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The suspended matter of sea water

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

F. A. J. Armstrong
Affiliation:
From the Plymouth Laboratory
W. R. G. Atkins
Affiliation:
From the Plymouth Laboratory

Extract

Sea water collected at Station E1, surface, between June 1948, and November 1949, contained suspended matter from 2·77 to 0·45 g./m.3 (or parts per million) dried and ignited. A few determinations of insoluble organic matter gave 1·77 to 1·15 parts per million dry weight at 100° C. The ignited residue contained from 55 to 17% silica, 28 to 3 of ferric oxide, 20 to under 1 of alumina and 70 (or excluding one high value 29) to 9 calcium carbonate. There was nothing in the records for temperature or salinity to suggest that the water mass had changed during the period of sampling.

The analyses reveal an unsuspectedly large amount of iron, compared with that found in solution. The ignited residue is rich in silicate, judging from the silica alumina ratio, but it is quite doubtful whether the additional supply of silicate available for diatoms is at all adequate to balance their requirements calculated on a phosphate utilization basis. It seems more probable that a considerable amount of the phosphate is available for non-siliceous phytoplankton.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1950

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References

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