1. SPM control on the partitioning and balance of 210Po and 210Pb in high-turbidity surface waters of the East China Sea.
- Author
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Bi, Qianqian, Zhang, Fenfen, Deng, Bing, and Du, Jinzhou
- Subjects
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WATER , *ATMOSPHERIC deposition , *PARTICULATE matter , *WATER currents , *CHEMICAL processes , *RADIOACTIVE fallout - Abstract
210Po and 210Pb are well-known tracer pairs for some biomass and chemical processes in the marine system. In this study, 210Po and 210Pb were analyzed in surface seawater collected from the East China Sea (ECS), in atmospheric deposition, and in riverine input water collected along the ECS coast. The atmospheric fallouts of 210Po and 210Pb were higher in the dry season, due to the arrival of storm dust from the northwestern region of China. In the riverine input water, the particulate 210Po and 210Pb dominated (corresponding to 33–94% and 50–92% of the total, respectively), especially during the flood season. In the surface seawaters, the percentage of particulate 210Po (17–85%) was generally greater than that of 210Pb (10–76%). Additionally, in the Changjiang Estuary, log K d (Po) and log K d (Pb) were negatively correlated with log suspended particulate matter (SPM) (R = 0.71, P = 0.013 for Po, R = 0.67, P = 0.019 for Pb). 210Pb showed a stronger "particle effect" than 210Po when SPM <1.00 mg L−1, and vice versa when SPM >1.00 mg L−1. The deficit of 210Po relative to 210Pb gradually decreased from the Changjiang Diluted Water, to the Shelf Merged Water and the Taiwan Warm Current Water. The mass balance of 210Po and 210Pb in the water column of the estuary indicated that the Changjiang River was the dominating input source (providing 91% and 88% of the 210Po and 210Pb, respectively); meanwhile, the shelf export was the dominating output source (accounting for 68% and 78% of the 210Po and 210Pb, respectively). • Particulate 210Po and 210Pb were dominant in the high-turbidity surface water of ECS. • The deficiency of 210Po relative to 210Pb decreased with offshore water masses. • 210Pb showed a stronger "particle effect" than 210Po when SPM < 1.00 mg L−1, and vice versa when SPM > 1.00 mg L−1. • The predominant source and sink of 210Po and 210Pb in the estuary are the river input and shelf report. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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