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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2014-01-28
    Description: Examination of the behavior of oxygen and hydrogen during weathering reactions shows that river dissolved load, although widely used, is an imperfect tracer of chemical denudation. At the current state of knowledge, none of the metrics for river total dissolved loads (such as the silicate-derived total dissolved solids, TDS sil = Ca 2+ + Mg 2+ + Na + + K + + SiO 2 , converted or not to equivalent oxides) account, in a mechanistic manner, for the transfer of oxygen and hydrogen between the solid and fluid phase during weathering reactions. We assess that chemical denudation derived from TDS sil will significantly overestimate the true chemical denudation for weathering of Ca-feldspar to kaolinite, whereas weathering of water-rich sedimentary rocks will be characterized by an underestimation of chemical denudation by TDS sil . For a handful of field sites, we estimate that the bias is lower than ±10%. The sign and extent of the bias depends on the nature of bedrock and on weathering conditions. Altogether, our analysis questions the broadly accepted concept of chemical denudation rate.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-04-12
    Description: Lithium (Li) isotopes are a promising tracer of chemical weathering processes for both modern and ancient times. In order to improve the use of Li isotopes in the sedimentary record, here we calibrate the relationship between weathering intensity and detrital Li isotope composition ( 7 Li) using the fine fraction of modern large river sediments. Through independent estimates for sediment provenance to calculate the Li isotope signature of the rock from which the sediments derive through weathering, we show that source rock variability (in particular the relative contribution of sedimentary versus igneous rocks) must be corrected for before using Li isotopes as a weathering proxy. We also show that for rivers draining mountain ranges, the contribution to river sediments of particles derived from sedimentary rocks is correlated to their Li/Al ratio, making it possible to use Li contents to estimate the average source rock composition. Once corrected for bedrock variability, the Li isotope signature defines a negative relationship with the weathering intensity (ratio between silicate weathering rate and total denudation rate), with highest Li isotope fractionation for the highest weathering intensity. Altogether, we propose a set of new relationships between weathering, erosion, provenance, and Li isotopes that can be used to quantify present-day and paleo-weathering using detrital sediment.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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