Title of article :
210Po and 210Pb cycling in a hydrothermal vent zone in
the coastal Aegean Sea
Author/Authors :
F. Boisson، نويسنده , , J.-C. Miquel، نويسنده , , O. Cotret، نويسنده , , S.W. Fowler، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
To quantify the potential enhancement of naturally-occurring 210Po and 210Pb that may result from the high
sulfur-reducing and sulfur-oxidizing regimes associated with hydrothermal vents, sinking particles from both inside
and outside vent areas and benthic molluscs grazing on or living near bacterial mats in the vent zone were collected
off Milos Island ŽAegean Sea. and analyzed for their 210Po and 210Pb content. There was no significant difference in
the range of 210Po specific activities measured in particulate material collected by sediment traps in a control area
and in the vent area; the resultant 210Po levels were of the same order of magnitude as literature values reported for
other Mediterranean coastal areas. 210Pb levels in sinking particles from the control site tended to be higher than
those measured in the vent zone, as demonstrated by the lower 210Po 210Pb ratios observed in particles from the
control site. Nevertheless, these 210Pb levels were also comparable with similar 210Pb data reported for the
northwestern Mediterranean Sea. The 210Po and 210Pb vertical particulate fluxes were, on average, higher in the vent
zone as a consequence of the higher particle flux. This observation indicates that vents can indirectly control the flux
of these natural radionuclides by affecting the types and amount of particles produced in hydrothermal areas. The
210Po levels measured in a gastropod and a bivalve living on or near the microbial mat in the vent zone were higher
than values reported for non-vent gastropods and bivalves from the NW Mediterranean Sea, an observation which
suggests that an enhanced food chain transfer of 210Po may occur in the vicinity of vents off Milos Island.
Nevertheless, the lack of a general enhancement of 210Po and 210Pb in the marine particulate samples collected
indicates that any input of these radionuclides through venting activity may have a minimal effect in the surrounding
environment.
Keywords :
Food chain transport , molluscs , particle flux , natural radioactivity
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment