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Marine Sediments
Origin, Composition, and Distribution
Introductory Oceanography
Ray Rector - Instructor
Example of Seafloor Sediments
Shallow Underwater Carbonate Sand Dunes - Bahamas
Ocean Basins are Vast Sinks for Sediment
Land- and plankton-derived sediments settle on both the
continental margins and on the deep ocean seafloor
Two Major Types of Marine Sediment
Depositional Environments
 Shallow Margin = Littoral and Neritic
 Deep Sea = Pelagic
Littoral
Pelagic
Neritic
Seafloor Sediment Provinces
Cross-Section Profile of an Ocean Basin
 Continental shoreline = Littoral Province
 Continental shelf = Neritic Province
 Continental slope to rise = Transitional
 All deep sea regions = Oceanic or Pelagic
Four Compositional Types
of Seafloor Sediments
1. Terrigenous
 Sources: Erosion of land; volcanic eruptions; wind-blown dust
 Material: Gravels, Sands, Silts, and Clays
2. Biogenous
Sources: Organic; accumulation of plant and animal hard parts
 Material: Calcareous and Siliceous Oozes
3. Hydrogenous
 Sources: Precipitation of minerals from solution
 Material: Carbonates, Metal Oxides and Sulfides
4. Cosmogenous
 Sources: Extraterrestrial dust and meteorites
 Material: Tektite particles, Glassy spheres, Silicate dust
Type and Locality of Marine Sediments
Marine Sediment Sampling Methods
 Bucket-Scooping
 Piston Coring
 Submersible
 Drilling
Marine Sediment Sampling Locations
Terrigenous Sediments
Sources: Erosion of land; volcanic eruptions; wind-blown dust; icebergs
Material Comp: Quartz, Feldspar, Mica, Amphibole, Fe Oxide, & Clays
Material Size: Cobbles, Gravels, Sands, Silts, and Clays
Ash from
volcanic
eruptions
Sediment from rivers
Wind-blown material
Sediment-filled glacial ice flows
Biogenous Sediments
Sources: Carbonate reefs; Benthic shelled-animals; Plankton
Material Comp: Calcium carbonate and Silica
Material Size: Gravel, Sand, Silt, and Clay
Coral and
Sponge
Reefs
Benthic shelled-animals
Microscopic Plankton
Type and Locality of Marine Sediments
Continental Margins of the World
Seafloor that includes shoreline, continental shelf and slope
Submerged continental margins are shown in pale orange
color
Continental Margin Settings
Seafloor that includes shoreline, continental shelf and slope
Shallow Marine Sediments
Key Points
1) Shallow marine sediments that deposit along shorelines
and offshore shelf are termed littoral and neritic
2) Coast and shelf sediments are of two types:
 Land-derived inorganic rock and mineral fragments of
gravel, sand, silt, and clay
 Organic carbonate and silica materials of marine life
skeletons from reefs and sea bottom habitats
Carbonate, silica and phosphate seawater precipitates
3) Shelf sediments mostly arrive via rivers
4) Coastal sediments may reach deep waters via turbidity
currents moving down submarine canyons
Deep Ocean Basins of the World
Deep seafloor excluding the continental shelf and slope
From continental rise to mid-ocean ridge
Key Points
Deep Marine
Sediments
1) Deep ocean sediments are
termed pelagic
2) Pelagic sediments are
predominately very fine-grained
3) Two types of pelagic sediments
 Inorganic clays – from land
 Biogenic oozes – from plankton
4) Two types of biogenic oozes
Calcareous
 Siliceous
5) Abundant benthic organisms
crawl over and burrow through
the sediment = Bioturbation
Calcareous Ooze Sediments
 Accumulation of calcium carbonate hard parts from dead microscopic plankton
 Mainly consists of cocolithophores and foraminifera tests
 Calcite-shelled plankton abundant in warmer surface waters
 Accumulate above the Carbonate Compensation Depth (CCD)
foraminifera
cocolithophores
Distribution of Calcareous Ooze Sediments
1) Calcareous oozes principally deposit in relatively
shallow, low- to mid-latitude regions of deep ocean
2) Concentrated on tops and flanks of mid ocean ridges
Silica Ooze Sediments
 Accumulation of silica hard parts from dead plankton
 Mainly consists of diatoms and radiolarian tests
 Abundant in deeper, cooler surface waters – high latitude
Silica Ooze Sediments
 Accumulation of silica hard parts from dead plankton
 Mainly consists of diatoms and radiolarian tests
 Abundant in cooler surface waters – high latitude
Comparing Silica and Carbonate Oozes
Types of Hydrogenous Sediment
 Sources: Precipitation of minerals from solution
 Material: Carbonates, Metal Oxides and Sulfides
Black Smoker
Chimneys
Manganese
Nodules
Types of Cosmogenous Sediment
 Sources: Extraterrestrial rock, dust ,and debris
 Material: Silicates, glass, and metals
Microtektites
Tektite Strewn Fields
Type and Distribution of Marine Sediments
Percentage Distribution of Pelagic Sediments
1) Calcareous Oozes = covers 48% of deep seafloor
2) Abyssal Clays = covers 38% of deep seafloor
3) Siliceous Oozes = covers 15% of deep seafloor
Rates of Deposition of Marine Sediments
Total Sediment Thickness in Ocean
MARINE SEDIMENTS
Discussion
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