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    Trace element composition of size-fractionated suspended particulate matter samples from the Qatari Exclusive Economic Zone of the Arabian Gulf: the role of atmospheric dust

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    Date
    2020-01-27
    Author
    Yigiterhan, Oguz
    Mohd Al-Ansari, Ebrahim
    Nelson, Alex
    Alaa Abdel-Moati, Mohamed
    Turner, Jesse
    Abdulla Alsaadi, Hamood
    Paul, Barbara
    Abdullatif Al-Maslamani, Ibrahim
    Abdulla Al-Ansi Al-Yafei, Mehsin
    W. Murray, James
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    Abstract
    We analyzed net-tow samples of natural assemblages of plankton, and associated particulate matter, from the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of Qatar in the Arabian Gulf. Size-fractionated suspended particles were collected using net tows with mesh sizes of 50 and 200 μm to examine the composition of small- and large-size plankton populations. Samples were collected in two different years (11 offshore sites in October 2012 and 6 nearshore sites in April 2014) to examine temporal and spatial variabilities.We calculated the excess metal concentrations by correcting the bulk composition for inputs from atmospheric dust using aluminum (Al) as a lithogenic tracer and the metal=Al ratios for average Qatari dust. Atmospheric dust in Qatar is depleted in Al and enriched in calcium (Ca), in the form of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), relative to the global average Upper Continental Crust (UCC). To evaluate the fate of this carbonate fraction when dust particles enter seawater, we leached a subset of dust samples using an acetic acid–hydroxylamine hydrochloride (HAc–HyHCl) procedure that should solubilize CaCO3 minerals and associated elements. As expected, we found that Ca was removed in Qatari dust; however, the concentrations (ppm) for most elements actually increased after leaching because the reduction in sample mass resulting from the removal of CaCO3 by the leach was more important than the loss of metals solubilized by the leach. Because
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-17-381-2020
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/12845
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