Download Ocean Sediments

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Ocean Sediments
Origin and Distribution
Continental Margins and Ocean Basins
• Review from last week
• Shape of ocean floor
• Continental Margins
– Active Margins
– Passive Margins
• Ocean Basins
Marine Sediments
• Most ocean floor covered by marine sediments
• Sediment thickness is thinnest at mid-ocean ridge and thickest
at continental margins
Types of Ocean Sediments
• Terrigenous – “rock-derived”
• Biogenous – “life-derived”
• Hydrogenous – “water-derived”
• Cosmogenous – “cosmic-derived”
Lithogenous Sediments
• Derived from the weathering of rocks
– continents or volcanic islands
• Transported by rivers, glaciers or wind
• Most deposited on continental margins
• Covers about 45% of ocean floor
• Composed mostly of quartz sand and clay
Sediment Distribution -
Terrigenous
Terigenous Sediment Mt. Pinatubo
Mississippi River
Examples
Sahara Desert
• Red Clays
– Sediment from rivers, dust, and volcanic
ash
– Transported to deep ocean by winds and
surface currents
– Common in deep oceans
– Accumulates 2 mm (1/8”) every 1,000 years
Biogenous Sediment
• Biogenic ooze – greater than 30% biogenous sediment
• Composed mostly of hard skeletal parts of once-living
organisms
• Two main compositions of hard parts:
1. Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3)
a)Coccolithophore (phytoplankton)
b)Foraminifera (zooplankton)
2. Silica (SiO2)
a) Diatoms (phytoplankton)
b) Radiolarian (zooplankton)
Sediment Distribution -
• Calcareous and Siliceous Oozes
Biogenous
Biogenous – Calcareous Examples
Foraminifera
Foraminifera
• Composed of CaCO3
• Widespread in relatively
shallow areas
Coccolithophore
Biogenous – Calcareous oozes
• Cover greater than 50% of ocean floor
• Distribution controlled by dissolution processes
• Calcium Carbonate Compensation Depth (CCD) – the depth at which
the rate of accumulation of calcareous sediments equals the rate of
dissolution
• Cold bottom waters undersaturated with respect to CaCO3
– slightly acidic ( CO2)
– readily dissolves CaCO3
• Pacific Ocean – 500-1,500 m
CaCO3 is found
• Atlantic Ocean – 4,000 m
Sediment Distribution –
Calcareous/Siliceous
Biogenous –
Siliceous Ooze Examples
Radiolarians
Diatoms
• Composed of SiO2
• Base of food chain
Biogenous – Siliceous Ooze
• Covers 15% of ocean floor
• Distribution - areas of high productivity (zones of upwelling)
• Dissolve more slowly than calcareous particles
• Diatoms common at higher latitudes
• Radiolarians common at equatorial regions
Siliceous Oozes
Sediment Distribution -
Hydrogenous
Hydrogenous Sediments
• Produced by chemical processes in seawater
• Sediment precipitates from water
• Some Examples:
• Oolites – occur in surface waters supersaturated in CaCO3
• Manganese Nodules – manganese, iron deposits accumulate in
areas of low sedimentation
• Evaporites – “salt precipitates” form in areas of high evaporation
Hydrogenous - Examples
Sea salt
Manganese Nodules
Oolitic sand
Cosmogenous – microtektites
Microtektites
• Sediments derived from extraterrestrial material (micrometeorites)
• Tektites – result from collisions with micrometeors
– Fragments of Earth’s crust melt and spray outward from impact crater
– Crustal material re-melts as it falls back and forms glassy tektites
• Widespread but not abundant
Sediment Distribution
Related documents