987 resultados para spectrophotometry
Resumo:
Four samples of Nauru Basin basalts (Cores 94 to 109 of Hole 462A, sub-bottom depth 1077-1209 m) have 87Sr/86Sr ratios in the range 0.7037 to 0.7038, which is distinctly higher than the ratios of N-type MORB. The Rb contents of the samples are depleted in comparison with those of MORB and ocean-island basalts. These chemical and isotopic characteristics are identical to those of the basalts previously drilled during Leg 61 (Cores 75 to 90 of Hole 462A), and are explained in terms of inhomogeneity of the source region in the mantle or later alteration effects. Sr/Ca-Ba/Ca systematics of 15 samples from Cores 462A-94 to 462A-109 and 14 samples from Cores 462A-75 to 462A-90 suggest that the Nauru Basin basalts are derived from a mantle peridotite by 20 to 30% partial melting with subsequent Plagioclase crystallization.
Resumo:
The depth variations in the major chemical components dissolved in interstitial waters from the Tonga margin (ODP Site 841) are much more pronounced than those usually observed in deep-sea sediments. The extensive alteration of volcanic Miocene sediments to secondary minerals such as analcime, clays, and thaumasite forms a CaCl2-rich brine. The brine results from a high exchange of Ca to Na, K, and Mg and an increase in Cl concentrations due to removal of H2O from the fluid during the authigenesis of hydrous minerals. The formation of thaumasite could have partly controlled the concentration of dissolved SO4, HCO3, and Ca in the Miocene sediments. The strontium isotopic signature of the interstitial water suggests that alteration of the volcanic Miocene sediments occurred a long time after sedimentation. A transient diffusion model indicates that molecular diffusion was not prevented by lithologic barriers and that the formation of secondary minerals in the Miocene sediment occurred over a short period of time (e.g.,=1000 years). The extensive diagenetic processes in the Tonga margin were mostly caused by the recent intrusion of andesite sills and dikes into the Miocene sediments.
Resumo:
Interstitial water studies were done at 9 of the 11 sites visited in the Mississippi Fan and Orca and Pigmy Basins during DSDP Leg 96. High concentrations of sulfate were observed at Mississippi Fan Sites 616, 617, 620, and 623. The maximum sulfate value of 38.8 mM, recorded at Site 617, is the highest ever found in DSDP sediments. Hypersaline interstitial water was observed at Site 618 in Orca Basin. Concentration ratios of salinity to chlorinity and to sodium in interstitial waters are similar to those of Orca Basin bottom water, suggesting that the chemistry of interstitial water is affected by the dissolution of buried salt.
Resumo:
Massive clinoptilolite authigenesis was observed at about 1105 meters below sea floor (mbsf) in lower Miocene wellcompacted carbonate periplatform sediments from the Great Bahama Bank [Ocean Drilling Program, ODP Leg 166, Site 1007]. The diagenetic assemblage comprises abundant zeolite crystallized within foraminifer tests and sedimentary matrix, as well as Mg smectites. In carbonate-rich deposits, the formation of the zeolite requires a supply of silica. Thus, the objective of the study is to determine the origin of the silica supply, its diagenetic evolution, and consequently the related implications on interpretation of the sedimentary record, in terms of local or global paleoceanographic change. For lack of evidence for any volcaniclastic input or traces of Si-enriched deep fluids circulation, an in situ biogenic source of silica is validated by isotopic data and chemical modeling for the formation of such secondary minerals in shallow-water carbonate sequences. Geochemical and strontium isotopic data clearly establish the marine signature of the diagenetic zeolite, as well as its contemporaneous formation with the carbonate deposition (Sr model ages of 19.6-23.2 Ma). The test of saturation for the pore fluids specifies the equilibrium state of the present mineralogical assemblage. Seawater-rock modeling specifies that clinoptilolite precipitates from the dissolution of biogenic silica, which reacts with clay minerals. The amount of silica (opal-A) involved in the reaction has to be significant enough, at least 10 wt.%, to account for the observed content of clinoptilolite occurring at the most zeolite-rich level. Modeling also shows that the observed amount of clinoptilolite (~19%) reflects an in situ and short-term reaction due to the high reactivity of primary biogenic silica (opal-A) until its complete depletion. The episodic occurrence of these well-lithified zeolite-rich levels is consistent with the occurrence of seismic reflectors, particularly the P2 seismic sequence boundary located at 1115 mbsf depth and dated as 23.2 Ma. The age range of most zeolitic sedimentary levels (biostratigraphic ages of 21.5-22 Ma) correlates well with that of the early Miocene glaciation Mi-1 and Mi-1a global events. Thus, the clinoptilolite occurrence in the shallow carbonate platform environment far from volcanogenic supply, or in other sensitive marine areas, is potentially a significant new proxy for paleoproductivity and oceanic global events, such as the Miocene events, which are usually recognized in deep-sea pelagic sediments and high latitude deposits.
Resumo:
A complex study of influence of various environmental factors on rates of oxygen (M_O2 ), ammonium (M_NH4), and phosphate (M_PO4) metabolism in Ahnfeltia tobuchiensis has been carried out in situ in the Izmena Bay of the Kunashir Island. The following environmental factors have been included into the investigation: photosynthetically active radiation (PAR); ammonium (NH4); phosphate (PO4); and contents of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and chlorophyll a (Chl) in tissue. Population of agar-containing seaweed A. tobuchiensis forms a layer with thickness up to 0.5 m, which occupies about 23.3 km**2; biomass is equal to 125000 tons. Quantitative assessment of organic matter production and nutrient consumption during oxygen metabolism has been carried out for the whole population. It has been shown that daily oxygen metabolism depends on PAR intensity, concentrations of PO4 and NH4 in seawater, and contents of N and P in tissues (r**2=0.78, p<0.001). Average daily NH4 consumption is 0.21 µmol/g of dry weight/hour and depends on NH4 and O2 concentrations in seawater and on ? and Chl a contents in algal tissues (r**2=0.64, p<0.001). Average daily PO4 consumption is 0.01 µmol/g of dry weight/hour and depends on NH4 concentrations in seawater and on P contents in algal tissues (r**2=0.40, p<0.001).