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Sub-recent nitrogen-isotope trends in sediments from Skagerrak (North Sea) and Kattegat: Changes in N-budgets and N-sources?
Authors:Kirstin Dhnke  Alexandra Serna  Thomas Blanz  Kay-Christian Emeis
Institution:aGKSS Research Center, Max-Planck-Str. 1, D-21502 Geesthacht, FRG;bIfBM, University of Hamburg, Bundesstr. 55, D-20146 Hamburg, FRG;cGeological Institute, University of Kiel, Ludewig-Meyn-Str. 10, D-24103 Kiel, FRG
Abstract:We determined 15N/14N ratios of total nitrogen in surface sediments and dated sediment cores to reconstruct the history of N-loading of the North Sea. The isotopic N composition in modern surface sediments is equivalent to and reflects the isotopic mixture of oceanic nitrate on the one hand (δ15N = 5‰) and the imprint of river-borne nitrogen input into the SE North Sea (δ15N up to 12‰ in estuaries of the SE North Sea) on the other hand. We compare the results with δ15N records from pre-industrial sediment intervals in cores from the Skagerrak and Kattegat areas, which both constitute significant depositional centres for N in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea/North Sea transition. As expected, isotopically enriched anthropogenic nitrogen was found in the two records from the Kattegat area, which is close to eutrophication sources on land. Enrichment of δ15N in cores from the Skagerrak – the largest sediment sink for nitrogen in the entire North Sea – was not significant and values were similar to those found in sediment layers representing pre-industrial conditions. We interpret this isotopic uniformity as an indication that most riverine reactive nitrogen with its characteristic isotopic signature is removed by denitrification in shallow shallow-water sediments before reaching the main sedimentary basin of the North Sea.
Keywords:North Sea  Skagerrak  Kattegat  eutrophication  nitrogen isotopes  sediments
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