998 resultados para 487-2


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Basaltic rocks recovered at the Middle America Trench area off Mexico are typical plagioclase-olivine phyric abyssal tholeiites containing less than 0.2 wt.% K2O. Phenocrysts of plagioclase and olivine usually make up the aggregate. Plagioclase phenocrysts are Ca-rich and up to An90. Olivine phenocrysts, which are always attached to plagioclase phenocrysts, are magnesian, Fo88 to Fo89, and contain 0.2 to 0.3 wt. % of NiO. Plagioclase phenocrysts contain numerous glass inclusions with the Mg/Mg+Fe atomic ratio of 0.70 to 0.73, which is distinctly higher than the same ratio of the bulk rock (0.62-0.63). Olivine of Fo88 to Fo89 is equilibrated with the liquid with an Mg/Mg+Fe atomic ratio of about 0.7, assuming the KDMg-Fe between liquid and olivine of 0.3. Small droplets of glass within glass inclusions in plagioclase are more enriched in K2O and volatiles than the host glass. This enrichment may have been caused by the extraction of Al2O3 as plagioclase from the trapped liquid and implies its immiscibility. Aggregates of plagioclase with small amounts of olivine may have been floated from more primitive magma with an Mg/Mg+Fe atomic ratio of about 0.7, judging from the chemical characteristics mentioned above. Flotation must have occurred at relatively high pressure. Large crystals of plagioclase and smaller crystals of olivine are xenocryst rather than phenocryst. Parental magma of Leg 66 basalt was high-MgO olivine tholeiite.

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The oceans absorb and store a significant portion of anthropogenic CO2 emissions, but large uncertainties remain in the quantification of this sink. An improved assessment of the present and future oceanic carbon sink is therefore necessary to provide recommendations for long-term global carbon cycle and climate policies. The formation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) is a unique fast track for transporting anthropogenic CO2 into the ocean's interior, making the deep waters rich in anthropogenic carbon. Thus the Atlantic is presently estimated to hold 38% of the oceanic anthropogenic CO2 inventory, although its volume makes up only 25% of the world ocean. Here we analyze the inventory change of anthropogenic CO2 in the Atlantic between 1997 and 2003 and its relationship to NADW formation. For the whole region between 20°S and 65°N the inventory amounts to 32.5 ± 9.5 Petagram carbon (Pg C) in 1997 and increases up to 36.0 ± 10.5 Pg C in 2003. This result is quite similar to earlier studies. Moreover, the overall increase of anthropogenic carbon is in close agreement with the expected change due to rising atmospheric CO2 levels of 1.69% a?1. On the other hand, when considering the subpolar region only, the results demonstrate that the recent weakening in the formation of Labrador Sea Water, a component of NADW, has already led to a decrease of the anthropogenic carbon inventory in this water mass. As a consequence, the overall inventory for the total water column in the western subpolar North Atlantic increased only by 2% between 1997 and 2003, much less than the 11% that would be expected from the increase in atmospheric CO2 levels.

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The volcanism of Central America, according to current theory (Pichler and Weyl, 1973; Stoiber and Carr, 1974; Hey, 1977), is related to the subduction of the Cocos Plate under the North American lithospheric plate and the melting of ocean crust material in the subduction zone (Green and Ringwood, 1968; Dickinson, 1970, Fitton, 1971). Since Cocos Plate subduction occurs at the rate of more than 7 cm/y. (Hey et al., 1977), basalts underlying upper Miocene sediments of the Middle America Trench outer slope, penetrated in Hole 487 (Fig. 1) during Leg 66 (Moore et al., 1979), should have formed far from their present position if current theory is accurate. Present manifestations of basaltic magmatism in adjacent areas of the Pacific derive from the axial part of the East Pacific Rise, the Galapagos spreading center, and transform fracture zones. The question arises: Are there analogs of the Middle America Trench basalts among magmatic cock associated with these modern features, or do the trench basalts have some other origin?