Abstract

AbstractA 2‐D non‐steady state model was applied to measured profiles of 234Th/238U and 90Y/90Sr disequilibria in a shallow (22 m) water column of coastal Lake Michigan. Downward fluxes of 234Th and 90Y were primarily driven by onshore horizontal advection. Concordance between 234Th and 90Y‐derived mass flux estimates from the water column could only be realistically achieved under a nuclide scavenging scenario dominated by direct sorption on bottom or near‐bottom sediment and vertical convection in the water column—not sinking particles. An estimated vertical 234Th/90Y flux ratio of ∼0.31 in the water column agreed with measured 234Th/90Y activity ratios on collected ejecta from bottom dwelling dreissenid mussels (0.26 ± 0.05) and not with water column particles (3.3 ± 1.3). A similar 238U/90Sr parent nuclide activity ratio of 0.30 ± 0.02 suggests that both 234Th and 90Y are scavenged in toto below the maximum sampling depth (17 m) and near the sediment/water interface. Determining the mechanism by which particles are transported to the bottom is important for understanding not only how benthos are supplied with water column material, but also how particle fluxes should be measured and calculated.

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