Photochemical studies of the eastern Caribbean: An introductory overview
- 15 February 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
- Vol. 98 (C2) , 2223-2232
- https://doi.org/10.1029/92jc02759
Abstract
This special section of the Journal of Geophysical Research reports a multi‐investigator study of a number of sunlight‐initiated photoprocesses taking place in the varied biogeochemical and oceanographic environment found in the tropical Eastern Caribbean and Orinoco River delta in the spring and fall of 1988. Principal conceptual themes that were addressed by the program included (1) the characterization of the role of dissolved organic matter as the main chromophore initiating photoprocesses in surface seawater, (2) the determination of the fluxes and pathways of reactants and transient species involved in oxygen photoredox chemistry, and (3) the continuing development of chemical mapping strategies, including observing and modelling reactive phototransient distribution in terms of their sources, mixing, and fates. Ancillary supporting studies included observation of water mass tracers, dissolved trace gases, atmospheric components, nutrients and the geochemistry of estuarine mixing processes in an important continental margin. The observational and mechanistic investigations reported here feature a number of novel or improved methods allied with some advanced underway sampling, sensing and computing facilities that were implemented aboard the R/VColumbus Iselin. Results from the study showed large‐scale (∼1000 km) seasonal variations in surface water photoreactivity, optical and biooptical characteristics over much of the Caribbean basin. These changes resulted from seasonally varying riverine inputs of organic chromophores, nutrients and suspended material. Smaller scale (10–100 km) studies carried out in the Orinoco delta and the Gulf of Paria showed that estuarine mixing processes did not affect major net removal of dissolved organic matter, consistent with the hypothesis that riverine chromophore input plays a dominant role in open‐water photochemistry.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- AmasSeds: An Interdisciplinary Investigation of a Complex Coastal EnvironmentOceanography, 1991
- Extraction of chromophoric humic substances from seawaterMarine Chemistry, 1990
- Deep mixing in the Gulf of Lions, RevisitedGeophysical Research Letters, 1988
- Heat and Freshwater Budgets of the Caribbean Sea with Revised Estimates for the Central American SeasJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1987
- Advances in marine photochemistry 1983–1987Reviews of Geophysics, 1987
- Volume and Heat Transports of the Florida Current: April 1982 Through August 1983Science, 1985
- On the Flow Through Broad Gaps with Application to the Windward PassageJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1983
- Seasonal Variability from a Model of the Tropical Atlantic OceanJournal of Physical Oceanography, 1983
- Interaction of ozone and hydrogen peroxide in water: Implications for analysis of H2O2 in airGeophysical Research Letters, 1982
- Production of Carbon Monoxide and Gaseous Hydrocarbons in Seawater: Relation to Dissolved Organic CarbonScience, 1970