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1.
Talanta ; 232: 122435, 2021 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34074420

ABSTRACT

Determination of neodymium (Nd) isotopic composition in seawater is useful for tracing water masses and geochemical cycles for lithogenic elements in the ocean. A new separation procedure for determination of the Nd isotopic composition of in seawater samples was developed that offers enhanced sample throughput and improved measurement reliability. The procedure consists of conventional Fe hydroxide coprecipitation, solid phase extraction using DGA chelating resin column chromatography, and Ln Resin column chromatography to preconcentrate samples. High selectivity in HNO3 medium and elution by low concentration HCl medium for Nd are characteristics of extraction using DGA Resin®, and they allowed an evaporation step to be omitted between the chromatographic steps. These chromatographic steps, using DGA Resin to separate REEs and Ln Resin® to remove Sm, were refined from a previous study. The procedural blank value of Nd was obtained as 2 pg (n = 6) from 3 L of water samples. Chemical yield of Nd from 3 L of seawater ranged within 90-95%. The developed procedure was combined with multiple collector-ICP-MS and applied to analysis of vertical seawater samples obtained from the western subarctic gyre of the North Pacific Ocean, where εNd ranged from -1.29 ± 0.42 at the surface to -3.80 ± 0.41 at 4000 m depth. These results were validated by comparing them with results obtained by the conventional method verified in the GEOTRACES inter-calibration program.

2.
Nat Commun ; 6: 10018, 2015 Nov 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26602034

ABSTRACT

The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) encompasses the heaviest rain belt on the Earth. Few direct long-term records, especially in the Pacific, limit our understanding of long-term natural variability for predicting future ITCZ migration. Here we present a tropical precipitation record from the Southern Hemisphere covering the past 282,000 years, inferred from a marine sedimentary sequence collected off the eastern coast of Papua New Guinea. Unlike the precession paradigm expressed in its East Asian counterpart, our record shows that the western Pacific ITCZ migration was influenced by combined precession and obliquity changes. The obliquity forcing could be primarily delivered by a cross-hemispherical thermal/pressure contrast, resulting from the asymmetric continental configuration between Asia and Australia in a coupled East Asian-Australian circulation system. Our finding suggests that the obliquity forcing may play a more important role in global hydroclimate cycles than previously thought.

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