Nature Communications | 2019

New isotope constraints on the Mg oceanic budget point to cryptic modern dolomite formation

 
 
 
 

Abstract


The oceanic magnesium budget is important to our understanding of Earth’s carbon cycle, because similar processes control both (e.g., weathering, volcanism, and carbonate precipitation). However, dolomite sedimentation and low-temperature hydrothermal circulation remain enigmatic oceanic Mg sinks. In recent years, magnesium isotopes (δ26Mg) have provided new constraints on the Mg cycle, but the lack of data for the low-temperature hydrothermal isotope fractionation has hindered this approach. Here we present new δ26Mg data for low-temperature hydrothermal fluids, demonstrating preferential 26Mg incorporation into the oceanic crust, on average by εsolid-fluid\u2009≈\u20091.6‰. These new data, along with the constant seawater δ26Mg over the past ~20\u2009Myr, require a significant dolomitic sink (estimated to be 1.5–2.9\u2009Tmol\u2009yr−1; 40–60% of the oceanic Mg outputs). This estimate argues strongly against the conventional view that dolomite formation has been negligible in the Neogene and points to the existence of significant hidden dolomite formation. Earth’s carbon cycle and oceanic magnesium cycle are controlled by processes such as weathering, volcanism and precipitation of carbonates, such as dolomite. Here, the authors contradict the view that modern dolomite formation is rare and suggest instead that dolomite accounts for ~40–60% of the global oceanic Mg output in the last 20\u2009Ma.

Volume 10
Pages None
DOI 10.1038/s41467-019-13514-6
Language English
Journal Nature Communications

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