333 resultados para Organic loading rate


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Bulk sediment accumulation rates and carbonate and carbonate-free accumulation rates corrected for tectonic tilting have been calculated for Leg 78A sediments. These rates are uniformly low, ranging from 0.1 to 6.8 g/(cm**2 x 10**3 yr.), reflecting the pelagic-hemipelagic nature of all the sediments drilled in the northern Lesser Antilles forearc. Rates calculated for Sites 541 and 542 [0.6-6.8 g/(cm**2 x 10**3 yr.)], located on the lower slope of the accretionary prism, are significantly greater than the Neogene rates calculated for oceanic reference Site 543 [0.1-2.4 g/(cm**2 x 10**3)]. This difference could be the result of (1) tectonic thickening of accretionary prism sediments due to folding, small-scale faulting, and layer-parallel shortening; (2) deposition in shallower water farther above the CCD (carbonate compensation depth) resulting in preservation of a greater percentage of calcareous microfossils; or (3) a greater percentage of foraminiferal sediment gravity flows. Terrigenous turbidites are not documented in the Leg 78A area because of (1) great distance from South American sources; (2) damming effects of east-west trending tectonic elements; and (3) location on the Tiburon Rise (Site 543). This lack of terrigenous material, characteristic of intraoceanic convergent margins, suggests that published sedimentation models for active continental convergent margins with abundant terrigenous influxes are not applicable to intraoceanic convergent margin settings.

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Rate of CO2 assimilation was determined above the Broken Spur and TAG active hydrothermal fields for three main ecosystems: (1) hydrothermal vents; (2) 300 m near-bottom layer of plume water; and (3) bottom sediments. In water samples from warm (40-45°C) vents assimilation rates were maximal and reached 2.82-3.76 µg C/l/day. In plume waters CO2 assimilation rates ranged from 0.38 to 0.65 µg C/l/day. In bottom sediments CO2 assimilation rates varied from 0.8 to 28.0 µg C/l/day, rising up to 56 mg C/kg/day near shrimp swarms. In the most active plume zone of the long-living TAG field bacterial production of organic matter (OM) from carbonic is up to 170 mg C/m**2/day); production of autotrophic process of bacterial chemosynthesis reaches about 90% (156 mg C/m**2/day). Thus, chemosynthetic production of OM in September-October is almost equal to that of photosynthetic production in the oceanic region. Bacterial production of OM above the Broken Spur hydrothermal field is one order lower and reaches only 20 mg C/m**2/day.