707 resultados para Sakalaves seamounts


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Recent phosphorites from the Namibian shelf are characterized by low REE contents, depletion in REE compared to host sediments and sharp deficiency of lanthanum and europium. In Late Quaternary and Pre-Quaternary phosphorites from ocean shelves REE contents and patterns in general are the same as in host sediments. Phosphorites from seamounts are enriched in REE compared to shelf phosphorites and their patterns are close to one of seawater. Behavior of REE in shelf phosphorites is determined by the fact that in early stages of phosphorite formation REE are associated not primarily with phosphate, but with organic matter and terrigenous impurities. Only in the later stages of diagenesis phosphate begins to play a leading role in concentration of REE. In metasomatic phosphorites on seamounts concentration of REE depends on age and depth of these rocks, i.e. it is determined by duration and conditions of contact with sea water.

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Distribution of rare earth elements (REE) was studied in phosphorites collected from seamounts at depths from about 400 to 3600 m. In general phosphorites are characterized by high REE con¬tent, by a strong negative Ce anomaly, by a slight positive Gd anomaly, and by slight enrichment in heavy REE, which is also characteristic of seawater, where, to certain extent, composition of REE depends on depth. Comparison of REE composition in phosphorites and in seawater from the Northwest Pacific by means of Q-mode factor analysis revealed that REE have been transported into the phosphorites from various water depths following submergence of the seamounts. This corresponds to paleotectonic reconstructions, but is only partially consistent with age determinations of phosphorites.

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Changes in concentration levels and speciation of heavy metals during sedimentation on example of a typical semi-closed bay, where bottom sediments have formed due to river run-off, are under consideration. It is shown that due to desorption of mobile manganese, zinc and copper entered the bay with river suspended matter, their total contents in bottom sediments decrease and percentages of lithogenic forms increase. Contents and speciation of iron in bottom sediments are determined by its participation in coagulation of river colloids in the mixing zone and by mechanical differentiation of sedimentary material.

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Porous seep-carbonates are exposed at mud volcanoes in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. The 13C-depleted aragonitic carbonates formed as a consequence of the anaerobic oxidation of methane in a shallow sub-surface environment. Besides the macroscopically visible cavernous fabric, extensive carbonate corrosion was revealed by detailed analysis. After erosion of the background sediments, the carbonates became exposed to oxygenated bottom waters that are periodically influenced by the release of methane and upward diffusion of hydrogen sulphide. We suggest that carbonate corrosion resulted from acidity locally produced by aerobic oxidation of methane and hydrogen sulphide in the otherwise, with respect to aragonite, oversaturated bottom waters. Although it remains to be tested whether the mechanisms of carbonate dissolution suggested herein are valid, this study reveals that a better estimate of the significance of corrosion is required to assess the amount of methane-derived carbon that is permanently fixed in seep-carbonates.

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During Leg 125, scientists drilled two serpentinite seamounts: Conical Seamount in the Mariana forearc and Torishima Forearc Seamount in the Izu-Bonin forearc. Grain densities of the serpentinized peridotites range from 2.44 to 3.02 g/cm**3. The NRM intensity of the serpentinized peridotites ranges from 0.01 to 0.59 A/m and that of serpentine sediments ranges from 0.01 to 0.43 A/m. Volume susceptibilities of serpentinized peridotites range from 0.05 * 10**-3 SI to 9.78 * 10**-3 SI and from 0.12 * 10**-3 to 4.34 * 10**-3 SI in the sediments. Koenigsberger ratios, a measure of the relative contributions of remanent vs. induced magnetization to the magnetic anomaly, vary from 0.09 to 80.93 in the serpentinites and from 0.06 to 4.74 in the sediments. The AF demagnetization behavior of the serpentinized peridotites shows that a single component of remanence (probably a chemical remanence carried by secondary magnetite) can be isolated in many samples that have a median destructive field less than 9.5 mT. Multiple remanence components are observed in other samples. Serpentine sediments exhibit similar behavior. Comparison of the AF demagnetization of saturation isothermal remanence and NRM suggests that the serpentinized peridotites contain both single-domain and multidomain magnetite particles. The variability of the magnetic properties of serpentinized peridotites reflects the complexity of magnetization acquired during serpentinization. Serpentinized peridotites may contribute to magnetic anomalies in forearc regions.