Distribution, Sources, and Dynamics of Particulate Matter Along
Trans-Arctic Sections
Abstract
In order to better understand the sources, sinks and
hydrodynamic/biogeochemical influences on particulate matter
distribution and variability in Arctic basins, we combined data from two
2015 fall expeditions: one from Bering Strait (USCGC Healy) and the
other from Barents Sea (R/V Polarstern) meeting at the North Pole.
Sections of beam attenuation due to particles were overlain by salinity,
temperature, and chlorophyll-a fluorescence (Chl-a), and
with nitrate contours on Chl-a sections to compare with
concentrations of particulate matter (PM) and particulate organic carbon
(POC) from full water column filtered samples. Dense Pacific water
moving swiftly through Bering Strait erodes and carries sediment-laden
waters onto the Chukchi Shelf, much of it moving in and above Barrow
Canyon or is entrained in eddies. This nutrient-rich Pacific water sinks
below the low-salinity, nutrient-poor polar mixed layer, forming a thick
lens of high salinity water known as Pacific halocline waters. The
nutrient-poor mixed layer inhibits photosynthesis in surface waters of
Canada and Makarov Basins, but subsurface Chl-a maxima are
observed when nutrients are available. Surface-water POC biomass appears
greater in Barents Sea than in Beaufort Sea because nutrient-rich
Atlantic water entering Barents Sea is not isolated from surface waters
by strong stratification. Surface water freezes, creating high-density
water that cascades into 400 m basins in Barents Sea and into deep
Nansen Basin, eroding sediment that forms patches of nepheloid layers in
the shallow basins. Nepheloid layers in the deep basins are very weak,
consistent with a lack of strong currents there.