2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.orggeochem.2012.08.002
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Soil organic matter transport along an sub-Arctic river–sea transect

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Cited by 32 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 66 publications
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“…Interestingly, not all correlations between the BIT index and δ 13 C were nonlinear (Figure c). Some studies have shown that the BIT index correlated linearly with δ 13 C [e.g., Doğrul Selver et al ., ; Smith et al ., , ], while some showed only a weak or no significant correlation [e.g., Kim et al ., ; Walsh et al ., ; Xing et al ., ; Wu et al ., ]. Smith et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…Interestingly, not all correlations between the BIT index and δ 13 C were nonlinear (Figure c). Some studies have shown that the BIT index correlated linearly with δ 13 C [e.g., Doğrul Selver et al ., ; Smith et al ., , ], while some showed only a weak or no significant correlation [e.g., Kim et al ., ; Walsh et al ., ; Xing et al ., ; Wu et al ., ]. Smith et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…[] also observed a nonlinear correlation between BIT and δ 13 C along a cross‐shelf Arctic transect in the East Siberian Sea (ESS) from the mouth of the Kolyma River to the middle of the ESS, but they found that another soil index, R soil , based on bacteriohopanepolyols (BHPs), showed a strong linear correlation with δ 13 C. They attributed this to the difference in the addition of the marine components crenarchaeol and bacteriohopanetetrol (BHT) rather than the difference in the removal (degradation and/or hydrodynamic sorting) of brGDGTs, soil marker BHPs, and other terrestrial‐derived OC throughout the transect, because they found that soil marker BHPs appeared to be removed more rapidly than brGDGTs [ Doğrul Selver et al ., ]. In addition, in contrast to the brGDGTs, which was derived mainly from fluvial transport, coastal erosion was thought to be responsible for the strong linear correlation between R soil and δ 13 C because coastal erosion may account for the majority of the BHP and bulk δ 13 C signals in this region, [ Doğrul Selver et al ., ], as opposed to another (sub‐Arctic ) Arctic system that has less coastal erosion [ Doğrul Selver et al ., ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Erosion rates from ICDs are 5-7 times greater than other coastal permafrost and are responsible for a large proportion of the sediment and OC input to the ESAS (Vonk et al, 2012, and references therein). Biomarker investigations have been able to identify and model the contribution from fluvial and coastal delivery processes separately (Bischoff et al, 2016;Dogrul Selver et al, 2015;Sparkes et al, 2015). Tesi et al (2016) showed that biomarker and radiocarbon values differed between areas dominated by ICDs (from coastal erosion) and topsoil (from river erosion), and that these values varied between size and density fractions.…”
Section: Study Area and Sample Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(a) and (b)) for these compounds are m/z 151 (from [M + H] + precursor ion m/z 761, terminal group not acetylated) and m/z 192 (from [M + H] + precursor ion m/z 802, terminal group with one acetylated functionality), respectively. The exact TG structures of these two compounds are currently unknown, meaning that they are known simply as ‘Adenosylhopane Type‐2′ ( If , IIf ) and ‘Adenosylhopane Type‐3′ ( If’ , IIf’ ), respectively . The equivalent [M + H] + ions for the non‐acetylated structures as well as the proposed terminal group ions (by analogy with adenosylhopane; Figs.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%