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Dead zones may record river floods.


The remains of sediment-dwelling microorganisms beneath periodically oxygen-depleted ocean waters could enable scientists to determine when nearby rivers flooded for extended periods.

Huge areas of anoxic an·ox·i·a  
n.
1. Absence of oxygen.

2. A pathological deficiency of oxygen, especially hypoxia.



[an- + ox(o)- + -ia1.
 water occur offshore near the mouths of rivers, says Lisa E. Osterman of the U.S. Geological Survey The term geological survey can be used to describe both the conduct of a survey for geological purposes and an institution holding geological information.

A geological survey
 in Reston, Va. These areas often form because the rivers carry large amounts of agricultural fertilizers and other nutrients into the sea, where they fuel immense blooms of algae algae (ăl`jē) [plural of Lat. alga=seaweed], a large and diverse group of primarily aquatic plantlike organisms. These organisms were previously classified as a primitive subkingdom of the plant kingdom, the thallophytes (plants that  and other plankton plankton: see marine biology.
plankton

Marine and freshwater organisms that, because they are unable to move or are too small or too weak to swim against water currents, exist in a drifting, floating state.
 at the ocean's surface (SN: 6/5/04, p. 360). When those organisms die and fall to the seafloor, their natural decomposition depletes dissolved oxygen in the water.

Fish can swim away from these so-called dead zones, but organisms that live in the seafloor can't. The microorganisms that live in some sediments off the coast of Louisiana CODE, OF LOUISIANA. In 1822, Peter Derbigny, Edward Livingston, and Moreau Lislet, were selected by the legislature to revise and amend the civil code, and to add to it such laws still in force as were not included therein.  provide a good record of the anoxic zone created by the Mississippi River Mississippi River

River, central U.S. It rises at Lake Itasca in Minnesota and flows south, meeting its major tributaries, the Missouri and the Ohio rivers, about halfway along its journey to the Gulf of Mexico.
, says Osterman. In recent years, when this dead zone was extensive and long lasting, the populations of three particular anoxia-tolerant species exploded in sediments of these areas, compared with populations of anoxia-sensitive species.

However, analyses of those sediments indicate that anoxic waters blanketed the area several times before the 1960s, when farmers began to use increasing amounts of artificial fertilizers. Those earlier dead zones probably arose in years when the Mississippi River carried abnormally large volumes of water into the Gulf of Mexico Noun 1. Gulf of Mexico - an arm of the Atlantic to the south of the United States and to the east of Mexico
Golfo de Mexico

Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east
, says Osterman.

When these massive flows of fresh water spilled out of the fiver and formed a thick layer atop the denser salt water of the Gulf, oxygen couldn't reach the underlying ocean water efficiently. Indeed, the four periods in which anoxia-tolerant sediment dwellers were most prevalent--1823, 1848 through 1850, 1882, and 1890--match intervals of high river flow, as measured by instruments in place at Vicksburg, Miss.

Population trends among the microorganisms in older sediments may enable scientists to infer periods of high Mississippi River flows for times before 1817, when the Vicksburg instruments were installed. Similar analyses for other anoxia-prone regions could detect ancient periods of river flooding, even in eras when no observers or instruments were present to record the flows, Osterman says.--S.P.
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Title Annotation:Earth Science
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 27, 2004
Words:356
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