998 resultados para 129-802


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Evidence for the dissolution of biogenic silica at the base of pelagic sections supports the hypothesis that much of the chert formed in the Pacific derives from the dissolution and reprecipitation of this silica by hydrothermal waters. As ocean bottom waters flow into and through the crust, they become warmer. Initially they remain less saturated with respect to dissolved silica than pore water in the overlying sediments. With the diffusion of heat, dissolved ions, and to some extent the advection of water itself, biogenic silica in the basal part of the sedimentary section is dissolved. Upon conductively cooling, these pore waters precipitate chert layers. The most common thickness for the basal silica-free zone (20 m) lies below the most common height of the top of the chert interval above basement (50 m). This mode of chert formation explains the frequent occurrence of chert layers at very shallow subbottom depths in pelagic sections of the Pacific. It is also consistent with the common occurrence of cherts

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

I have compiled CaCO3 mass accumulation rates (MARs) for the period 0-25 Ma for 144 Deep Sea Drilling Project and Ocean Drilling Program drill sites in the Pacific in order to investigate the history of CaCO3 burial in the world's largest ocean basin. This is the first synthesis of data since the beginning of the Ocean Drilling Program. Sedimentation rates, CaCO3 contents, and bulk density were estimated for 0.5 Myr time intervals from 0 to 14 Ma and for 1 Myr time intervals from 14 to 25 Ma using mostly data from Initial Reports volumes. There is surprisingly little coherence between CaCO3 MAR time series from different Pacific regions, although regional patterns exist. A transition from high to low CaCO3 MAR from 23-20 Ma is the only event common to the entire Pacific Ocean. This event is found worldwide. The most likely cause of lowered pelagic carbonate burial is a rising sea-level trend in the early Miocene. The central and eastern equatorial Pacific is the only region with adequate drill site coverage to study carbonate compensation depth (CCD) changes in detail for the entire Neogene. The latitude-dependent decrease in CaCO3 production away from the equator is an important defining factor of the regional CCD, which shallows away from the equatorial region. Examination of latitudinal transects across the equatorial region is a useful way to separate the effects of changes in carbonate production ('productivity') from changes in bottom water chemistry ('dissolution') upon carbonate burial.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

On the basis of their respective eruptive environments and chemical characteristics, alkalic dolerite sills from the northern Pigafetta Basin (Site 800) and tholeiitic pillow lavas from the Mariana Basin (Site 802) sampled during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 129 are considered to represent examples of the widespread mid-Cretaceous volcanic event in the western Pacific. Both groups of basic rocks feature mild, low-grade, anoxic smectite-celadonite-carbonate-pyrite alteration; late-stage oxidation is very limited in extent, with the exception of the uppermost sill unit at Site 800. The aphyric and nonvesicular Site 800 alkalic dolerite sills are all well-evolved mineralogically and chemically, being mainly of hawaiite composition, and are similar to ocean island basalts. They are characterized by high contents of incompatible elements (for example, 300-400 ppm Zr), well-fractionated rare earth element patterns ([La/Yb]N 18-21) and HIMU isotopic characters. They probably represent deep-sea, lateral, intrusive off-shoots from nearby seamounts of similar age. The olivine-plagioclase +/- clinopyroxene phyric tholeiitic pillow lavas and thin flows of Site 802 are nonvesicular and quench-textured throughout. Relative to normal-type mid-ocean ridge basalt, they are enriched in large-ion-lithophile elements, exhibit flat (unfractionated) rare earth element patterns and have distinctive (lower) Zr/Nb, Zr/Ta, La/Ta, and Hf/Th ratios. Overall they are compositionally and isotopically similar to the mid-Cretaceous tholeiites of the Nauru basin and the Ontong-Java and Manihiki plateaus. The Site 802 tholeiites differ from the thickened crustal segments of the oceanic plateaus, however, in apparently representing only a thin veneer over the local basement in an off-axis environment.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Basaltic rocks recovered from three drill sites in the western Pacific during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 129 have fairly distinct Sr, Nd, and Pb isotopic compositions. The Cretaceous alkali olivine dolerites from Site 800 in the northern part of Pigafetta Basin have fairly low 87Sr/86Sri (0.70292-0.70320) and 143Nd/144Ndi (0.51277-0.51281) and high present-day Pb isotopic ratios (206Pb/204Pb = 20.53-21.45; 207Pb/204Pb = 15.70-15.77; 208Pb/204Pb = 40.02-40.68). The Middle Jurassic tholeiites from Site 801 in the southern part of the basin have low 87Sr/86Sri (0.70237-0.70248), high 143Nd/144Ndi (0.51298-0.51322), and moderate present-day Pb isotopic ratios (206Pb/204Pb = 18.20-19.12; 207Pb/204Pb = 15.47-15.60; 208Pb/204Pb = 37.56-38.18); isotopic compositions of the alkali olivine basalts overlying the tholeiites fall between those of the tholeiites and Site 800 dolerites. The Cretaceous tholeiites from Site 802 in the East Mariana Basin have high 87Sr/86Sri (0.70360-0.70372), fairly low 143Nd/144Ndi (0.51277-0.51280), and fairly low and homogeneous present-day Pb isotopic ratios (206Pb/204Pb = 18.37-18.39; 207Pb/204Pb = 15.49-15.51; 208Pb/204Pb = 38.34-38.39). Isotopic compositions of Site 801 tholeiites are indistinguishable from those of modern mid-ocean ridge basalts, consistent with the proposal that these tholeiites are a part of the oldest Pacific crust. The diverse isotopic compositions of the younger basalts appear to be the result of Jurassic Pacific plate migration over the geologically anomalous south-central Pacific region, wherein they acquired their distinct isotopic compositions. The anomalous region was volcanically more active during the Cretaceous than at present.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This report presents all the available major and trace elemental analyses and Sr, Nd, and Pb isotopic compositions of basaltic rocks recovered from Ocean Drilling Program Sites 800, 801, and 802 during Leg 129 (Table 1). Its main purpose is to provide other investigators a complete summary of geochemical data for Leg 129 basement basalts that they can use for later work. Detailed discussions of the data are presented elsewhere in the volume by Floyd and Castillo (Site 801 geochemistry and petrogenesis, dataset: doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779154) Floyd et al. (Sites 800 and 802 geochemistry and petrography, dataset: doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779129), Alt et al. (Site 801 alteration, dataset: doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779207), and Castillo et al. (Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope geochemistry of Leg 129 basalts, dataset: doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779191).

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Drilling at Ocean Drilling Program Site 802 in the central Mariana Basin, northwest Pacific Ocean, revealed an unexpected 222-m-thick sequence of well-cemented tuff of Miocene age. The deposits are unusual in that their source is presumably an unmapped seamount and they exhibit several peculiar petrological and mineralogical features. The well-developed secondary mineral sequence which includes analcime is rare in such relatively young, unburied deposits, in an area where there is little other evidence of hydrothermal activity. The massive tuff section also contains abundant fissure veins made of a rare silicate carbonate sulfate hydroxide hydrate of calcium, called thaumasite, which has not before been described in deep submarine deposits. The smectite-zeolite-thaumasite paragenesis coincides with the presence of chloride and calcium-enriched interstitial waters. The diagenetic evolution of the deposit appears to have been largely controlled by the depositional mode. The discharges of disaggregated and rejuvenated volcaniclasts seem to have been abrupt and repeated. The Miocene tuff at Site 802 thus provides new insights on the interactions between basaltic glass, biogenic phases, and seawater, in a specific deep-sea environment.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Interstitial water samples from Leg 129, Sites 800, 801, and 802 in the Pigafetta and Mariana basins (central western Pacific), have been analyzed for major elements, B, Li, Mn, Sr, and 87Sr/86Sr. At all sites waters show enrichment in Ca and Sr and are depleted in Mg, K, Na, SO4, B, alkalinity, and 87Sr compared to seawater. These changes are related to alteration of basaltic material into secondary smectite and zeolite and recrystallization of biogenic carbonate. Water concentration depth profiles are characterized by breaks due to the presence of barriers to diffusion such as chert layers at Sites 800 and 801 and highly cemented volcanic ash at Site 802. In Site 800, below a chert layer, concentration depth profiles are vertical and reflect slight alteration of volcanic matter, either in situ or in the upper basaltic crust. Release of interlayer water from clay minerals is likely to induce observed Cl depletions. At Site 801, two units act as diffusion barrier and isolate the volcaniclastic sediments from ocean and basement. Diagenetic alteration of volcanic matter generates a chemical signature similar to that at Site 800. Just above the basaltic crust, interstitial waters are less evolved and reflect low alteration of the crust, probably because of the presence in the sediments of layers with low diffusivities. At Site 802, in Miocene tuffs, the chemical evolution generated by diagenetic alteration is extreme (Ca = 130 mmol, 87Sr/86Sr = 0.7042 at 83 meters below seafloor) and is accompanied by an increase of the Cl content (630 mmol) due to water uptake in secondary hydrous phases. Factors that enhance this evolution are a high sediment accumulation rate, high cementation preventing diffusive exchange and the reactive composition of the sediment (basaltic glass). The chemical variation is estimated to result in the alteration of more than 20% of the volcanic matter in a nearly closed system.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Lower Cretaceous and Jurassic sediments from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 129 (Sites 800, 801, and 802) and Deep Sea Drilling Project Sites 167, 195, 196, and 463 were analyzed for palynomorphs. In contrast to Atlantic occurrences, all Cretaceous pelagic sediments at these sites in the Pacific are barren of preserved palynomorphs. This absence of palynomorphs appears to be independent of facies, sedimentation rate, paleodepth, and paleolatitude. Except for one sample, the dinocyst-bearing sediments also contain spores and pollen grains. The only palynomorphs observed were in redeposited material having sources near former emergent seamounts. Among the dinoflagellate cysts at Site 802, Dingodinium cerviculum, Odontochitina operculata, Canninginopsis colliveri, and Oligosphaeridium complex are the most important species. Based on the presence of these species and their known biostratigraphic ranges, this basal interval of Site 802 is considered to be Aptian/earliest Albian in age. The lack of dinocysts within the Pacific pelagic sediments may be the result of ubiquitous oxygenated bottom waters throughout the Cretaceous or may indicate that open-marine dinoflagellate populations in this ocean did not produce cysts.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Hydrogen isotope compositions have been measured on pore waters from sediments of Leg 129 sites in the Pigafetta and East Mariana basins (central western Pacific). Total water (pore + sorbed waters) contents and their dD have been analyzed for three samples that contain smectite but no zeolite so that sorbed water can be attributed to interlayer water. The H budget for pore and total waters implies that interlayer water is 20 per mil to 30 per mil depleted in D compared to pore water. Because the interlayer/total water molar ratio (0.25 to 0.5) in smectitic sediments is very high, interlayer water represents an important reservoir of D-depleted water in sediments. dD depth profiles for pore water at Sites 800 and 801 show breaks related to chert and radiolarite layers and are relatively vertical below. Above these chert units, pore waters are similar to modern seawater but below, they are between -10 per mil and -5.5 per mil. These values could represent little modified pre-Miocene seawater values, which were D-depleted because of the absence of polar caps, and were preserved from diffusive exchange with modern seawater by the relatively impermeable overlying chert layers. At Site 802, dD values of the pore waters show a decrease in the Miocene tuffs from 0 per mil values at the top to -8 per mil at 250 mbsf. Below, dD values are relatively uniform at about -8ë. Miocene tuffs are undergoing low water/rock alteration. A positive covariation of dD and Cl content of pore water in the tuffs suggests that the increase of dD values could result from secondary smectite formation. Low diffusive exchange coupled with D enrichment due to alteration of preglacial waters could explain the observed profile.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Cretaceous basalts have been recovered at several Ocean Drilling Program and Deep Sea Drilling Project sites where basement of Jurassic age was predicted. Sites 800 and 802, Leg 129, both fall in this category. We have examined the paleomagnetic properties of 25 basalt samples from Site 802 in order to establish a paleolatitude for the site at the time of basalt emplacement and to compare the results to those from Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 462. Mean natural remanent magnetization intensity for the Site 802 basalts was found to be approximately 12 A/m consistent with typical oceanic basalts. Mean stable inclination is -34.7° ± 2.2 which implies a paleolatitude of approximately 19.4°S. This is very similar to the paleolatitudes calculated for Site 462 basalts and suggests - along with similarities in geochemistry, magnetic properties, and projected age of Site 802 basalt emplacement - both contemporaneity of and a possible source link between the two sites.