학술논문

Efficient preservation of young terrestrial organic carbon in sandy turbidity-current deposits
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 48(9):882-887
Subject
06A|Sedimentary petrology - sed rocks, sediments
acoustic Doppler current profiler data
atmosphere
Bouma sequence
British Columbia
burial
Bute Inlet
Canada
carbon
carbon dioxide
clastic sediments
climate
cores
currents
fjords
glacial features
grain size
mud
organic carbon
oxygen
particulate materials
preservation
sand
sedimentary structures
sediments
shore features
stream sediments
stream transport
terrigenous materials
transport
turbidite
turbidity current structures
turbidity currents
Western Canada
wood
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
Burial of terrestrial biospheric particulate organic carbon in marine sediments removes CO2 from the atmosphere, regulating climate over geologic time scales. Rivers deliver terrestrial organic carbon to the sea, while turbidity currents transport river sediment further offshore. Previous studies have suggested that most organic carbon resides in muddy marine sediment. However, turbidity currents can carry a significant component of coarser sediment, which is commonly assumed to be organic carbon poor. Here, using data from a Canadian fjord, we show that young woody debris can be rapidly buried in sandy layers of turbidity current deposits (turbidites). These layers have organic carbon contents 10× higher than the overlying mud layer, and overall, woody debris makes up >70% of the organic carbon preserved in the deposits. Burial of woody debris in sands overlain by mud caps reduces their exposure to oxygen, increasing organic carbon burial efficiency. Sandy turbidity current channels are common in fjords and the deep sea; hence we suggest that previous global organic carbon burial budgets may have been underestimated.