987 resultados para 765
Resumo:
During Ocean Drilling Program Leg 123, two sites were drilled in the deep Indian Ocean. Physical properties were measured in soft Quaternary and Lower Cretaceous sediments to relatively fresh, glass-bearing pillow lavas and massive basalts. Porosities ranged from 89% near the seafloor to 1.6% for the dense basalts. This self-consistent set of measurements permitted some descriptive models of physical properties to be more rigorously tested than before. Predictive relationships between porosity and compressional-wave velocity have generally been based upon the Wyllie time average equation. However, this equation does not adequately describe the actual relationship between these two parameters, and many have attempted to improve it. In most cases, models were derived by testing them against a set of data representing a relatively narrow range of porosity values. Similarly, the use of the Wyllie equation has often been justified by a pseudolinear fit to the data over a narrow range of porosity values. The limitations of the Wyllie relationship have been re-emphasized here. A semi-empirical acoustic impedance equation is developed that provides a more accurate porosity-velocity transform, using realistic material parameters, than has hitherto been possible. A closer correlation can be achieved with this semi-empirical relationship than with more theoretically based equations. In addition, a satisfactory empirical equation can be used to describe the relationship between thermal conductivity and porosity. If enough is known about core sample lithologies to provide estimates of the matrix and pore water parameters, then these predictive equations enable one to describe completely the behavior of a saturated rock core in terms of compressional-wave velocity, thermal conductivity, porosity, and bulk density.
Resumo:
The results of experiments in 40Ar/39Ar age dating using fresh basement material from Sites 765 and 766 of Leg 123 of the Ocean Drilling Program are inconsistent and cannot be used to constrain the basement age of the Argo Abyssal Plain in the Indian Ocean. However, a celadonite sample, which was precipitated during a low-temperature alteration event that affected the basement at Site 765, yielded a K-Ar age of 155.3 ±3.4 Ma. Celadonites, which have been dated using Rb-Sr methods for basement in the Atlantic Ocean (Staudigel et al., 1981, doi:10.1016/0012-821X(81)90186-2) and by K-Ar methods for the Troodos Ophiolite (Staudigel et al., 1986, doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1986)14<72:AASAOC>2.0.CO;2), and for sediments from the Pacific Ocean (Peterson et al., 1986, doi:10.2973/dsdp.proc.92.132.1986) yield ages that are up to 15 Ma younger than the age for the formation of basement. Thus, the celadonite age is retained as a reliable minimum age for basement at Site 765. This radiometric age is inconsistent with biostratigraphic ages, which indicate a maximum of late Berriasian (approximately 140 Ma) for Site 765, but is consistent with geophysical interpretations of marine magnetic anomalies and with the early north-south seafloor spreading history of the Argo Abyssal Plain region of the Indian Ocean.
Resumo:
Drilling at Site 765 in the Argo Abyssal Plain sampled sediments and oceanic crust adjacent to the Australian margin. Some day, this site will be consumed in the Java Trench. An intensive analytical program was conducted to establish this site as a geochemical reference section forcrustal recycling calculations. About 150 sediment samples from Site 765 were analyzed for major and trace elements. Downhole trends in the sediment analyses agree well with trends in sediment mineralogy, as well as in Al and K logs. The primary signal in the geochemical variability is dilution of a detrital component by both biogenic silica and calcium carbonate. Although significant variations in the nonbiogenic component occur through time, its overall character is similar to nearby Canning Basin shales, which are typical of average post-Archean Australian shales (PAAS). The bulk composition of the hole is calculated using core descriptions to weight the analyses appropriately. However, a remarkably accurate estimate of the bulk composition of the hole can be made simply from PAAS and the average calcium carbonate and aluminum contents of the hole. Most elements can be estimated within 30% in this way. This means that estimating the bulk composition of other sections dominated by detrital and biogenic components may require little analytical effort: calcium carbonate contents, average Al contents, and average shale values can be taken from core descriptions, geochemical logs, and the literature, respectively. Some of the geochemical systematics developed at Site 765 can be extrapolated along the entire Sunda Trench. However, results are general, and Site 765 should serve as a useful reference for estimating the compositions of other continental margin sections approaching trenches around the world (e.g., outboard of the Lesser Antilles, Aegean, and Eolian arcs).
Resumo:
Sediments recovered from Site 765 can be divided into seven mineral associations, based on differences in clay mineralogy. These clay mineral associations correlate with the lithologic units and reflect the rift-to-drift history of the passive Australian margin. In general, the Lower to mid-Cretaceous sediments represent altered volcanic material and detrital aluminosilicates that were deposited during the early formation of the Argo Basin. The predominant clay mineral is randomly interstratified illite/smectite (I/S) that contains less than 10% illite layers. The transformation of smectite to illite is suggested by an increase in the percentage of illite layers in the basal sediments (from <10% to 40%) that corresponds to the silica transformation of opal-CT to quartz. This mixed-layered illite/smectite has an average composition of (K0.14 Na0.29 C0.07)(Al0.88 Mg0.43 Fe0.61 Ti0.06)(Si3.88 Al0.12)(O)10(OH)2. The highly smectitic composition of the I/S and its association with bentonite layers and zeolite minerals suggest that much of the I/S was derived from the alteration of volcanic material. The condensed middle to Upper Cretaceous sediments consist of palygorskite and detrital I/S that contains 30% to 60% illite layers. The condensed Paleogene sediments contain no palygorskite and are dominated by detrital clay minerals or by highly smectitic I/S associated with bentonite layers and zeolite minerals. The overlying, rapidly deposited Neogene clayey calcareous turbidites consist of three distinct clay mineral associations. Middle Miocene sediments contain palygorskite, kaolinite, and a tentatively identified mixed-layered illite/smectite/chlorite (I/S/C) or saponite. Upper Miocene sediments contain abundant sepiolite and kaolinite and lesser amounts of detrital I/S. Detrital I/S and kaolinite dominate the clay mineralogy of Pliocene and Pleistocene sediments. The fibrous, magnesium-rich clay minerals sepiolite and palygorskite appear to be authigenic and occur intimately associated with authigenic dolomite. The magnesium required to form these Mg-rich minerals was supplied by diffusion from the overlying seawater, and silica was supplied by the dissolution of associated biogenic silica.