930 resultados para Dredge
Resumo:
The Marcus Necker Rise has two geologically distinct parts: the western one is composed of the Marcus Wake seamounts and the eastern one of the Wake-Necker seamounts. The first contain differentiated alkali basaltoids, while the second show a distinctive prolonged and complicated history. The latter contain Early Cretaceous olivine basalts and Late Cretaceous alkali and hornblende basaltoids.
Resumo:
Impact and monitoring of dredge spoils are an important environmental issue. This investigation aims to map two dredge-spoil dispersals in the Bay of Seine by using an innovative application of well-established environmental magnetic proxies. Low-field magnetic susceptibility measurements were performed on discrete samples from dredge sediments and from the Bay of Seine seafloor before & after dumping. The fingerprinting of the dispersion of dredge-dumped sediments is efficient due to the higher susceptibility of the dredge sediments with respect to the background. Besides, terrestrial input is also monitored in our susceptibility maps. Dilution of the susceptibility signal allows an estimation of the resilience of the sedimentary environment on a six-month survey. This susceptibility signal is controlled by the ferromagnetic fraction of the sediment. A constant magnetic mineralogy carried by magnetite is observed in the study area, thus a qualitative parameter for magnetic grain size was selected that shows an in-progress resilience pattern over the survey.
Resumo:
In terms of physical and genetic features studied nodules are assigned to the sedimentational manganese-iron type (Canary Basin) and to the iron-containing type (Guyana Basin). They are enriched in Fe, Co and Pb and depleted in Mn, Ni, Cu, and Zn. Cores of the nodules from the Canary Basin consist primarily of peridotite, gabbro, dolerite, and metamorphic rock. Great predominance of peridotite and gabbro indicates that blocks of ocean crust underwent considerable displacement, bringing the third and fourth layers of a crust to the surface.
Resumo:
Scandium and lanthanum were analyzed using neutron activation and ICP-MS methods in 60 samples of oceanic phosphorites of various composition and age recovered from continental margins and seamounts in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. In the samples studied scandium content ranges from 0.1 to 60 ppm, lanthanum content ranges from 0.4 to 513 ppm, and La/Sc ratio varies from 1.1 to 114. The lowest scandium content occurs in recent phosphorite nodules, intermediate - in Pleistocene phosphatic sand, and the highest - in ancient seamount phosphorites. Process of scandium accumulation in the phosphorites is mainly controlled by their specific surface area and duration of their contact with ocean water. Lanthanum concentrates in the phosphorites much more intensely than scandium. Correlation between scandium and lanthanum distribution is weak, and it appears only when average concentrations of these elements in various groups of samples are compared.