An initial multiple biogeochemical dataset was acquired from the first discovered asphalt seeps in the Brazil margin during deep-sea dive surveys in 2013 using a manned submersible. These surveys were conducted on the outer escarpment of the North São Paulo Plateau. Sediment cores taken from the submersible were processed for pore water and sediment biogeochemistry. The silica concentration, as a chemical geothermometer, showed a steep gradient in the pore water, which indicates the possibility of an active brine system operating in the seepage area. Rare earth elements were used as powerful tracers of chemical processes. Low rare earth element concentrations in both asphalt and Fe-Mn oxyhydroxide-phase sediments suggests that rare earth elements were released during the oil fractionation and biodegradation processes and further depleted under the reducing environment. The main bacterial communities of the sediment were Proteobacteria in the asphalt sites, while at non-asphalt sites, the main bacterial communities of sediment were Firmicutes. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes were used to determine the food sources of the heterotrophs, and results suggest that asphalt probably provides a carbon source for these benthic animals. This study may provide useful information to clarify the impact of heavy hydrocarbon seepage on the marine ecosystem.
Concentrations
of 137Cs in seawater, seabed sediment,
and pore water collected from the area around Fukushima were investigated
from 2015 to 2018, and the potential of coastal sediments to supply
radiocesium to the bottom environment was evaluated. The 137Cs concentration in the pore water ranged from 33 to 1934 mBq L–1 and was 10–40 times higher than that in the
overlying water (seawater overlying within 30 cm on the seabed). At
most stations, the 137Cs concentrations in the overlying
water and the pore water were approximately proportional to those
in the sediment. The conditional partition coefficient between pore
water and sediment was [0.9–14] × 102 L kg–1, independent of the year of sampling. These results
indicated that an equilibrium of 137Cs between pore water
and sediment has been established in a relatively short period, and 137Cs in the pore water is gradually exported to seawater near
the seabed. A simple box model estimation based on these results showed
that 137Cs in the sediment decreased by about 6% per year
by desorption/diffusion of 137Cs from the seabed.
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