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Published byLillian Western Modified over 9 years ago
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Sea Floor & Sediments Measuring the Depths Soundings Echo Sounder
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Measuring the Depths Modern Tools ROV’s LADS Side-scan Sonar Satellites
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Sea Floor Bathymetry
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Continental Margin Active margin Leading margin Pacific-type Convergent boundary Continental shelf is narrow and irregular
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Continental Margin Passive margin Trailing margin Atlantic-type Divergent boundary Sediment build-up on shelf
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Continental Shelf
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Formation
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Shelf Break & Slope
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Submarine Canyons
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Turbidity Currents Turbidites
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Continental Rise Atlantic, Indian, and Antarctic Oceans Not usually found at active margins
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Ocean Basin Floor
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Abyssal Hills & Seamounts Abyssal hills Most common topographic feature < 1000m Seamounts Steep-sided volcanoes > 1000m
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Abyssal Hills & Seamounts Guyots (gee-ohs) Flat-topped seamounts
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Coral Reefs
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Trenches
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Sediments Rate of accumulation Distribution Source & abundance Chemical composition History
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Particle Size
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Size & shape Influences sinking rate and travel time
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Particle Size Particle aggregation Electrical attraction Fecal pellets 2200x
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Location Neritic Continental margins & islands Pelagic Found on the deep sea floor
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Location
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Rates of Deposits Neritic Sediments Highly variable River estuaries Quiet bays Relict Sediments
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Rates of Deposit Pelagic Sediments Slower than neritic 500-600 m
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Source & Chemistry 4 sources: 1. Preexisting rocks 2. Marine organisms 3. Seawater 4. Space
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Lithogenous Sediments Terrigenous sediments Fine to coarse Most common Weathering of rocks Transport by rivers, winds, volcanoes and glaciers
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Lithogenous Sediments Terrigenous sediments Dominant neritic sediment Clear size distribution
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Lithogenous Sediments Pelagic lithogenous sediments Abyssal clay 70% clay-size particles 0.1 cm per 1000 years! Red clay Due to oxidation of iron
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Lithogenous Sediments 4 types of clay minerals: 1. Chlorite
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Lithogenous Sediments 4 types of clay minerals: 2. Kaolinite
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Lithogenous Sediments 4 types of clay minerals: 3. Illite
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Lithogenous Sediments 4 types of clay minerals: 4. Montmorillonite
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Biogenous Sediments Fine to coarse 2 nd most common Shells & skeletons CaCO 3 [calcareous] SiO 3 [siliceous] Oozes
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Biogenous Sediments Coccolithophorids Pteropods Foraminfera Lysocline
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Carbonate Compensation Depth The depth at which the amount of calcareous material preserved falls below 20% of the total sediment
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Biogenous Sediments Diatoms Radiolarians
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Hydrogenous Sediments Derived from chemical reactions in the water
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Hydrogenous Sediments Carbonates Limestone-type deposits Shallow, warm water Ooliths
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Hydrogenous Sediments Phosphorites Phosphorus in the form of phosphate Continental shelf & slope
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Hydrogenous Sediments Salts High rate of evaporation in shallow areas Carbonate salts, sulfate salts, then chlorides
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Hydrogenous Sediments Manganese nodules Manganese, iron, nickel, cobalt & copper
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Cosmogenous Sediments Sediments derived from space
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Lithification Formation of sedimentary rock Temps <200ºC
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Diagenesis Chemical changes of sediments when they react with seawater
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Sampling Methods Dredges Large bulk samples Benthic organisms
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Sampling Methods Grab samplers Mud & sand Quantitative sampling
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Sampling Methods Corers Gravity corer 1-2 m cores
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Sampling Methods Corers Piston corer Up to 20 m cores
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Sampling Methods Corers Box corer Large, undisturbed samples Door
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Sampling Methods Platform drilling JOIDES Resolution 1100 m cores
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Sampling Methods Acoustic profiling
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Sediments as Historical Records Paleoceanography Chemistry of biogenous sediments Ratio of 18 O: 16 O Proportion of these in skeletons reflects abundance of isotopes in water
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Seabed Resources Sand & Gravel Annual world production = 1.2 billion metric tons Only significant seabed mining done in the US
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Seabed Resources Phosphorite Mined to produce phosphate fertilizers Substantial source in Onslow Bay, NC
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Seabed Resources Sulfur Used for production of sulfuric acid
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Seabed Resources Coal Produced by burial of plant material in areas of low oxygen Peat
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Seabed Resources Oil & Gas Represent >95% of the value of all resources extracted from the sea floor Sedimentary rocks 85-180 million years old
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Seabed Resources Gas Hydrates Combo of natural gas (CH 4 ) and water Ice-like structure
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Seabed Resources Manganese Nodules Manganese, copper, nickel & cobalt Cobalt is of particular interest
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