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The importance of atmospheric input of terrestrial organic material to deep sea sediments
Authors:Robert B. Gagosian  Edward T. Peltzer
Abstract:The concentrations of lipids were determined in atmospheric particle, gas and rain samples collected from the tropical North Pacific to assess lipid sources, transport mechanisms and fluxes to the ocean surface. Four lipid compound classes (aliphatic hydrocarbons, fatty alcohols, fatty acid esters, and salts) all unequivocally show a terrestrial vascular plant source. These aerosol lipids originate from wind erosion of Asian and American soils and direct emission from vegetation. The major fluxes result from rain rather than dry deposition. These fluxes are large enough to have a major potential impact on the inventory of terrestrially derived lipid material found in deep-sea sediments. This has been showm for n-alkanes, fatty alcohols, fatty acids, total lipids and for organic carbon. By comparing atmospheric and sediment trap fluxes with sediment accumulation rates, it is suggested that some biogenic terrestrial material is more protected from degradation than marine-derived material.
Keywords:atmospheric input   lipids   n-alkanes   fatty acid salts   fatty alcohols   wax esters   terrestrial material   atmospheric transport   organic paniculate matter   particles   aerosols   sedimentary sources
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