116 resultados para Extractable


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Organic petrological and geochemical analyses were performed on samples cored on Broken Ridge and Ninetyeast Ridge in the Central Indian Ocean during Leg 121. Organic carbon (Corg) contents are less than 1% in each individual sample and average Corg values calculated for larger stratigraphic units are less than 0.2%. Generally, there is more organic matter in Cretaceous sediments than in Tertiary. In the Cretaceous, the bulk of the organic matter consists of terrigenous debris, but a significant contribution of marine-derived organic matter was found in some samples, especially in the early Maestrichtian on Broken Ridge (Site 754). The youngest Pliocene-Pleistocene sediments at Site 758 (northern part of Ninetyeast Ridge) contain a significant amount of clastic material transported to the site by the (distal) Bengal Fan. In these sediments, Corg contents of up to 0.9% were measured and are due to the inflow of terrigenous organic debris. Corg values are positively correlated with bulk sediment accumulation rates (i.e., sediments contain more organic matter at times of faster deposition). The size of terrigenous organic particles is generally small in all sediments. The extremely small number of particles in the Cretaceous sediments at Site 758 and their smaller grain size, compared to the Cretaceous sediments on Broken Ridge, indicate that Cretaceous surface water paleocurrents flowed from southeast to northwest in the Proto-Indian Ocean. In the central Indian Ocean, sediments deposited above the carbonate compensation depth consist of nannofossil and foraminiferal oozes. In contrast to Corg values, calcite contents in the sediments are negatively correlated with bulk sediment accumulation rates (i.e., carbonate oozes were deposited only during times of extremely slow sedimentation). Therefore, older sediments deposited in the young and still narrow Indian Ocean accumulated faster and are less carbonate-rich than Neogene sediments, although carbonate accumulation rates were higher.

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Two samples of Miocene sediments from Site 525 and four samples of sediments ranging in age from Pleistocene to Miocene from Site 528 have been analyzed for concentrations of organic and carbonate carbon, carbon/nitrogen ratios of organic matter, and extractable hydrocarbons and fatty acids. Organic carbon concentrations average 0.32% and show a diagenetic decrease with greater sediment age. Distributions of n-alkanes and n-alkanoic acids give evidence of considerable microbial reworking and of eolian contributions of terrigenous components. Organic contents of these sediments reflect a history of low marine productivity and poor preservation of organic matter in the eastern South Atlantic since middle Miocene times.

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Although sulfur is an essential element for marine primary production and critical for climate processes, little is known about the oceanic pool of non-volatile dissolved organic sulfur (DOS). We present a basin-scale distribution of solid phase extractable DOS in the East Atlantic Ocean and the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. While molar DOS versus dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) ratios of 0.11 ± 0.024 in Atlantic surface water resembled phytoplankton stoichiometry (S/N ~ 0.08), increasing dissolved organic carbon (DOC) versus DOS ratios and decreasing methionine-S yield demonstrated selective DOS removal and active involvement in marine biogeochemical cycles. Based on stoichiometric estimates, the minimum global inventory of marine DOS is 6.7 Pg S, exceeding all other marine organic sulfur reservoirs by an order of magnitude.