Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > 234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of se...
View graph of relations

234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf. / Muir, G. K. P.; Pates, Jackie M.; Karageorgis, A. P. et al.
In: Continental Shelf Research, Vol. 25, No. 19-20, 12.2005, p. 2476-2490.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Muir, GKP, Pates, JM, Karageorgis, AP & Kaberi, H 2005, '234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf.', Continental Shelf Research, vol. 25, no. 19-20, pp. 2476-2490. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2005.08.009

APA

Muir, G. K. P., Pates, J. M., Karageorgis, A. P., & Kaberi, H. (2005). 234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf. Continental Shelf Research, 25(19-20), 2476-2490. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2005.08.009

Vancouver

Muir GKP, Pates JM, Karageorgis AP, Kaberi H. 234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf. Continental Shelf Research. 2005 Dec;25(19-20):2476-2490. doi: 10.1016/j.csr.2005.08.009

Author

Muir, G. K. P. ; Pates, Jackie M. ; Karageorgis, A. P. et al. / 234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf. In: Continental Shelf Research. 2005 ; Vol. 25, No. 19-20. pp. 2476-2490.

Bibtex

@article{0ea33ddeae3a4c4b92301c99b30eb70c,
title = "234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf.",
abstract = "234Th:238U disequilibria have been used extensively as tracers of particle dynamics in marine environments. 234Th (t1/2=24.1 days) can be used as “proxy” for particle reactive pollutants, due to their similar rapid rate of scavenging onto particles and subsequent removal from the water column, to the sediments. Radioactive disequilibrium can be exploited to determine the rates and time-scales of processes occurring over days to months; in this instance the residence times of dissolved and particulate species with the benthic nepheloid layer (BNL). Three sampling cruises were undertaken in Thermaikos Gulf (NW Aegean Sea) during contrasting periods, to examine the impact of natural and anthropogenic activity on sediment resuspension. September and October 2001 represented background and trawling periods, respectively; January 2002 represented a mixed period, of trawling and storms. Dissolved 234Th is scavenged actively at the BNL, in the presence of suspended particulate material (SPM), with a mean residence time of 16 days. There is a weak inverse correlation between dissolved 234Th residence time and SPM concentration in the BNL, with the shortest residence times occurring during October 2001. No relationship was observed between particulate 234Th activities and SPM concentrations, indicating that particles are rapidly removed from the system, either by sinking or advection. The mean particulate 234Th residence time is 5 days.",
keywords = "Thorium, Resuspension, Radioactive tracers, Greece, Thermaikos Gulf",
author = "Muir, {G. K. P.} and Pates, {Jackie M.} and Karageorgis, {A. P.} and H. Kaberi",
year = "2005",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1016/j.csr.2005.08.009",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "2476--2490",
journal = "Continental Shelf Research",
issn = "0278-4343",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "19-20",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - 234Th:238U disequilibrium as an indicator of sediment resuspension in the Thermaikos Gulf.

AU - Muir, G. K. P.

AU - Pates, Jackie M.

AU - Karageorgis, A. P.

AU - Kaberi, H.

PY - 2005/12

Y1 - 2005/12

N2 - 234Th:238U disequilibria have been used extensively as tracers of particle dynamics in marine environments. 234Th (t1/2=24.1 days) can be used as “proxy” for particle reactive pollutants, due to their similar rapid rate of scavenging onto particles and subsequent removal from the water column, to the sediments. Radioactive disequilibrium can be exploited to determine the rates and time-scales of processes occurring over days to months; in this instance the residence times of dissolved and particulate species with the benthic nepheloid layer (BNL). Three sampling cruises were undertaken in Thermaikos Gulf (NW Aegean Sea) during contrasting periods, to examine the impact of natural and anthropogenic activity on sediment resuspension. September and October 2001 represented background and trawling periods, respectively; January 2002 represented a mixed period, of trawling and storms. Dissolved 234Th is scavenged actively at the BNL, in the presence of suspended particulate material (SPM), with a mean residence time of 16 days. There is a weak inverse correlation between dissolved 234Th residence time and SPM concentration in the BNL, with the shortest residence times occurring during October 2001. No relationship was observed between particulate 234Th activities and SPM concentrations, indicating that particles are rapidly removed from the system, either by sinking or advection. The mean particulate 234Th residence time is 5 days.

AB - 234Th:238U disequilibria have been used extensively as tracers of particle dynamics in marine environments. 234Th (t1/2=24.1 days) can be used as “proxy” for particle reactive pollutants, due to their similar rapid rate of scavenging onto particles and subsequent removal from the water column, to the sediments. Radioactive disequilibrium can be exploited to determine the rates and time-scales of processes occurring over days to months; in this instance the residence times of dissolved and particulate species with the benthic nepheloid layer (BNL). Three sampling cruises were undertaken in Thermaikos Gulf (NW Aegean Sea) during contrasting periods, to examine the impact of natural and anthropogenic activity on sediment resuspension. September and October 2001 represented background and trawling periods, respectively; January 2002 represented a mixed period, of trawling and storms. Dissolved 234Th is scavenged actively at the BNL, in the presence of suspended particulate material (SPM), with a mean residence time of 16 days. There is a weak inverse correlation between dissolved 234Th residence time and SPM concentration in the BNL, with the shortest residence times occurring during October 2001. No relationship was observed between particulate 234Th activities and SPM concentrations, indicating that particles are rapidly removed from the system, either by sinking or advection. The mean particulate 234Th residence time is 5 days.

KW - Thorium

KW - Resuspension

KW - Radioactive tracers

KW - Greece

KW - Thermaikos Gulf

U2 - 10.1016/j.csr.2005.08.009

DO - 10.1016/j.csr.2005.08.009

M3 - Journal article

VL - 25

SP - 2476

EP - 2490

JO - Continental Shelf Research

JF - Continental Shelf Research

SN - 0278-4343

IS - 19-20

ER -