Low rates of rock organic carbon oxidation and anthropogenic cycling of rhenium in a slowly denuding landscape

Author:

Ogrič Mateja1ORCID,Dellinger Mathieu123ORCID,Grant Katherine E.1,Galy Valier4,Gu Xin567,Brantley Susan L.56ORCID,Hilton Robert G.18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography Durham University Durham UK

2. Department of Earth Sciences Durham University Durham UK

3. Environnements Dynamiques et Territoires de la Montagne (EDYTEM) CNRS – Université Savoie Mont‐Blanc Le Bourget du Lac France

4. Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole Massachusetts USA

5. Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University Park Pennsylvania USA

6. Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvamia USA

7. Environmental Sciences Division Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge Tennessee USA

8. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

Abstract

AbstractThe oxidation of petrogenic organic carbon (OCpetro) is a source of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere over geological timescales. The rates of OCpetro oxidation in locations that experience low rates of denudation remain poorly constrained, despite these landscapes dominating Earth's continental surface area. Here, we track OCpetro oxidation using radiocarbon and the trace element rhenium (Re) in the deep weathering profiles, soils and stream waters of the Susquehanna Shale Hills Critical Zone Observatory (PA, USA). In a ridge‐top borehole, radiocarbon measurements reveal the presence of a broad OCpetro weathering front, with a first‐order assessment of ~40% loss occurring over ~6 m. However, the low OCpetro concentration (< 0.05 wt%) and inputs of radiocarbon throughout the deepest parts of the profile complicate the assessment of OCpetro loss. The OCpetro weathering front coincides with a zone of Re depletion (~90% loss), and we estimate that > 80% of Re in the rock is associated with OCpetro, based on Re/Na and Re/S ratios. Using estimates of long‐term denudation rates, the observed OCpetro loss and the Re proxy are equivalent to a low OCpetro oxidation yield of < 1.7 × 10−2 tC km−2 yr−1. This is consistent with the low OCpetro concentrations and low denudation rates at this location. In addition, we find the surface cycle of Re is decoupled from that of deep weathering, with an enrichment of Re in surface soils and elevated Re concentrations in stream water, precipitation, and shallow groundwater. A mass balance model shows that this can be explained by a historical anthropogenic contribution of Re through atmospheric deposition. We estimate that the topsoil Re pool could take decades to centuries to deplete and call for a renewed focus on anthropogenic perturbation of the surface Re cycle in low denudation rate settings.

Funder

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Earth-Surface Processes,Geography, Planning and Development

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