RADIOGENIC HF ISOTOPIC COMPOSITIONS OF CONTINENTAL EOLIAN DUST FROM ASIA, ITS VARIABILITY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR SEAWATER HF

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dc.contributor.author Pettke T.
dc.contributor.author Lee D.C.
dc.contributor.author Halliday A.N.
dc.contributor.author Rea D.K.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-09-17T06:49:04Z
dc.date.available 2021-09-17T06:49:04Z
dc.date.issued 2002
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=1254046
dc.identifier.citation Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2002, 202, 2, 453-464
dc.identifier.issn 0012-821X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/30270
dc.description.abstract The inorganic silicate fraction extracted from bulk pelagic sediments from the North Pacific Ocean is eolian dust. It monitors the composition of continental crust exposed to erosion in Asia. 176Lu/177Hf ratios of modern dust are sub-chondritic between 0.011 and 0.016 but slightly elevated with respect to immature sediments. Modern dust samples display a large range in Hf isotopic composition (IC), -4.70<εHf<+16.45, which encompasses that observed for the time series of DSDP cores 885/886 and piston core LL44-GPC3 extending back to the late Cretaceous. Hafnium and neodymium isotopic results are consistent with a dominantly binary mixture of dust contributed from island arc volcanic material and dust from central Asia. The Hf-Nd isotopic correlation for all modern dust samples, εHf=0.78εNd+5.66 (n=22, R2=0.79), is flatter than those reported so far for terrestrial reservoirs. Moreover, the variability in εHf of Asian dust exceeds that predicted on the basis of corresponding εNd values (-4.7<εHf<+2.5; -10.9<εNd<-10.1). This is attributed to: (1) the fixing of an important unradiogenic fraction of Hf in zircons, balanced by radiogenic Hf that is mobile in the erosional cycle, (2) the elevated Lu/Hf ratio in chemical sediments which, given time, results in a Hf signature that is radiogenic compared with Hf expected from its corresponding Nd isotopic components, and (3) the possibility that diagenetic resetting of marine sediments may incorporate a significant radiogenic Hf component into diagenetically grown minerals such as illite. Together, these processes may explain the variability and more radiogenic character of Hf isotopes when compared to the Nd isotopic signatures of Asian dust. The Hf-Nd isotope time series of eolian dust are consistent with the results of modern dust except two samples that have extremely radiogenic Hf for their Nd (εHf=+8.6 and +10.3, εNd=-9.5 and -9.8). These data may point to a source contribution of dust unresolved by Nd and Pb isotopes. The Hf IC of eolian dust input to the oceans may be more variable and more radiogenic than previously anticipated. The Hf signature of Pacific seawater, however, has varied little over the past 20 Myr, especially across the drastic increase of eolian dust flux from Asia around 3.5 Ma. Therefore, continental contributions to seawater Hf appear to be riverine rather than eolian. Current predictions regarding the relative proportions of source components to seawater Hf must account for the presence of a variable and radiogenic continental component. Data on the IC and flux of river-dissolved Hf to the oceans are urgently required to better estimate contributions to seawater Hf. This then would permit the use of Hf isotopes as a monitor of past changes in erosion.
dc.subject HF-177/HF-176
dc.subject DUST
dc.subject FERROMANGANESE COMPOSITION
dc.subject PACIFIC OCEAN
dc.subject SEA WATER
dc.subject EROSION
dc.subject ODP SITE 885
dc.subject ODP SITE 886
dc.subject Cretaceous
dc.title RADIOGENIC HF ISOTOPIC COMPOSITIONS OF CONTINENTAL EOLIAN DUST FROM ASIA, ITS VARIABILITY AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR SEAWATER HF
dc.type Статья
dc.subject.age Mesozoic::Cretaceous
dc.subject.age Мезозой::Меловая ru


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