Genesis of shallow-water manganese nodules with uniquely high Mn/Fe ratios
Cited 0 time in
Cited 0 time in
-
Title
-
Genesis of shallow-water manganese nodules with uniquely high Mn/Fe ratios
-
Other Titles
-
이례적으로 높은 Mn/Fe비를 보이는 천해 망간단괴의 성인
-
Authors
-
Koo Hyo Jin
Cho Hyen Goo
Jin, Young Keun
Lee Dong-Hun
Kim Ji-Hoon
Rhee, Tae Siek
Hong, Jong Kuk
Lee Sung Keun
-
Keywords
-
Arctic Ocean; Continental slope; Exceptionally high Mn/Fe ratios; Paleo-environmental proxy; Shallow-water manganese nodules
-
Issue Date
-
2025-12
-
Citation
-
Koo Hyo Jin, et al. 2025. "Genesis of shallow-water manganese nodules with uniquely high Mn/Fe ratios". Geoscience Frontiers, 17(2): 0-0.
-
Abstract
-
While manganese (Mn) nodules are authigenic metal concretions that form predominantly on deep-sea seafloor, they have also been found along shallow seafloors. The formation environments of these nodules - deep sea vs. shallow water - often result in distinct chemical and morphological characteristics. As Mn is one of the essential components of energy-storing technologies, assessing the proper estimation of Mn and metal contents in both deep-and shallow-water Mn nodules is critical. It has been found that the Mn content of shallow-water nodules is often lower than that from deep-sea environments. Here, we report the discovery of shallow-water Mn nodules with exceptionally high Mn/Fe ratios on the continental slope of the East Siberian Sea, Arctic Ocean. Despite their shallow-water origin, Mn nodules show morphological and chemical characteristics that are typically unique to deep-sea nodules. These distinctive features, including exceptionally high Mn/Fe ratios, may reflect suboxic diagenesis and the preferential remobilization and re-precipitation of Mn from the adjacent continental shelf. The formation of high Mn/Fe nodules may reflect unique ocean circulation patterns that provided oxygenated bottom waters to the study area. Particularly, Pacific Water entering through the Bering Strait, which overlaps with the nodule formation depth (160-240 m) and is enriched in dissolved oxygen, could facilitate Mn-rich nodule growth under suboxic diagenetic conditions since the Holocene. Shallow-water Mn nodules with uniquely high Mn/Fe ratios may offer a novel paleo-environmental proxy for reconstructing paleohydrology and biogeochemical evolutions in shallow marine environments. (c) 2025 China University of Geosciences (Beijing) and Peking University. Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of China University of Geosciences (Beijing). This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
-
URI
-
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/16466
-
DOI
-
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gsf.2025.102219
-
Type
-
Article
-
Station
-
Araon
-
Indexed
-
SCIE
- Appears in Collections
- 2020-2020, Investigation of submarine resource environment and seabed methane release in the Arctic (20-20) / Jin, Young Keun (PM20050)
2025-2025, 북극해 해저지질 조사 및 해저환경 변화 연구 (25-25) / 홍종국 (PM25050)
- Files in This Item
- There are no files associated with this item.
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.