Mmr. Vanderloeff et al., RA-228 AS A TRACER FOR SHELF WATER IN THE ARCTIC-OCEAN, Deep-sea research. Part 2. Topical studies in oceanography, 42(6), 1995, pp. 1533-1553
During its formation on the vast Siberian shelves,Arctic surface water
is strongly enriched in Ra-228. When Ra-228 of surface samples from t
he Arctic interior is plotted against the river water component f(r),
derived from salinity, delta(18)O and silicate as tracers, a shelfwate
r end-member can be calculated by extrapolation. Highest values occur
in the core of the Transpolar Drift, indicating rapid transport of sur
face water, comparable to the known ice-drift pattern. Low values at I
ce Island T3 are explained by radioactive decay (5.8 year half-life) d
uring the long residence time of fresh and shelf-influenced water in t
he Beaufort Gyre. Some evidence of decay and, consequently, prolonged
transit times is also observed in the southern Nansen Basin. Future re
search is required to establish the seasonal, interannual and spatial
variability of Ra-228 on the shelves in order to determine the full po
tential of Ra-228 as a tracer for the origin and transport rates of sh
elfwater in the Arctic Basin. Apart from the usual Ra-228 signature of
bottom waters, the tracer is also observed in intermediate layers whe
re it gives evidence of recent contact with slope or shelf sediments.
The Atlantic Inflow along the Barents slope is enriched down to 2000 m
. The return flow over the Amundsen Basin and Lomonosov Ridge carries
a shelf signature of Ra-228 and Th-228 down to more than 1200 m depth,
in agreement with the enrichment observed in Cs-137. Deeper maxima ar
ound 1900-2500 m in the Nansen Basin are interpreted as inflow of bott
om water from the Norwegian Sea through Fram Strait.