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Environmental evolution of the East China Sea inner shelf and its constraints on pyrite sulfur contents and isotopes since the last deglaciation.
- Source :
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Marine Geology . Nov2020, Vol. 429, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p. - Publication Year :
- 2020
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Abstract
- To better understand the depositional constraints on the sulfate reduction process, we present a set of sulfur isotope data for hand-picked pyrites (δ34S pyr) from the coarse fraction (63–250 μm) of bulk sediments, coupled with the contents of carbonate, total organic carbon (TOC) and nitrogen (TN), as well as δ13C values of the TOC, from sediments of core EC2005 on the inner shelf of the East China Sea (ECS) since 16.4 ka. Our results show that core sediments were deposited in a terrestrial environment before 13.1 ka (stage I) when pyrite rarely occurred. During stages II (13.1–12.3 ka) and III (12.3–12.1 ka) seawater began to influence the core location, forming a tidal flat environment where abundant pyrites are well preserved. Then the inner shelf of the ECS was fully flooded, and two intervals with high (stage IV:12.1–6.0 ka; stage VI: 5.2–1.5 ka) and low sedimentation rate (stage V: 6.0–5.2; stage VII: 1.5 ka-present) are identified respectively. When compared with previous δ34S values of chromium-reducible sulfur (δ34S CRS) derived from the bulk sediments, δ34S pyr values are usually higher, indicating the macroscopic pyrites form in the later stages of sedimentary diagenesis when ongoing sulfate reduction has distilled porewater sulfate to a high degree. Considering the wide occurrence of biogenic shallow gas (dominated by CH 4) in these sediments, sulfate-driven anaerobic oxidation of methane (SO 4 -AOM) and organoclastic sulfate reduction (OSR) are expected to be two competitive pathways for sulfate reduction. We propose that the changes in sedimentation rate controls the pace of migration of the sulfate methane transition zone (SMTZ). When sedimentation rate is low, the SMTZ may be fixed in a certain depth (e.g., sediments deposited in stage III and V), where H 2 S is produced by SO 4 -AOM. In contrast, when sedimentation rate is very high (> 1 cm/yr), the SMTZ would be deep, and H 2 S is mostly produced by OSR. Further, our results imply that sulfur diagenesis in recent (since 1.5 ka) ECS mud sediments might be influenced by physical reworking (e.g., typhoon) and/or biological activity (bioturbation), resulting in partial reoxidation of pyrite crystals in fluid mud. Our findings therefore demonstrate that pyrite sulfur isotope compositions (bulk δ34S CRS & hand-picked δ34S pyr) are sensitive to local environmental evolution and the combined use of these two indicators can provide new insights into pathway of sulfate reduction in unsteady environments. • Constructing the depositional evolution of the East China Sea since16.4 ka. • Extreme pyrite sulfur isotopic fluctuation regulated by sedimentation rate. • Sulfur isotope of coarse pyrite is heavier than that of bulk sediments (CRS). • Sulfate reduction (OSR vs. AOM) is controlled by the pace of SMTZ migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00253227
- Volume :
- 429
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Marine Geology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 146118442
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.margeo.2020.106307