Abstract
The mud depositional area ("mud area") of the South Yellow Sea serves as a prominent carbon sink within the Eastern Continental Shelf of China, offering crucial insights into human activities and climate fluctuations and its relationship with carbon cycle. This study investigates variations in total organic carbon (TOC) and black carbon (BC) concentrations in South Yellow Sea sediments. By combining 210Pb isotope analysis with grain-size profiling, the study distinguishes organic carbon origins, revealing the complex interplay between human activities and environmental shifts since the Industrial Revolution. The reasons for discrepancies between TOC and BC contents are analyzed, yielding the following results: (1) Sediment core QY-2 predominantly contains terrestrial-sourced organic carbon, primarily derived from the Yellow River and the Yangtze River. (2) Temporal fluctuations of BC in core QY-2 show distinct trends, periodic responses to human activities, particularly peaks in 1937 and 1945, linked to large-scale wars in China. (3) Relaxed carbon emission regulations in China, coupled with industrial growth spurred by the “reform and opening up” policy, led to a continuous rise in BC content from the mid-1960s to the 1980s, peaking in 1980. Subsequently, reduced BC values during the 1990s correlated with emission control policies and the shift from highly polluting domestic coal stoves to cleaner alternatives like liquefied petroleum gas or natural gas stoves. (4) BC content was influenced by the East Asian monsoon and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), with higher BC accumulation rates occurring in summer and depletion in winter. (5) Interestingly, changes in BC and TOC content exhibited a negative correlation. While grain size and material sources minimally influenced these discrepancies, the primary driver lay in the water's redox environment, impacting other TOC components and thereby causing variations in both TOC and BC content. This study of black carbon sources to sinks in the South Yellow Sea Mud Area holds significant implications for the broader Yellow Sea sedimentary system and provides support for understanding carbon cycle and marine environments.
Published Version
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