Barium isotope cycling in the marine environment: pathways of fractionation and implications for paleoceanographic applications
Barium isotope cycling in the marine environment: pathways of fractionation and implications for paleoceanographic applications
Date
2022-06
Authors
Middleton, Julien T.
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DOI
10.1575/1912/28622
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Keywords
Barium isotopes
Geochemistry
Paleoceanography
Geochemistry
Paleoceanography
Abstract
Removal of particulate organic carbon (POC) from sunlit surface waters into the deep ocean represents a climatically important sink of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), linking the biogeochemical cycling of POC to CO2-driven climate change. As POC is not well preserved in the sediment record, other proxies, including the chemistry of barium (Ba) in the ocean and through the sedimentary record, offer an avenue to investigate oceanic carbon export through Earth’s history. This thesis seeks to constrain the controls on the formation, cycling, and isotopic signature of the main particulate phase of marine barium, the mineral barite (BaSO4) through its inception in the water column, during deposition, and ultimately into the rock record. To that end, I characterize the depth, spatial region, and general controls on particulate Ba formation in the South Pacific Ocean through shipboard experimentation and find that particulate Ba forms mainly in the surface of the Polar Frontal Zone in the presence of large particles and microbial activity. Next, I characterize the effect of ion exchange on BaSO4, a process previously unstudied under marine conditions, in a laboratory setting. Ion exchange occurs rapidly between dissolved Ba and BaSO4 and imparts a characteristic net offset between the Ba isotope composition of the dissolved and solid phase, which arises through a combination of Ba isotope fractionation during both precipitation and dissolution. Finally, I investigate the role of ion exchange in marine settings using co-located pore fluids and sedimented BaSO4. Modeling constrained by data from natural samples produce results that are consistent with the laboratory study, suggesting that this mode of isotopic fractionation impacts Ba isotopes in the environment and must be accounted for when applying Ba based climate proxies.
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Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Chemical Oceanography at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution May 2022.
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Middleton, J. T. (2022). Barium isotope cycling in the marine environment: pathways of fractionation and implications for paleoceanographic applications [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/28622