Black carbon from the Mississippi river: Quantities, sources, and potential implications for the global carbon cycle

Environmental Science and Technology
By: , and 

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Abstract

Black carbon (BC) may be a major component of riverine carbon exported to the ocean, but its flux from large rivers is unknown. Furthermore, the global distribution of BC between natural and anthropogenic sources remains uncertain. We have determined BC concentrations in suspended sediments of the Mississippi River, the 7th largest river in the world in terms of sediment and water discharge, during high flow and low flow in 1999. The 1999 annual flux of BC from the Mississippi River was 5 × 10-4 petagrams (1 Pg = 1015 g = 1 gigaton). We also applied a principal components analysis to particulate-phase high molecular weight polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon isomer ratios in Mississippi River suspended sediments. In doing so, we determined that ∼27% of the BC discharged from the Mississippi River in 1999 originated from fossil fuel combustion (coal and smelter-derived combustion), implicating fluvial BC as an important source of anthropogenic BC contamination into the ocean. Using our value for BC flux and the annual estimate for BC burial in ocean sediments, we calculate that, in 1999, the Mississippi River discharged ∼5% of the BC buried annually in the ocean. These results have important implications, not only for the global carbon cycle but also for the fluvial discharge of particulate organic contaminants into the world's oceans.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Black carbon from the Mississippi river: Quantities, sources, and potential implications for the global carbon cycle
Series title Environmental Science and Technology
DOI 10.1021/es015834b
Volume 36
Issue 11
Year Published 2002
Language English
Publisher ACS Publications
Description 7 p.
First page 2296
Last page 2302
Country United States
State Louisiana
Other Geospatial Lower Mississippi River
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