909 resultados para Low thermal conductivity

em Publishing Network for Geoscientific


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Using a new temperature recording instrument recently developed at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, downhole temperature measurements were made at five sites during Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 86. The instrument, which can be installed in the shoe of the hydraulic piston corer, allows measurements of sediment temperature to be made simultaneously with the collection of sediment cores. A numerical procedure was applied to correct the temperature disturbance caused by the corer's friction with the sediment. Detailed temperature profiles constructed from the data were combined with the measurement of thermal conductivity to calculate heat flow. Heat flow values were generally low at all sites of Leg 86, consistent with the age of the lithosphere (>100 m.y.) in the Northwestern Pacific Basin.

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A total of 1547 thermal conductivity values were determined by both the NP (needle probe method) and the QTM (quick thermal conductivity meter) on 1319 samples recovered during DSDP Leg 60. The NP method is primarily for the measurement of soft sedimentary samples, and the result is free from the effect of porewater evaporation. Measurement by the QTM method is faster and is applicable to all types of samples-namely, sediments (soft, semilithified, and lithified) and basement rocks. Data from the deep holes at Sites 453, 458, and 459 show that the thermal conductivity increases with depth, the rate of increase ranging from (0.18 mcal/cm s °C)/100 m at Site 459 to (0.72 mcal/cm s °C)/100 m at Site 456. A positive correlation between the sedimentary accumulation rate and the rate of thermal conductivity increase with depth indicates that both compaction and lithification are important factors. Drilled pillow basalts show nearly uniform thermal conductivity. At She 454 the thermal conductivity of one basaltic flow unit was higher near the center of the unit and lower toward the margin, reflecting variable vesicularity. Hydrothermally altered basalts at Site 456 showed higher thermal conductivity than fresh basalt because secondary calcite, quartz, and pyrite are generally more thermally conductive than fresh basalt. The average thermal conductivity in the top 50 meters of sediments correlates inversely with water depth because of dissolution of calcite, a mineral with high thermal conductivity, from the sediments as the water depth exceeds the lysocline and the carbonate compensation depth. Differences between the Mariana Trench data and the Mariana Basin and Trough data may reflect different abundances of terrigenous material in the sediment. There are remarkable correlations between thermal conductivity and other physical properties. The relationship between thermal conductivity and compressional wave velocity can be used to infer the ocean crustal thermal conductivity from the seismic velocity structure.

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