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Quantitative compensation of grain-size effects in elemental concentration: A Korean coastal sediments case study.

Authors :
Jung, Hoi-Soo
Lim, Dhongil
Xu, Zhaokai
Kang, Jung-Hoon
Source :
Estuarine Coastal & Shelf Science. Dec2014, Vol. 151, p69-77. 9p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Element concentrations ( C element ) of the sediments in the diverse Korean coastal environments were constrained strongly by the grain-size effect (GSE), especially after compensation for metal-free carbonate and organic material contents. However, the GSE in some elements (especially metallic elements) was not completely offset by conventional Al-normalization ( C element / C Al ratio), and further the best-fit regression lines between the concentrations of Al and elements may not be linear, but instead curved, and also cannot pass through the origin point (0, 0). The results suggest the presence of conventional GSE (primary GSE) as well as another GSE (i.e., secondary GSE), which was well supported by the factor analysis for the variable of C element / C Al ratios. Such primary and secondary GSEs are likely caused by physical and chemical processes, respectively, such as the quartz-dilution effect by metal-free, coarse-grained sediments and diagenetic reactions in organic-rich, fine-grained sediments. Furthermore, these GSEs in Korean coastal sediments can be quantitatively normalized by a quadratic equation: C element = a 0 · C Al + a 1 · ( C Al ) 2 , where a 0 and a 1 are constants for the primary and the secondary GSEs, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02727714
Volume :
151
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Estuarine Coastal & Shelf Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99831278
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2014.09.024