448 resultados para 494
Resumo:
Interstitial water chemistry has proved to be a sensitive indicator for early diagenetic reactions, particularly those related to organic matter oxidation. Downhole chemical variations in the pore waters from Deep Sea Drilling Project Holes 496 and 497 on the Middle America Trench slope off Guatemala are anomalous because both salinity and chlorinity show strong decreases to half the values of seawater, and d18O values become positive (maximum of about +2.5% at the bottom of the holes). These observations are explained in terms of dilution of pore waters after retrieval as a result of decomposition of the gas hydrates before removal of pore waters by shipboard squeezing techniques. In all holes, except Hole 495 (drilled in pelagic sediments), decomposition of organic matter leads to rapid sulfate depletion and subsequent methane generation. Associated with methane generation are large increases in alkalinity and dissolved ammonia. The latter component causes ion exchange reactions with clay minerals, which results in maxima in magnesium and perhaps potassium. At greater depths, as yet unidentified reactions cause the removal of magnesium. Especially in the deeper Trench Sites 499 and 500, rapid variations in calcium, magnesium, and alkalinity occur in turbidite sequences.
Resumo:
Controls of sediment dynamics at the Galician continental slope (NW Iberia) during the past 30 ka were reconstructed from three new gravity cores (GeoB11035-1, 130206-1, 13071-1) based on sedimentological (e.g. sortable silt, IRD), micropalaeontological (e.g. coccoliths), geochemical (AMS 14C, XRF) and geophysical (e.g. magnetic susceptibility) diagnostics. The data are consistent with existing regional knowledge that, during marine isotope stages 3-1, variations in detrital input, marine productivity and sea level were the essential drivers of sediment availability on the slope, whereas deep-water current velocities controlled sediment deposition: (1) the period prior to 30 cal ka BP is characterized by minor but systematic variations in various proxies which can be associated with D-O cycles; (2) between 30 and 18 cal ka BP, high detrital input and steady slope-parallel currents led to constant sedimentation; (3) from the LGM until 10 cal ka BP, the shelf-transgressive sea-level rise increased the detrital particle flux; sedimentation was influenced by significantly enhanced deep-water circulation during the Bølling/Allerød, and subsequent slowing during the Younger Dryas; (4) an abrupt and lasting change to hemipelagic sedimentation at ca. 10 cal ka BP was probably due to Holocene warming and decelerated transgression; (5) after 5 cal ka BP, additional input of detrital material to the slope is plausibly linked to the evolution of fine-grained depocentres on the Galician shelf, this being the first report of this close shelf-slope sedimentary linkage off NW Iberia. Furthermore, there is novel evidence of the nowadays strong outer shelf Iberian Poleward Current becoming established at about 15.5 cal ka BP. The data also demonstrate that small-scale morphologic features and local pathways of sediment export from the neighbouring shelf play an important role for sediment distribution on the NW Iberian slope, including a hitherto unknown sediment conduit off the Ría de Arousa. By implication, the impact of local morphology on along- and down-slope sediment dynamics is more complex than commonly considered, and deserves future attention.