@article { ISI:000319838200023, title = {Carbon isotopic evidence for microbial control of carbon supply to Orca Basin at the seawater-brine interface}, journal = {BIOGEOSCIENCES}, volume = {10}, number = {{5}}, year = {2013}, pages = {3175-3183}, type = {Article}, abstract = {Orca Basin, an intraslope basin on the Texas-Louisiana continental slope, hosts a hypersaline, anoxic brine in its lowermost 200m in which limited microbial activity has been reported. This brine contains a large reservoir of reduced and aged carbon, and appears to be stable at decadal time scales: concentrations and isotopic composition of dissolved inorganic (DIC) and organic carbon (DOC) are similar to measurements made in the 1970s. Both DIC and DOC are more {\textquoteleft}{\textquoteleft}aged{{\textquoteright}{\textquoteright}} within the brine pool than in overlying water, and the isotopic contrast between brine carbon and seawater carbon is much greater for DIC than DOC. While the stable carbon isotopic composition of brine DIC points towards a combination of methane and organic carbon remineralization as its source, radiocarbon and box model results point to the brine interface as the major source region for DIC, allowing for only limited oxidation of methane diffusing upwards from sediments. This conclusion is consistent with previous studies that identify the seawater-brine interface as the focus of microbial activity associated with Orca Basin brine. Isotopic similarities between DIC and DOC suggest a different relationship between these two carbon reservoirs than is typically observed in deep ocean basins. Radiocarbon values implicate the seawater-brine interface region as the likely source region for DOC to the brine as well as DIC.}, issn = {1726-4170}, doi = {10.5194/bg-10-3175-2013}, author = {Shah, S. R. and Joye, S. B. and Brandes, J. A. and McNichol, A. P.} }