1. Manganese flux from continental margin sediments in a transect through the oxygen minimum
- Author
-
Virginia A. Elrod, Tammy E. Kilgore, Kenneth H. Coale, Jocelyn L. Nowicki, Helen D. Iams, William M. Berelson, Kenneth S. Johnson, Teresa L. Coley, and W. Russell Fairey
- Subjects
geography ,Multidisciplinary ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Continental shelf ,fungi ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Continental shelf pump ,Manganese ,Oxygen minimum zone ,Bottom water ,Oceanography ,chemistry ,Continental margin ,Benthic zone ,parasitic diseases ,Limiting oxygen concentration ,geographic locations ,Geology - Abstract
The flux of manganese from continental margin sediments to the ocean was measured with a free-vehicle, benthic flux chamber in a transect across the continental shelf and upper slope of the California margin. The highest fluxes were observed on the shallow continental shelf. Manganese flux decreased linearly with bottom water oxygen concentration, and the lowest fluxes occurred in the oxygen minimum zone (at a depth of 600 to 1000 meters). Although the flux of manganese from continental shelf sediments can account for the elevated concentrations observed in shallow, coastal waters, the flux from sediments that intersect the oxygen minimum cannot produce the subsurface concentration maximum of dissolved manganese that is observed in the Pacific Ocean.
- Published
- 1992