729 resultados para 178-1102


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Pebbles (>10 mm) sampled from three drill sites on the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 178 were classified by shape and roundness. In addition, pebble lithology and surface texture were visually identified. To increase the pebble sample number to 331, three sites that were drilled 94 to 213 km from the continental shelf edge were integrated into the data set using magnetostratigraphy for core correlation. Pebbles were compared in three groups defined by the same stratigraphic intervals at each site: 3.1-2.2 Ma (late Pliocene), 2.2-0.76 Ma (late Pliocene-late Pleistocene), and 0.76 Ma to the Holocene. Pebble lithologies originate from sources on the Antarctic Peninsula margin. Most pebbles are metamorphic and sedimentary pebbles are rare (<6%), whereas mafic volcanic and intrusive igneous lithologies increase in abundance upsection. Pebbles from 3.1 to 0.76 Ma, plotted on sphericity-roundness diagrams, indicate original transport as basal and supraglacial/englacial debris. Pebbles are abundant and of diverse lithology. From 0.76 Ma to the present, the number of pebbles is low and their shape characteristics indicate they originated as basal debris. Observed changes in ice-rafted pebbles can be explained by growth of an ice sheet and inundation of the Antarctic Peninsula topography by ice ~0.76 Ma. Prior to this, outlet and valley glaciers transported debris at high levels within and at the base of the ice. The mass accumulation rate of sand fluctuates and includes rounded quartz grains. Ice-sheet growth may have been accompanied by overall cooling from subpolar to polar glacial regimes, which halted meltwater production and enhanced the growth of ice shelves, which consequently reduced sediment supply to icebergs.

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The routine use of spectrophotometry on the sediment surfaces of archive halves of each section during the onboard sedimentological core description process is a great stride toward development of real-time noninvasive characterization of deep-sea sediments. Spectral reflectance data have been used so far for mineral composition studies as well as for lithostratigraphic correlation between sites (Balsam and Deaton, 1991; Balsam et al., 1997; Mix et al., 1995; Ortiz et al., 1999). Their results demonstrate that spectrophotometry can estimate CaCO3 content by using the 4.65-, 5.25-, and 5.55-µm wavelength spectrums. A detailed overview of various other noninvasive methods is given in Ortiz and Rack (1999). The purpose of this study is to test whether spectrophotometry in the visible band can be used as a tool to gather further information about grain-size variation, sorting, compaction, and porosity, which are directly linked to the sedimentation process. From remote sensing data analyses, it is known that diffuse spectral reflectance data in the visible band in the wavelength window of 7.0-6.5 µm are sensitive to grain-size variations. It appears that a relationship between grain size and signal absorption exists only in this wavelength window. (e.g., Clark, 1999; Gaffey, 1986; Gaffey et al., 1993). Variations in grain size during a sedimentation process are linked to depositional energy, which affects sorting, compaction, and porosity of sediment deposits. As an example, we study here the spectrophotometric data of the sedimentary sequence of Hole 1098C, which was deposited under widely varying environmental conditions. Alternating turbidite and finely laminated sediments were recovered from Hole 1098C. The turbidites are related to a high depositional energy environment; the finely laminated sediments are related to a low depositional energy environment. Data from Hole 1098C were therefore used to test whether the spectral reflectance data can provide a proxy for these different depositional environments.

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Geochemical analyses have been performed on sediment samples collected during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 178 from the continental rise and outer continental shelf of the Antarctic Peninsula. A suite of 21 trace elements was measured by neutron activation analysis in 39 sediment samples, and major element oxides were determined in 67 samples by electron microprobe analyses of fused glass beads. These geochemical data, combined with the X-ray diffraction and X-ray fluorescence data from shipboard analyses, provide a reasonable estimate of the mineral and chemical composition of sediments deposited along the western margin of the Antarctic Peninsula.

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Early Pliocene to middle late Miocene hemipelagic and distal turbidite sediments from Hole 1095B, near the Antarctic Peninsula, yield moderately abundant, moderately well preserved radiolarian faunas and other biosiliceous material (diatoms, silicoflagellates, and sponge spicules). Preservation characteristics, however, vary strongly even between closely related samples, and there are many intervals of poor preservation. In the 140- to 460-meters below seafloor interval studied, it was possible to identify the following standard Southern Ocean radiolarian zones: Upsilon, Tau, Amphymenium challengerae, Acrosphaera? labrata, Siphonosphaera vesuvius, and upper Acrosphaera australis (total age range ~4-10 Ma). Some normally common radiolarian groups, such as actinommids, are unusually rare in the studied material, and the relative ranges of several individual species, such as Acrosphaera labrata vs. A. australis, appear to be somewhat anomalous. These observations imply that the ranges of taxa in this section may be somewhat diachronous, due to either local ecologic factors and/or the highly variable preservation of the faunas. Thus, the ages of events reported are probably only approximate, although they are still useful for constraining the age of sediments in this section.

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Sediment drifts on the continental rise west of the Antarctic Peninsula received fine-grained sediment and ice-rafted debris (IRD) directly from the continental shelf and thus indirectly record the history of West Antarctic glaciation. Site 1101 contains a 218-m-thick, nearly continuous section extending from the late Pliocene to the Holocene. To assess the presence of calving glaciers at sea level in the Antarctic Peninsula region, the mass accumulation rate (MAR) of IRD was calculated using the weight percent terrigenous sand fraction (250 µm to 2 mm). IRD MAR is cyclic throughout, with small peaks alternating with periods of low or no IRD. Many cycles have a sawtooth pattern that increases gradually to the peak then abruptly decreases to zero. This pattern is consistent with rapid disintegration of ice streams and release of icebergs from the continental shelf. Three unusually large peaks (three to five times the size of other peaks) occurred at approximately 2.8, 1.9, and 0.88 Ma and indicate periods of intense ice rafting. Lithofacies were described in detail using X-radiographs and core descriptions for the interval from 1.34 to 0.54 Ma. Glacial units are represented by thickly laminated mud deposited by distal turbidites and meltwater plumes. Less commonly, thinly laminated sediment formed by contour currents and diamicton by intense ice rafting. Interglacials are represented by foraminifer-bearing mud with IRD. Ice rafting appears to have increased in the later part of the glacial period and remained high in the interglacial period.

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