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Radium distribution, seawater

Joly observed elevated "Ra activities in deep-sea sediments that he attributed to water column scavenging and removal processes. This hypothesis was later challenged with the hrst seawater °Th measurements (parent of "Ra), and these new results conhrmed that radium was instead actively migrating across the marine sediment-water interface. This seabed source stimulated much activity to use radium as a tracer for ocean circulation. Unfortunately, the utility of Ra as a deep ocean circulation tracer never came to full fruition as biological cycling has been repeatedly shown to have a strong and unpredictable effect on the vertical distribution of this isotope. [Pg.48]

The biological pump influences, to varying degrees, the distribution of many elements in seawater besides carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and silicon. Barium, cadmium, germanium, zinc, nickel, iron, selenium, yttrium, and many of the REEs show depth distributions that very closely resemble profiles of the major nutrients. Additionally, beryllium, scandium, titanium, copper, zirconium, and radium have profiles where concentrations increase with depth, although the correspondence of these profiles with nutrient profiles is not as tight (Nozaki, 1997). [Pg.2949]

In addition to its distribution in minute amounts in many rocks and minerals, radium is found in inuiiy mineral springs1 and in seawater. [Pg.59]


See other pages where Radium distribution, seawater is mentioned: [Pg.571]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.594]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.3087]    [Pg.687]    [Pg.76]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.221 ]




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