Radioisotope stratigraphy, sedimentology and geochemistry of Late Quaternary sediments from the Eastern Arctic Ocean


Autoria(s): Bohrmann, Horst
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 84.915980 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 23.699315 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 78.750000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 1.775000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 86.135000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 32.058333 * DATE/TIME START: 1987-06-08T00:00:00 * DATE/TIME END: 1987-10-08T00:00:00

Data(s)

19/03/2013

Resumo

To reconstruct Recent and past sedimentary environments, marine sediments of Upper Pleistocene and Holocene ages from the eastern Arctic Ocean and especially from the Nansen-Gakkel Ridge (NGR) were investigated by means of radioisotopic, geochemical and sedimentological methods. In combination with mass physical property data and lithological analysis these investigations allow clearly to characterize the depositional environments. Age dating by using the radioisotope 230Th gives evidence that the investigated sediments from the NGR are younger than 250,000 years. Identical lithological sediment sequences within and between sediment cores from the NGR can be related to sedimentary processes which are clearly controlled by palaeoclimate. The sediments consist predominantly of siliciclastic, terrigenous ice-rafted detritus (IRD) deriving from assorted and redeposited sediments from the Siberian shelfs. By their geochemical composition the sediments are similar to mudstone, graywacke and arcose. Sea-ice as well as icebergs play a major roll in marine arctic sedimentation. In the NGR area rapid change in sedimentary conditions can be detected 128,000 years ago. This was due to drastic change in the kind of ice cover, resulting from rapid climatic change within only hundreds of years. So icebergs, deriving mostly from Siberian shelfs, vanished and sea-ice became dominant in the eastern Arctic Ocean. At least three short-period retreats of the shelf ice between 186,000 and 128,000 years are responsible for the change of coarse to fine-grained sediments in the NGR area. These warmer stages lasted between 1,000 and 3,000 years. By monitoring and comparing the distribution patterns of sedimentologic, mass physical and geochemical properties with 230Th ex activity distribution patterns in the sediment cores from the NGR, there is clear evidence that sediment dilution is responsible for high 230Th ex activity variations. Thus sedimentation rate is the controlling factor of 230Th ex activity variations. The 230Th flux density in sediments from the NGR seems to be highly dependent On topographic Position. The distribution patterns of chemical elements in sediment cores are in general governed by lithology. The derivation of a method for dry bulk density determination gave the opportunity to establish a high resolution stratigraphy on sediment cores from the eastern Arctic Ocean, based on 230Thex activity analyses. For the first time sedimentation and accumulation rates were determined for recent sediments in the eastern Arctic Ocean by 230Th ex analyses. Bulk accumulation rates are highly variable in space and time, ranging between 0.2 and 30 g/cm**2/ka. In the sediments from the NGR highly variable accumulation rates are related to the kind of ice cover. There is evidence for hydrothermal input into the sediments of the NGR. Hydrothermal activity probably also influences surficial sediments in the Sofia Basin. High contents of As are typical for surficial sediments from the NGR. In particular SL 370-20 from the bottom of the rift valley has As contents exceeding in parts 300 ppm. Hydrothermal activity can be traced back to at least 130,000 years. Recent to subrecent tectonic activity is documented by the rock debris in KAL 370 from the NGR. In four other sediment cores from the NGR rift valley area tectonically induced movements can be dated to about 130,000 years ago, related most probably to the rapid climate change. Processes of early diagenesis in sediments from the NGR caused the aobilization and redeposition of Fe, Mn and Mo. These diagenetic processes probably took place during the last 130,000 years. In sediment cores from the NGR high amounts of kaolinite are related to coarse grained siliciclastic material, probably indicating reworking and redeposition of siberian sandstones with kaolinitic binding material. In contrast to kaolinite, illite is correlated to total clay and 232Th contents. Aragonite, associated with serpentinites in the rift valley area of the NGR, was precipitated under cold bottom-water conditions. Preliminary data result in a time of formation about 60 - 80 ka ago. Manganese precipitates with high Ni contents, which can be related to the ultrabasic rocks, are of similar age.

Formato

application/zip, 24 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.809032

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.809032

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Relação

Bohrmann, Horst (1991): Radioisotopenstratigraphie, Sedimentologie und Geochemie jungquartärer Sedimente des östlichen Arktischen Ozeans (Radioisotope Stratigraphy, Sedimentology and Geochemistry of Late Quaternary Sediments from the Eastern Arctic Ocean). Berichte zur Polarforschung = Reports on Polar Research, 95, 133 pp, doi:10.2312/BzP_0095_1991

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Palavras-Chave #(238U/232Th); (Th230 xs/Th232); (Th230 xs/Th232) std dev; <2 µm, >9 phi; 230Th; 230Th std dev; 230Th xs; 230Th xs std dev; 231Pa; 231Pa std dev; 232Th; 232Th std dev; 234U; 234U/238U; 234U/238U std dev; 238U; 238U aut; 238U std dev; Acc rate <2 µm; Acc rate >63 µm; Acc rate Al2O3; Acc rate As; Acc rate Ba; Acc rate Bi; Acc rate CaCO3; Acc rate CaO; Acc rate Cd; Acc rate Co; Acc rate Cr203; Acc rate Cu; Acc rate Fe2O3; Acc rate Ga; Acc rate K2O; Acc rate La; Acc rate MgO; Acc rate MnO; Acc rate Mo; Acc rate Na2O; Acc rate Nb; Acc rate Ni; Acc rate P205; Acc rate Pb; Acc rate Rb; Acc rate Sb; Acc rate SiO2; Acc rate Sr; Acc rate TiO2; Acc rate TOC; Acc rate V205; Acc rate Y; Acc rate Zn; Acc rate Zr; Accumulation rate, aluminium oxide; Accumulation rate, antimony; Accumulation rate, arsenic; Accumulation rate, barium; Accumulation rate, bismuth; Accumulation rate, cadmium; Accumulation rate, calcium carbonate; Accumulation rate, calcium oxide; Accumulation rate, chromium(III) oxide; Accumulation rate, clay < 2 µm; Accumulation rate, cobalt; Accumulation rate, copper; Accumulation rate, gallium; Accumulation rate, iron oxide; Accumulation rate, lanthanum; Accumulation rate, lead; Accumulation rate, magnesium oxide; Accumulation rate, manganese oxide; Accumulation rate, molybdenum; Accumulation rate, nickel; Accumulation rate, niobium; Accumulation rate, phosphorus oxide; Accumulation rate, potassium oxide; Accumulation rate, rubidium; Accumulation rate, sand > 63 µm; Accumulation rate, sediment, mean; Accumulation rate, silica; Accumulation rate, sodium oxide; Accumulation rate, strontium; Accumulation rate, titanium oxide; Accumulation rate, total organic carbon; Accumulation rate, vanadium oxide; Accumulation rate, yttrium; Accumulation rate, zinc; Accumulation rate, zirconium; Age; AGE; age-corrected; Age model; Al2O3; Alpha-spectrometry; Aluminium oxide; Antimony; Arsenic; As; AWI_Paleo; Ba; Barium; Bi; Bismuth; CaCO3; Cadmium; Calcium carbonate; Calcium oxide; Calculated; calculated after Kominz; calculated after Mangini; Calculated from weight/volume; CaO; Carbon, organic, total; Cd; Chl; Chlorite; Chromium(III) oxide; Co; Cobalt; Copper; Cored; Cr2O3; Cu; cum SCa; cum SCa/SCp; Cumulative Thorium 230 standing crop; Cumulative Thorium 230 standing crop/Thorium 230 standing crop, expected; DBD; Density, dry bulk; Density, wet bulk; Depth; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Element analyser CHN, LECO CS 240; Event; Fe2O3; Ga; Gallium; Grain size, sieving/settling tube; Ill; Illite; Interval Cored; Iron oxide, Fe2O3; K2O; Kaolinite; Kln; La; Lanthanum; Lead; LOI; Loss on ignition; LSR; Magnesium oxide; Manganese oxide; MAR; MgO; MnO; Mo; Molybdenum; Na2O; Nb; Ni; Nickel; Niobium; P2O5; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Pb; Phosphorus oxide; Poros; Porosity; Potassium oxide; Protactinium 231; Protactinium 231, standard deviation; Rb; Rubidium; S; Sand; Sb; SCp:1025; SCp:1045; SCp:1050 (=93%); SCp:1059; SCp:1123; SCp:1139; SCp:1318; SCp:1470.4; SCp:1470.4*2; SCp:250; SCp:640.5; SCp:817; SCp:857 (=65%); Sedimentation rate; Sed rate; Silicon dioxide; Silt; SiO2; Size fraction < 0.002 mm, > 9 phi, clay; Sme; Smectite; SO3**2-; Sodium oxide; Sr; Strontium; Sulfite; Sulfur, total; Sum; Th230 xs norm water depth; Thorium 230; Thorium 230, standard deviation; Thorium 230 excess; Thorium 230 excess, standard deviation; Thorium 230 excess/Thorium 232 activity ratio; Thorium 230 excess/Thorium 232 activity ratio, standard deviation; Thorium 230 excess normalized to water depth; Thorium 232; Thorium 232, standard deviation; TiO2; Titanium oxide; TOC; Uranium 234; Uranium 234/Uranium 238 activity ratio; Uranium 234/Uranium 238 activity ratio, standard deviation; Uranium 238; Uranium 238, authigenic; Uranium 238, standard deviation; Uranium 238/Thorium 232 activity ratio; V2O5; Vanadium oxide; Water content of wet mass; Water wm; WBD; X-ray diffractometry (Philips PW1050); X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (Philips PW1400); Y; Yttrium; Zinc; Zirconium; Zn; Zr
Tipo

Dataset