102 resultados para MO-106
Resumo:
The paper deals with regularities of distribution of iron, manganese, copper, nickel, and vanadium in interstitial waters from different lithofacies types of bottom sediments on the profile from the coast of Mexico to the Wake Atoll in the Pacific Ocean. With increasing distance from the shore and with transition from reduced coastal sediments to oxidized deep-sea red clays concentration of iron and manganese in the interstitial waters greatly decreases. Elevated concentration of dissolved iron (0.34 mg/l) was observed only in highly reduced terrigenous sediments from the shelf and continental slope of Mexico. The highest concentrations of manganese (13.2 mg/l) were measured in hemipelagic carbonate-siliceous-clayey sediments. Compared to Pacific seawater interstitial waters are enriched in Fe, Mn, Cu, Ni, V. Interstitial waters contain only from 0.000004 to 1.2% of total contents of these elements in bottom sediments.
Resumo:
The distribution of paragenetic assemblages of trace and rare elements, as revealed by factor analysis (R-mode, Q-mode), the ratios of elements to Zr and the interpretation of these data in the context of the known mineralogy, lithology, and geology of the region, provide the bases for the outline of the geochemical history of sedimentation in the study area that forms the subject of this chapter. Two stages may be discerned. 1. Late-Middle Jurassic-Early Cretaceous (160-106? Ma). The sediments that accumulated in relatively shallow water (shelf) were predominantly clay, with dispersed sapropelic organic matter, plant fragments, pyrite, admixtures of acid-medium volcanic glass, and epigenetic crystals of gypsum. The bottom water layers of the basin are notably stagnant. The sediments are characterized by higher amounts of V, Zn, Cu, Cr, Rb, and Be associated with organic matter. Lower Cretaceous sediments, separated from those of the Upper Jurassic by a hiatus, accumulated in a deepened and enlarging basin. These Lower Cretaceous deposits are chemically similar to those of the Upper Jurassic, but contain diagenetic concentrations of Zn, Ni, and La. 2. Early-middle Albian (Unit 5)-middle Maestrichtian (1067-66.6Ma). The prevailing regime was that of an open ocean basin that tended to expand and deepen. During the second half of the early-middle Albian, the biogenic components Ba, Sr, and CaCO3 accumulated. By the end of this interval, Ti/Zr values had increased. In conjunction data on mineral composition, they testify to an outburst of basaltoid volcanism related to tectonic activity before an erosional hiatus (late Albian-Cenomanian). At the end of the Cenomanian-Turonian, residual deposits of predominantly clay sediments with relatively high amounts of Ti and Zr and associated rare alkalis (Li, Rb) accumulated. Clay sediments deposited during the Coniacian-Santonian were characterized by higher concentrations of Ti, Zr, Li, and Rb, by diagenetic carbonate phases of Ni, Zn, and La, and by sulphides and Fe-oxides with an admixture of Ni and Co. The latter half of the interval saw the deposition of fine basaltoid volcanoclastic material, diagenetically altered by zeolitization and carbonatization and enriched with Se, Pb, Ti, Sr, Ba, Y, and Yb. Sediments with a similar chemistry accumulated in the Campanian-middle Maestrichtian. Strong current activity preceding a global hiatus at the Mesozoic/Cenozoic boundary is reflected in both lower sedimentation rates and the presence of higher residual concentrations of Ti, Zr, Ba, Sr, and other elements studied in this chapter.
Resumo:
Several meters of unconsolidated hydrothermal sediment were recovered from the Snake Pit hydrothermal field during ODP Leg 106. Polymetallic sulfides comprise most of the sediment with minor fragments of massive sulfide, organic debris, clay minerals, and fresh glass shards. Trace element and Sr-isotope contents of hydrothermal clays and sulfides from Holes 649B and 649G indicate that these minerals precipitated from a mixed hydrothermal fluid-seawater solution. Evaluation of the REE mineral data and the Snake Pit hydrothermal fluids shows that the REE distribution coefficients between the hydrothermal fluids and clay-sulfide mixes range from 100-500. This indicates that hydrothermal fluids originating in the root-zone of the Snake Pit hydrothermal system may be modified by the precipitation of hydrothermal minerals, either in the shallow subsurface or within chimney structures. Contrasting REE profiles of clay-sulfide aggregates and massive sulfides from Holes 649B and 649G may be accounted for by spatial and/or temporal variations in redox conditions in the plumbing system.