999 resultados para NEUTRON ACTIVATION ANALYSIS
Resumo:
Very significant enhancements of the element iridium have been observed in association with the Cretaceous/ Tertiary boundary in marine sediments laid down 65 m.y. ago and subsequently uplifted above the ocean's surface. If our hypothesis for the origin of the iridium and the cause of the Cretaceous/Tertiary life extinctions (the asteroid-impact theory) (Alvarez et al., 1980) is correct, the Ir anomaly should be associated with the Cretaceous/ Tertiary boundary region wherever it is intact. The present work was undertaken to search for the Ir anomaly in a deep-sea-drilling core, in order to check this aspect of the asteroid-impact theory.
Resumo:
Geological-geophysical data obtained during Cruises 7, 11, and 12 of R/V Akademic Nikolay Strakhov (1989-1991) within the international project EQUARIDGE in the Strakhov Fracture Zone region (4°N) are presented. The trough of the fracture is interpreted as an open extension joint, a graben produced by stretching along the axis of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Bedrock studies showed that typical mid-ocean tholeiitic basalts occur within the narrow (60 nm wide) axial rift zone, whereas igneous rocks not typical for the ocean were found on the eastern and western flank plateaus. This allows to suppose that a reworked relict continental-type basement of pre-Upper Jurassic age possibly exists beneath the flank plateaus, within the segment under discussion. The above data correspond to the hypothesis of E. Bonatti about nonspreading nature of the basement of Mid-Atlantic Ridge within the equatorial segment and the Strakhov Fracture Zone.
Resumo:
Ag and Au are typically concentrated in phosphorites; they genetically related to organic matter of bottom sediments that extract these elements from seawater or interstitial water. Consequently, the phosphorites inherit Ag and Au from host sediments that are not always enriched in them. In contrast to other organic-rich sediments, analyzed sample of recent diatom ooze from the Namibian shelf is not enriched in Ag and Au, although some sediments from this region are enriched in Au. In addition to authigenic Au, allochthonous Au associated with quartz grains and micrograins can also be present in shelf phosphorites. This was observed in oceanic phosphorites of various types. Anomalous Au and Fe contents recorded in one seamount phosphorite sample can be related to extraction of Au and nonferrous metals by ferromanganese hydroxides from seawater. This process can serve as one of major mechanisms of Au supply to ferromanganese crusts on seamounts. Phosphorites and sediments are enriched in Ru simultaneously with U. Author's data show that U content varies from 17 (seamount phosphorite) to 887 ppm (Pleistocene phosphorite nodule from the Namibian shelf). This is probably caused by different types of behavior of light and heavy PGEs in the marine environment.
Resumo:
REE abundances in gabbros and peridotites from Site 334 of DSDP Leg 37 show that these rocks are cumulates produced by fractional crystallization of a primitive oceanic tholeiite magma. They may be part of a layered oceanic complex. The REE distributions in the residual liquids left after such a fractionation are similar to those of incompatible element-depleted oceanic tholeiites. The REE data indicate that the basalts which overlie the gabbro-peridotite complex, are not genetically related to plutonic rocks.
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Compositions of different types of ocean suspended matter are under consideration.
Resumo:
Geochemical analyses of sediments from the top 24.5 m of Deep Sea Drilling Project hole 596 (23°51.20'S, 169°39.27'W) show great variability in the composition of pelagic clays accumulated in the South Pacific since the late Cretaceous. Elemental associations indicate that most of this variability can be attributed to variations in abundances of six sediment end-member components: detrital (eolian), andesitic (volcanic), hydrothermal, hydrogenous, phosphate (fish debris), and biogenic silica. We develop a sedimentation model which is used to infer processes that might have influenced the accumulation rates of these components over the last 85 million years. The accumulation of eolian detritus in the South Pacific shows some similarities to that observed in the North Pacific and has been largely controlled by global climate trends in the Cenozoic. Much of the variation in the accumulation of other sediment components likely reflects the paleoceanographic evolution of the South Pacific. The most notable change in the sedimentary environment occurred at about the Paleogene/Neogene boundary. At that time, significant changes in the color, mineralogy, and chemistry of the sediment probably reflect major shifts in climate mode as well as oceanic circulation in the central South Pacific region.