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Published byRicardo Martineau Modified over 9 years ago
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Ocean Sediments
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Importance of Sediments Economic Value –Oil, fossil fuels –Salt & Phosphorus deposits Determine shape & structure of Ocean bottom Strongly affect distribution of Benthic Organisms Chronological record of Earth’s history –Tectonic history –Climate history –Evolutionary history
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Sediment Thickness
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Topographic profiles
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Law of Superposition Younger sediments over Old sediments YOUNG ---------------------- OLD
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Sediment Classification By Grain Size By Origin
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Sediment Classification Grain Size –Clay <4 μm –Silt 4-62 μm –Sand62-2000 μm –Gravel>2000 μm
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Table 3.1
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Basic Sediment Transport (READ CC4)
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Sediment Sorting Well-sorted sediments are those of similar size class –Beach: well sorted (far from source) –Glacier: not sorted (close to source)
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Sediment Angularity Sediment weathering during transport induces loss in angularity –Angular grains (close to source) –Rounded grains (far from source)
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Sediment Classification Origin –Lithogenous or Terrigenous(~75%) –Biogenous(~20%) –Hydrogenous –Cosmogenous
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Lithogenous Sediments Fragments of rocks broken, weathered and eroded form lithogenous sediments
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Frost Wedging http://images.google.com
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www.naturalphotos.com Wind & Rain erosion
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Lithogenous Sediments Transport of sediments by: –Rivers –Glaciers –Waves –Wind –Landslides –Humans
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www.southalabama.eduhttp://earthobservatory.nasa.gov
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Sediment Discharge by Rivers Ganges:1700 million Tm/year Amazon:900 million Tm/year Mississippi260 million Tm/year (Figure 6-2)
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http://www.pbs.org/harriman/images/
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walrus.wr.usgs.gov/elnino/coastal/ images/
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http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov
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Winter Summer Aerial dust transport
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St Helens
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http://geohazards.cr.usgs.gov/http://web.umr.edu/~rogersda
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http://www.hihwnms.nos.noaa.gov/graphics/
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Biogenous Sediments Composed of planktonic organism remains –Calcareous skeletons (CaCO 3 ) –Siliceous skeletons (SiO 2 ) Accumulation rate controlled by: –Primary productivity –Rate of dissolution (Importance of fecal pellets)
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Figure 3.21a Diatoms (siliceous high latitudes) Coccololithospheres (calcareous – mid latitides)
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Figure 3.21b Radiolarians (siliceous – low latitudes)
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Foraminifera (calcareous – all latitides)
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Pteropods (calcareous – all latitudes) http://www.mbari.org/expeditions/
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Dissolution Biogenous Particles Silica –Ocean is UNDERSATURATED with silica –Dissolution highest in surface waters Low Pressure High Temperature Accumulation in sediments occurs in: -Areas of very high productivity -Poles and upwelling zones (diatoms) -Tropics (Radiolarians)
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Dissolution Biogenous Particles Carbonates Foraminifera (Calcite) – less soluble Pteropods (Aragonite) – More soluble –Dissolution is highest in Deep Waters High pressure Low temperatures Low pH (high C0 2 ) Carbonate Compensation Depth (CCD)
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Carbonate Compensation Depth CCD varies with Latitude CCD varies between Oceans North Pacific: 1000m South Pacific: 2500m Atlantic: 4000m
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Carbonate Compensation Depth New Deep Waters have low CO 2 conc. Old Deep Waters have high CO 2 conc. –Animal respiration –Decomposer activities Pacific Deep Waters are older than Atlantic Deep Waters
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Global Thermohaline Circulation
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Carbonate Compensation Depth & Greenhouse Effect? CO 2 atmosphere, seawater & sediments are interrelated! Will increase in atmospheric CO 2 cause increase in dissolved seawater CO 2 ? Consequences of a shallow CCD? Release into atmosphere of dissolved carbonate sediments?
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Hydrogenous Sediments Lower concentrations than Lithogenous and Biogenous sediments Ocean water usually is UNDERSATURATED, but.. –Hydrothermal Vent Minerals (metal rich sedim.) –Manganese Nodules (areas of low sedimentation) –Carbonate banks - CaCO 3 precipitates at: High Temperature Low Pressure High pH (low CO 2 ) –Caused by high productivity - photosynthesis
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Bahamian Bank
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Carbonate Sediments
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Figure 3.23
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Chicxulub crater
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