Silicate and opal in the Ross Sea


Autoria(s): Ledford-Hoffman, P A; DeMaster, David J; Nittrouer, Charles A
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: -76.767656 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: -175.446250 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: -78.700000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 164.700000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: -73.150000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -152.510000 * MINIMUM DEPTH, sediment/rock: -0.100 m * MAXIMUM DEPTH, sediment/rock: 0.405 m

Data(s)

16/03/1986

Resumo

Thirty-five box cores were collected from the continental shelf in the Ross Sea during cruises in January and February, 1983. Pb-210 and Pu-239, 240 geochronologies coupled with biogenic-silica measurements were used to calculate accumulation rates of biogenic silica. Sediment in the southern Ross Sea accumulates at rates ranging from <=0.6 to 2.7 mm/y, with the highest values occurring in the southwestern Ross Sea. Biogenic-silica content in surface sediments ranges from 2% (by weight) in Sulzberger Bay and the eastern Ross Sea to 41% in the southwestern Ross Sea. Biogenic-silica accumulation in the southwestern Ross Sea averages 2.7 * 10**-2 g/cm**2/y and is comparable to accumulation rates in high-productivity, upwelling environments from low-latitude continental margins (e.g., Gulf of California, coast of Peru). The total rate of biogenic-silica accumulation in the southern Ross Sea is approximately 0.2 * 10**14 g/y, with most of the accumulation occurring in basins (500-1000 m water depth). If biogenic-silica accumulation in the southern Ross Sea continental shelf is typical of other basins on the Antarctic continental shelf, as much as 1.2 * 10**14 g/y of silica could be accumulating in these deposits. Biogenic-silica accumulation on the Antarctic continental shelf may account for as much as a fourth of the dissolved silica supplied to the world ocean by rivers and hydrothermal vents.

Formato

text/tab-separated-values, 113 data points

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.58017

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.58017

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Ledford-Hoffman, P A; DeMaster, David J; Nittrouer, Charles A (1986): Biogenic-silica accumulation in the Ross Sea and the importance of Antarctic continental-shelf deposits in the marine silica budget. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 50(9), 2099-2110, doi:10.1016/0016-7037(86)90263-2

Palavras-Chave #BC; Box corer; Depth, bathymetric; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; LATITUDE; Ledford; LONGITUDE; Opal, biogenic silica; Opal, extraction; DeMaster, 1981; Sample, optional label/labor no; Silicate; Silicon Cycling in the World Ocean; SINOPS
Tipo

Dataset