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Microbial Fe(III) reduction as a potential iron source from Holocene sediments beneath Larsen Ice Shelf.

Jaewoo JungKyu-Cheul YooBrad E RosenheimTim M ConwayJae Il LeeHo Il YoonChung Yeon HwangKiho YangChristina SubtJinwook Kim
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
Recent recession of the Larsen Ice Shelf C has revealed microbial alterations of illite in marine sediments, a process typically thought to occur during low-grade metamorphism. In situ breakdown of illite provides a previously-unobserved pathway for the release of dissolved Fe2+ to porewaters, thus enhancing clay-rich Antarctic sub-ice shelf sediments as an important source of Fe to Fe-limited surface Southern Ocean waters during ice shelf retreat after the Last Glacial Maximum. When sediments are underneath the ice shelf, Fe2+ from microbial reductive dissolution of illite/Fe-oxides may be exported to the water column. However, the initiation of an oxygenated, bioturbated sediment under receding ice shelves may oxidize Fe within surface porewaters, decreasing dissolved Fe2+ export to the ocean. Thus, we identify another ice-sheet feedback intimately tied to iron biogeochemistry during climate transitions. Further constraints on the geographical extent of this process will impact our understanding of iron-carbon feedbacks during major deglaciations.
Keyphrases
  • heavy metals
  • organic matter
  • low grade
  • metal organic framework
  • aqueous solution
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • microbial community
  • high grade
  • visible light
  • climate change
  • iron deficiency