955 resultados para (63-10 µm) mean grain size
Resumo:
50 m of Middle Eocene pure radiolarian ooze were drilled at ODP Site 660 in the equatorial East Atlantic, 80 km northeast of the Kane Gap. The oozes comprise a 10 m high and 2 km broad mound of seismic reverberations, covered by manganese-rich sediment, and contain trace amounts of sponge spicules and diatoms, negligible organic carbon (0.15%), clay, and variable amounts of pyrite. The yellow to pale brown silty sediments are relatively coarse-grained (30-45% coarser than 6 µm), little bioturbated, and commonly massive or laminated on a cm-scale. The unlithified radiolarian ooze may indicate an interval of high oceanic productivity, probably linked to a palaeoposition of Site 660 close to the equatorial upwelling belt during Middle Eocene time. The absence of organic matter, however, and both the laminated bedding and the mound-like structure of the deposit on the lower slope of a continental rise indicate deposition by relatively intense contour currents of oxygen-rich deep water, which passed through the Kane Gap, winnowed the fine clay fraction, and prevented the preservation of organic carbon. The ooze may be either a contourite-lag deposit, or a contourite accumulation of displaced radiolarians, originating south of the Kane Gap and being deposited in its northern lee, thus documenting the passage of a strong cross-equatorial bottom-water current formed near Antarctica. These Eocene contourites may be an analogue for ancient radiolarites in the Tethyan Ocean.
Resumo:
Im Sedimentationsraum der südwestlichen Ostsee verdient der nordöstliche Teil der Kieler Bucht besonderes Interesse. Dort öffnet sich die wichtigste Verbindung zwischen Ostsee und Nordsee. Von den Austauschvorgängen, durch welche diese Meeresräume aufeinander Einfluß nehmen, ist gerade jenes Gebiet entscheidend betroffen. Die Beobachtung der Dynamik des Austausches, die Beobachtung der Transportlast, welche von den Wassermassen bewegt wird, und schließlich auch die Beobachtung der Beziehungen, welche sich zwischen dem Zusammentreffen von Wassermassen unterschiedlicher physikalischer Eigenschaften und der Sedimentbildung ergeben, läßt deshalb vor allem dort wesentliche Hinweise zum Verständnis der Sedimentationsvorgänge in der südlichen Ostsee erhoffen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden an 49 Durchschnittsproben die Korngrößenverteilungen und Schwermineralgehalte von Sedimenten aus dem Südausgang des Großen Beltes untersucht. 1. Es wurden sechs in sich morphologisch etwa gleichwertige Gebiete ausgegliedert, die jeweils durch Sedimente mit ähnlichen Korngrößenverteilungen ausgezeichnet sind. Nach Lage, Typ und genetischer Ausdeutbarkeit fügen sich diese Gebiete dem von O. PRATJE (1939, 1948) gegebenen Modell der Sedimentationszonen gut ein. 2. Innerhalb dieser Gebiete ergibt sich für Sande in mehr als 20 m Wassertiefe südwärts gerichteter Transport. Oberhalb dieser Tiefe läßt sich stellenweise nordwärts gerichteter Transport nachweisen. 3. Der Schwermineralgehalt der Sedimente bleibt immer unter zwei Prozent. Die höchsten Anteile (1,7 bzw. 1,9%) werden in den Sedimenten der Tiefen Rinne und der ufernahen Bereiche des Großen Beltes angetroffen. 4. Die Korngrößenverteilungen der Sedimente werden nach der Lage der Modi in bis zu drei (Kies-, Sand-, Silt-) Komponenten zerlegt. Die Beteiligung der Silt-Komponente wird entscheidend von der Salzgehaltssprungschicht beeinflußt. 5. Es bestehen offensichtlich Zusammenhänge zwischen der Schlicksedimentation und der Salzgehaltsschichtung auch in der weiteren südlichen Ostsee.
Resumo:
Sand-silt-clay distribution was determined on 10-cm**3 sediment samples collected at the time the cores were split and described.
Resumo:
The Antarctic Circumpolar Current is key to the mixing and ventilation of the world's oceans. This current flows from west to east between about 45° and 70° S connecting the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans, and is driven by westerly winds and buoyancy forcing. High levels of productivity in the current regulate atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Reconstructions of the current during the last glacial period suggest that flow speeds were faster or similar to present, and it is uncertain whether the strength and position of the westerly winds changed. Here we reconstruct Antarctic Circumpolar Current bottom speeds through the constricting Drake Passage and Scotia Sea during the Last Glacial Maximum and Holocene based on the mean grain size of sortable silt from a suite of sediment cores. We find essentially no change in bottom flow speeds through the region, and, given that the momentum imparted by winds, and modulated by sea-ice cover, is balanced by the interaction of these flows with the seabed, this argues against substantial changes in wind stress. However, glacial flow speeds in the sea-ice zone south of 56° S were significantly slower than present, whereas flow in the north was faster, but not significantly so. We suggest that slower flow over the rough topography south of 56° S may have reduced diapycnal mixing in this region during the last glacial period, possibly reducing the diapycnal contribution to the Southern Ocean overturning circulation.
Resumo:
Sand-silt-clay distribution was determined on 10-cm**3 sediment samples collected at the time the cores were split and described. The sediment classification used here is that of Shepard (1954), with the sand, silt, and clay boundaries based on the Wentworth (1922) scale. Thus the sand, silt, and clay fractions are composed of particles whose diameters are 2000 to 62.5 µm, 62.5 to 3.91 µm, and less than 3.91 µm, respectively. This classification is applied without regard to sediment type and origin; therefore, the sediment names used in this table may differ from those used elsewhere in this volume; e.g., a silt composed of nannofossils may be called a nannofossil ooze in a site chapter.
Resumo:
Hemipelagic muds deposited during the past 5.3 cal kyr in the northern Gulf of Mexico (Orca Basin) contain seven intervals punctuated by relatively coarse siliciclastic grain-size peaks, planktonic faunal turnovers, and negative d13C excursions. We believe these episodes represent megaflood deposits reflecting historically unprecedented outfall of North American floodwater and terrigenous mud plumes into the gulf, resulting in collapse of the open-ocean pelagic ecosystem. The deposits record multidecadal episodes of high continental precipitation and large Mississippi River floods at ~4.7, 3.5, 3.0, 2.5, 2.0, 1.2, and 0.3 cal ka (500-1200-year recurrence interval). Variations in tropical plankton frequencies define submillenial warming intervals that culminate in these fluvial episodes. Strengthened tropical currents in the gulf at these times appear to have increased sea surface temperatures and associated flow of moist gulf air to the midwest. Terrestrial paleohydrologic records support the marine evidence for millennial-scale changes in recurrence of large midwest flood episodes.