sediment,Last Deglaciation,Hg isotopes,Mercury
Session 10 - The biogeochemistry of trace metals in a changing ocean
Abstract Review Pending
Zhou Zhengwen / Ocean University of China
Wang Huiling / Ocean University of China
Xin Yu / Ocean University of China
Wang Yingjun / Shandong University
Liu Xiting / Ocean University of China
Tian Jiwei / Ocean University of China
Hintelmann Holger / Trent University
Yin Yongguang / Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Liu Guangliang / Florida International University
Cai Yong / Florida International University
Li Yanbin / Ocean University of China
Trench sediments receive mercury (Hg) from the upper ocean, serving as a crucial global Hg sink. To trace Hg cycling evolution in trenches before the Anthropocene, we analyzed the Hg contents and isotopes in a Mariana Trench sediment core. The Δ199Hg and Δ200Hg values, and the Δ199Hg/Δ201Hg slope indicated that Hg was influenced by atmospheric or seawater photochemical processes before deposition. Geological proxies and large negative δ202Hg values consistent with volcanic rocks suggested that the increased Hg content during the Deglacial period was due to geological Hg input. During the Holocene, atmospheric deposition was the main Hg source in the Mariana Trench, while a combination of atmospheric and biogenic sources occurred during the Last Deglaciation. Our findings indicate that Hg sources in the Mariana Trench varied from the Last Deglaciation to the Holocene, likely due to environmental and geological changes.