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This content will become publicly available on May 15, 2025

Title: Dissolved Organic Matter in Submarine Hydrothermal Systems
The transport and transformation of carbon in subseafloor environments is a significant component of past, present, and future global fluxes. Seawater’s dissolved organic matter (DOM) enters the subseafloor and undergoes complex reactions including microbial processing, interactions with the rock matrix, and thermal restructuring and remineralization to carbon dioxide. Large shifts in concentrations, isotopic compositions, and molecular abundances provide a rich source of information about the environments through which fluids have circulated. Broad patterns linking geological settings to the fate of organic molecules can now be drawn, including the wide-scale removal of seawater DOM in ridge-flank systems, and large additions of abiotically synthesized compounds into fluids that interact with mantle rocks. Outstanding questions remain concerning the role of hydrothermal circulation as a source of refractory organic matter and its impact on the isotopic signature of deep oceanic DOM.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1801036 1536702 1921654
PAR ID:
10527333
Author(s) / Creator(s):
Editor(s):
Hansell, DA; Carlson, CA
Publisher / Repository:
Academic Press
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Biogeochemistry of Marine Dissolved Organic Matter (Third Edition)
Edition / Version:
3
ISSN:
9780443138591
Page Range / eLocation ID:
317-342
Format(s):
Medium: X Size: 3 MB Other: pdf
Size(s):
3 MB
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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