Upload
jared-hall
View
216
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Climate change and calcium
• Calcium from geochemical weathering causes climate to become cooler
• Calcium from dust does not have a climate change effect
Carbon Reservoirs• Reservoirs are:
– Atmosphere– Terrestrial biosphere– Oceans– Fossil fuels
• Reservoirs or components of reservoirs that release carbon to other reservoirs are called sources
• Those that absorb carbon are called sinks• This overall network of storage or absorption and
transfer is known as the carbon cycle
Silicate Weathering
• Precipitation from the atmosphere falls to Earth as bicarbonate acid rain, with a natural acidity
• CO2 (gas) + H2O (liquid) --> H2CO3 (carbonic acid)
• Carbonic acid weathers the rocks on the Earth's surface, releasing ions of calcium (Ca++) and bicarbonate (HCO-
3)
into the oceans
• An example reaction is shown on the next slide
Urey Reaction
• Named after Harold Urey, Nobel-prize winning geochemist
• This reaction is an example of the conversion of silicates to carbonate
• CaSiO3 + CO2 = SiO2 + CaCO3
• Wollasonite + carbon dioxide = quartz + limestone
Harold C. Urey, 1893-1981
Carbonate-Silicate Cycle Diagram
Precipitation of Limestone
• Soluble carbonates may be converted to solid form by inorganic chemical reactions, or by organisms which extract lime and use it to build shells
• Limy muds or biochemical shells sink to the ocean floor, where the lime may be converted to limestone
• This stores large amounts of carbon on the ocean floor
Carbon Sequesterization
• Limestone added to the ocean flow sequesters carbon
• The oceans become sinks for carbon
• The atmosphere, which was the source of the carbon, is a source
• Carbon is depleted in the atmosphere
Carbonate – Silicate Cycle
• Cycle combines the Carbon Cycle with Silicate Weathering
• A steady state is reached, where the fluxes into and out of each reservoir are constant
• Changes to the system can upset the balance• There have been claims that this cycle
provides a self-regulating mechanism for CO2 in the atmosphere
Example: Plate Collisions
• When India hit Asia, the Himalayan mountains were pushed up
• Mountain ranges increase precipitation• The extra rain weathered the newly exposed
silicate minerals, and started the process of carbon sequesterization in the ocean
• This removed carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
Himalayas caused global cooling
Ice Age Trigger
• Eldridge Moores, 1996 president of the Geological Society of America, has suggested that the uplift of the Himalayas may have triggered the Pleistocene glacial advances
Eldridge Moores
DUST: MORE AROUND THAN YOU THINK
DUST STORM IN FEBRUARY
Determination of Sources of Ca to
Surface Waters in the Rocky Mountains using mineralogic and Sr-
isotopic dataDavid Clow1, Thomas D. Bullen2, Mark W. Williams3, John A. Fitzpatrick2, and Julie K. Sueker4
PROBLEM STATEMENT: Surface water in
granitoid terrain in the Rocky Mountains
often has higher Ca/Na ratios than can be
explained by weathering of major primary minerals in
local bedrock.
APPROACH
• Chemical analysis of calcium cannot discriminate sources of calcium– There is not a unique signature of calcium from
chemical analysis
• Strontium substitutes for calcium in chemical reactions
• Different sources of strontium have different isotopic ratios
HYPOTHESES
• (1) nonstoichiometric weathering of plagioclase
• (2) weathering of eolian carbonates
• (3) weathering of trace calcite in granitoid bedrock.
METHODS
• Rock and stream water samples were collected from sites in the Wind River Range of Wyoming, and the Park and Front Ranges of Colorado. Soil samples were collected from a subset of sites in the Front Range.
nonstoichiometric weathering of plagioclase
• evaluated by analyzing the zonation characteristics and chemical composition of plagioclase crystals in 40 rock samples collected from 12 recently glaciated basins underlain by Proterozoic granitoid bedrock in the Wind River Range of Wyoming, the Front Range of Colorado, and the Park Range of Colorado.
• Thin sections were made from the core of each rock sample, and 10 plagioclase crystals in each thin section were examined using a petrographic microscope.
Plagioclase zonation
Plagioclase zonation
• No zonation of plagioclase found
• Reject hypothesis one
• Reject Williams et al. 1993
weathering of eolian carbonates
• evaluating patterns in 87Sr/86Sr of exchangeable cations in soils collected from three different landscapes: forest, alpine, and near glaciers. These landscapes correspond to progressively younger and fresher soils.
weathering of trace calcite in bedrock
• tested by measuring the carbonate content of the rock samples used in the thin-section analysis. Cores cut from the interior of the rock samples were crushed into powder, and the carbonate content of the powder was measured by coulometric titration
87Sr/86Sr of exchangeable cations
in soil
inorganic carbon concentrations (as
CaCO3) in rock samples
Scatterplot of Ca/Na in stream water
against % CaCO3 in rocks
Scatterplot of Ca/Na in stream water
against fraction of basin area with slope
≥30°
Scatterplot of 87Sr/86Sr in stream water against Ca/Na in
stream water
Modeling strontium content
• Multivariate stepwise linear regression was performed– basin slope– basin size– amount of Pleistocene glacial till– granite/gneiss ratio
• explanatory variables were normalized to 1
Scatterplot of predicted 87Sr/86Sr against observed 87Sr/86Sr in stream water
Ca behavior may be summarized as follows: weathering of trace
calcite occurs primarily in areas
with steep slopes (≥ 30°) because that is
where physical weathering is most
active.
Eolian deposition of carbonates is important in cirques on the lee (east) side of the continental divide. Small glaciers and perennial snowfields occur in those locations because prevailing westerly winds deposit snow that is carried from the west side of the divide there; eolian deposition probably follows a similar pattern.