Terrigenous helium in deep-sea sediments
Academic Article
Overview
Identity
Additional Document Info
Other
View All
Overview
abstract
We have measured the isotope ratios of helium contained in various terrigenous materials that contribute to deep-sea sedments. These materials include ice-rafted debris from the North Atlantic, Chinese Loess, and sediment collected at or near the mouths of three large rivers: the Amazon, the Ganges, and the Yangtze. We observe terrigenous 3 He/ 4 He ratios that vary from 1.8 10 -9 to 4.6 10 -7 , i.e., values that are higher than the theoretically-derived range of 10 -9 to 10 -8 . Atlantic and Pacific deep-sea sediment 3 He/ 4 He ratios can be explained by mixing of helium from similar extraterrestrial but different terrigenous sources. Terrigenous sources for North Atlantic and North Pacific sediments are characterized by 3 He and 4 He contents that are higher, and 3 He/ 4 He ratios that are lower, than those for central and eastern equatorial Pacific sediments. This is consistent with the supply to the North Atlantic and North Pacific oceans of older cratonic continental material that contains high amounts of in situ-produced nucleogenic and radiogenic helium. Terrigenous material transported to central and eastern equatorial Pacific sediments contains lower amounts of 3 He and 4 He and higher 3 He/ 4 He ratios, indicative of supply from a more juvenile Andean source. In the equatorial Atlantic (core V31-135), we have used previously-published 230 Th data to determine an extraterrestrial 3 He flux of (1.16 0.15) 10 -12 cm 3 STP.cm -2 .ka -1 , within error of that previously determined in sediments from the equatorial Pacific Ocean ([0.78 0.29] 10 -13 cm 3 STP.cm -2 .ka -1 ; Marcantonio et al., 1996).