Quantification of iron-rich volcanogenic dust emissions and deposition over the ocean from Icelandic dust sources
Iceland has extremely active dust sources that result in large-scale emissions and deposition on land and at sea. The dust has a volcanogenic origin of basaltic composition with about 10% Fe content. We used two independent methods to quantify dust emission from Iceland and dust deposition at sea. F...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2014-12-01
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Series: | Biogeosciences |
Online Access: | http://www.biogeosciences.net/11/6623/2014/bg-11-6623-2014.pdf |
Summary: | Iceland has extremely active dust sources that result in large-scale
emissions and deposition on land and at sea. The dust has a volcanogenic origin of
basaltic composition with about 10% Fe content. We used two independent
methods to quantify dust emission from Iceland and dust deposition at sea.
Firstly, the aerial extent (map) of deposition on land was extended to ocean
areas around Iceland. Secondly, surveys of the number of dust events over the past
decades and calculations of emissions and sea deposition for the dust storms
were made. The results show that total emissions range from 30.5 (dust-event-based
calculation) to 40.1 million t yr<sup>−1</sup> (map calculation), which places Iceland
among the most active dust sources on Earth. Ocean deposition ranges between
5.5 (dust event calculations) and 13.8 million tons (map calculation).
Calculated iron deposition from Icelandic dust ranges between 0.567 and 1.4
million tons, which are distributed over wide areas (>370 000 km<sup>2</sup>)
and consist of fine reactive volcanic materials. The paper provides the first
quantitative estimate of total dust emissions and oceanic deposition from
Iceland. Iron is a limiting nutrient for primary production in the oceans
around Iceland, and the dust is likely to affect Fe levels in Icelandic ocean
waters. |
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ISSN: | 1726-4170 1726-4189 |