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Marine Sedimentation
• Sediment Defined:
• unconsolidated
  organic and
  inorganic particles
  that accumulate on
  the ocean floor
• originate from
  numerous sources
   – weathering and
     erosion of the
     continents
   – volcanic eruptions
   – biological activity
   – chemical processes
     within the oceanic
     crust and seawater
   – impacts of extra-
     terrestrial objects
• classified by size
  according to the
  Wentworth scale
• grain size indicates condition under which sediment is
  deposited
    – high energy environments characteristically yield sediments larger
      in size
    – small particles (silts, clays) indicate low energy environments
• considered well-sorted if most particles appear in the
  same size classification
• poorly sorted sediments comprised of multiple sizes
• sediment maturity is indicated by several factors
    – decreased silt and clay content
    – increased sorting
    – increased rounding of grains, as a result of weathering and
      abrasion
• particle transport is controlled by grain size and velocity
  of transporting medium
•
4-1   Sediment in the Sea
• Average grain
  size reflects
  the energy of
  the
  depositional
  environment.
• Hjulstrom’s
  Diagram
  graphs the
  relationship
  between
  particle size
  and energy for
  erosion,
  transportation
  and
  deposition.
Classification of             4-1   Sediment in the Sea
  marine
  sediments can
  be based upon
  size or origin.
• Size classification
  divides sediment by
  grain size into gravel,
  sand and clay.
   – Mud is a mixture of silt
     and clay.
• Origin classification
  divides sediment into
  five categories:
  Terrigenous
  sediments, Biogenic
  sediments, Authigenic
  sediments,
  Volcanogenic
  sediments and
  Cosmogenic
  sediments.
• Terrigenous (or Lithogenous
  Sediments):
• derived from weathering of
  rocks at or above sea level (e.g.,
  continents, islands)
• two distinct chemical
  compositions
   – ferromagnesian, or iron-magnesium
     bearing minerals
   – non-ferromagnesian minerals – e.g.,
     quartz, feldspar, micas
• largest deposits on continental
  margins (less than 40% reach
  abyssal plains)
• transported by water, wind,
  gravity, and ice
• transported as dissolved and
  suspended loads in rivers,
  waves, longshore currents
• (LANDSAT images
  adapted from Geospace
   Images catalog).
• sediment delivered to
  the open-ocean by wind
  activity as particulate
  matter (dust)
• primary dust source is
  deserts in Asia and
  North Africa
• comprise much of the
  fine-grained deposits in
  remote open-ocean
  areas (red clays)
• volcanic eruptions
  contribute ash to the
  atmosphere which
  settles within the
  oceans
• sediment also
  transported to the
  open-ocean by gravity-
  driven turbidity
  currents
• dense 'slurries' of
  suspended sediment
  moved as turbulent
  underflows
• typically initiated by
  storm activity or
  earthquakes
   – first identified during
     1929 Grand Banks
     earthquake
   – seismic activity triggered
     turbidity current which
     severed telegraph lines
• initial flow often
  confined to submarine
  canyons of the
  continental shelf and
  slope
• form deep-sea fans
  where the mouth of the
  canyon opens onto the
  continental rise
20 m s-1 near
Grand
Banks
• boulder to clay size
  particles also eroded
  and transported to
  oceans via glacial ice
• glacier termination in
  circum-polar oceans
  results in calving and
  iceberg formation
• as ice (or icebergs)
  melt, entrained
  material is deposited
  on the ocean floor
• termed 'ice-rafted'
  debris
• Biogenous Sediments:
• composed primarily of
  marine microfossil
  remains
• shells of one-celled
  plants and animals,
  skeletal fragments
• median grain size
  typically less than 0.005
  mm (i.e., silt or clay size
  particles)
• characterized as CaCO3
  (calcium carbonate) or
  SiO2 (silica) dominated
  systems
• sediment with biogenic
  component less than
  30% termed calcareous,
  siliceous clay
• calcareous or siliceous
  'oozes' if biogenic
  component greater than
  30%
• siliceous oozes
  (primarily diatom
  oozes) cover ~15%
  of the ocean floor
  – distribution mirrors
    regions of high
    productivity
  – common at high
    latitudes, and zones of
    upwelling
  – radiolarian oozes more
    common in equatorial
    regions
• calcareous oozes
  (foraminifera,
  coccolithophores) cover
  ~50% of the ocean floor
   – distribution controlled
      largely by dissolution
      processes
   – cold, deep waters are
      undersaturated with respect
      to CaCO3
   – deep water is slightly acidic
      as a result of elevated CO2
      concentrations
   – solubility of CaCO3 also
      increases in colder water
      and at greater pressures
   – CaCO3 therefore readily
      dissolved at depth
• level below which no CaCO3
  is preserved is the
  'carbonate compensation
  depth'
• typically occurs at a depth
  of 3000 to 4000 m
•
Microfossils in
Paleoclimatology/
Paleoceanography
• Dissolution
  Calcium carbonate
  dissolves better in
  colder water, in acidic
  water, and at higher
  pressures. In the deep
  ocean, all three of these
  conditions exist.
  Therefore, the
  dissolution rate of
  calcium carbonate
  increases greatly below
  the thermocline. This
  change in dissolution
  rate is called the
  lysocline.
  Below the lysocline,
  more and more calcium
  carbonate dissolves,
  until eventually, there is
  none left. The depth
  below which all calcium
  carbonate is dissolved is
  called the carbonate
  compensation depth or
  CCD.
• Hydrogenous (or Authigenic) Sediments:
• produced by chemical processes in seawater
• essentially solid chemical precipitates of several common
  forms
• non-biogenous carbonates
   – form in surface waters supersaturated with calcium carbonate
   – common forms include short aragonite crystals and oolites
• phosphorites
   – phosphate crusts (containing greater than 30% P2O5) occurring
     as nodules
   – formed as large quantities of organic phosphorous settle to the
     ocean floor
   – unoxidized material is transformed to phosphorite deposits
   – found on continental shelf and upper slope in regions of high
     productivity
• manganese
  nodules
    – surficial
      deposits of
      manganese,
      iron, copper,
      cobalt, and
      nickel
    – accumulate
      only in areas
      of low
      sedimentation
      rate (e.g., the
      Pacific)
    – develop
      extremely
      slowly (1 to 10
      mm/million
      years)
•
• The term evaporites is
  used for all deposits, such
  as salt deposits, mainly
  chemical sediments that
  are composed of minerals
  that precipitated from
  saline solutions
  concentrated by
  evaporation. Evaporite
  deposits are composed
  dominantly of varying
  proportions of halite (rock
  salt) (NaCl), anhydrite
  (CaSo4) and gypsum
  (CaSo4.2H2O). Evaporites
  may be classified as
  chlorides, sulfates or
  carbonates on the basis of
  their chemical composition
  (Tucker, 1991).
evaporites ('salt'
deposits')
   occur in regions
   of enhanced
   evaporation
   (e.g., marginal
   seas)
   evaporative
   process removes
   water and leaves
   a salty brine
   e.g.,
   Mediterranean
   'Salinity Crisis'
   between 5 and 6
   million years
• Cosmogenous
  Sediments:
• sediments derived
  from
  extraterrestrial
  materials
• includes
  micrometeorites
  and tektites
• tektites result from
  collisions with
  extraterrestrial
  materials
   – fragments of earth's
     crust melt and spray
     outward from impact
     crater
   – crustal material re-
     melts as it falls back
     through the
     atmosphere
   – forms 'glassy' tektites
• Distribution of Marine
  Sediments:
• sediments thickest along
  continental margins, thin at
  mid-ocean ridges
• coastlines
   – dominated by river-borne and
     wave reworked terrigenous
     sediments
   – shelf and slope characterized
     by turbidites and authigenic
     carbonate deposits
   – glacial deposits and ice-rafted
     debris common at high
     latitudes
   – high input of terrigenous
     sediments 'dilutes' biogenous
     components
• deep-sea (pelagic) basins
   – abyssal clays (wind blown
     deposits) common
   – lower quantities of biogenic
     material
• distribution of biogenous
  sediments dependent upon
  three primary factors
   – production in surface waters
   – dissolution in deep waters
   – dilution by other sediments
     types
• high productivity in
  zones of upwelling and   Nearshore sediments, turbidites:Up to
  nutrient-rich high       km/my (kilometers/million years)
  latitude waters
                           Hemipelagic deposits: Tens to hundreds
• calcareous oozes more
  common in warmer or      of m/myDrift deposits40-400 m/my
  shallower water          Mid-latitude eolian deposits: 3 to 10
• siliceous oozes more     m/my
  common in colder or
  deeper water
                           Ice rafted material: 10+ m/my
• terrigenous
                           Carbonate oozes: Up to 50 m/my
  sedimentation rates      Siliceous oozes: Up to 10 m/my
  range from ~1 mm to
  10's cm/1000 years
                           Hydrothermal deposits: (off ridge
• biogenous
                           axes)About 0.5 m/my
  sedimentation rates      Hydrogenous sediments: Rarely exceed
  typically ~1 cm/1000
  years
                           0.2 m/my
                           Ferromanganese nodules: 0.0002 to
                           0.005 m/my (0.2 to 5 mm/my)
Shelf sedimentation is
                       4-2       Sedimentation in the Ocean
   strongly controlled by
   tides, waves and
   currents, but their
   influence decreases
   with depth.
• Shoreline turbulence
  prevents small particles
  from settling and transports
  them seaward where they
  are deposited in deeper
  water.
• Particle size decreases
  seaward for recent
  sediments.
• Past fluctuations of sea
  level has stranded coarse
  sediment (relict sediment)
  across the shelf including
  most areas where only fine
  sediments are deposited
  today.
4-2   Sedimentation in the Ocean


Geologic controls of continental shelf
sedimentation must be considered in terms of a
time frame.
• For a time frame up to 1000 years, waves, currents and
  tides control sedimentation.
• For a time frame up to 1,000,000 years, sea level lowered
  by glaciation controlled sedimentation and caused rivers to
  deposit their sediments at the shelf edge and onto the
  upper continental slope.
• For a time frame up to 100,000,000 years, plate tectonics
  has determined the type of margin that developed and
  controlled sedimentation.
60% of the
world’s shelves
are covered
with relict
sediments that
were formed
about 15,000 y
BP under a
different
energy regime.
• Gas Methane Hydrates
  (Clathrates)
• Hydrates store immense
  amounts of methane, with
  major implications for
  energy resources and
  climate, but the natural
  controls on hydrates and
  their impacts on the
  environment are very
  poorly understood


• The worldwide amounts of
  carbon bound in gas
  hydrates is conservatively
  estimated to total twice the
  amount of carbon to be
  found in all known fossil
  fuels on Earth (USGS).


• Methane bound in hydrates
  amounts to approximately
  3,000 times the volume of
  methane in the
  atmosphere.
Chap 4
Chap 4
Chap 4

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Chap 4

  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10. • Sediment Defined: • unconsolidated organic and inorganic particles that accumulate on the ocean floor • originate from numerous sources – weathering and erosion of the continents – volcanic eruptions – biological activity – chemical processes within the oceanic crust and seawater – impacts of extra- terrestrial objects • classified by size according to the Wentworth scale
  • 11. • grain size indicates condition under which sediment is deposited – high energy environments characteristically yield sediments larger in size – small particles (silts, clays) indicate low energy environments • considered well-sorted if most particles appear in the same size classification • poorly sorted sediments comprised of multiple sizes • sediment maturity is indicated by several factors – decreased silt and clay content – increased sorting – increased rounding of grains, as a result of weathering and abrasion • particle transport is controlled by grain size and velocity of transporting medium •
  • 12. 4-1 Sediment in the Sea • Average grain size reflects the energy of the depositional environment. • Hjulstrom’s Diagram graphs the relationship between particle size and energy for erosion, transportation and deposition.
  • 13.
  • 14. Classification of 4-1 Sediment in the Sea marine sediments can be based upon size or origin. • Size classification divides sediment by grain size into gravel, sand and clay. – Mud is a mixture of silt and clay. • Origin classification divides sediment into five categories: Terrigenous sediments, Biogenic sediments, Authigenic sediments, Volcanogenic sediments and Cosmogenic sediments.
  • 15. • Terrigenous (or Lithogenous Sediments): • derived from weathering of rocks at or above sea level (e.g., continents, islands) • two distinct chemical compositions – ferromagnesian, or iron-magnesium bearing minerals – non-ferromagnesian minerals – e.g., quartz, feldspar, micas • largest deposits on continental margins (less than 40% reach abyssal plains) • transported by water, wind, gravity, and ice • transported as dissolved and suspended loads in rivers, waves, longshore currents
  • 16. • (LANDSAT images adapted from Geospace Images catalog). • sediment delivered to the open-ocean by wind activity as particulate matter (dust) • primary dust source is deserts in Asia and North Africa • comprise much of the fine-grained deposits in remote open-ocean areas (red clays) • volcanic eruptions contribute ash to the atmosphere which settles within the oceans
  • 17. • sediment also transported to the open-ocean by gravity- driven turbidity currents • dense 'slurries' of suspended sediment moved as turbulent underflows • typically initiated by storm activity or earthquakes – first identified during 1929 Grand Banks earthquake – seismic activity triggered turbidity current which severed telegraph lines • initial flow often confined to submarine canyons of the continental shelf and slope • form deep-sea fans where the mouth of the canyon opens onto the continental rise
  • 18. 20 m s-1 near Grand Banks
  • 19. • boulder to clay size particles also eroded and transported to oceans via glacial ice • glacier termination in circum-polar oceans results in calving and iceberg formation • as ice (or icebergs) melt, entrained material is deposited on the ocean floor • termed 'ice-rafted' debris
  • 20.
  • 21. • Biogenous Sediments: • composed primarily of marine microfossil remains • shells of one-celled plants and animals, skeletal fragments • median grain size typically less than 0.005 mm (i.e., silt or clay size particles) • characterized as CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) or SiO2 (silica) dominated systems • sediment with biogenic component less than 30% termed calcareous, siliceous clay • calcareous or siliceous 'oozes' if biogenic component greater than 30%
  • 22.
  • 23. • siliceous oozes (primarily diatom oozes) cover ~15% of the ocean floor – distribution mirrors regions of high productivity – common at high latitudes, and zones of upwelling – radiolarian oozes more common in equatorial regions
  • 24. • calcareous oozes (foraminifera, coccolithophores) cover ~50% of the ocean floor – distribution controlled largely by dissolution processes – cold, deep waters are undersaturated with respect to CaCO3 – deep water is slightly acidic as a result of elevated CO2 concentrations – solubility of CaCO3 also increases in colder water and at greater pressures – CaCO3 therefore readily dissolved at depth • level below which no CaCO3 is preserved is the 'carbonate compensation depth' • typically occurs at a depth of 3000 to 4000 m •
  • 26. • Dissolution Calcium carbonate dissolves better in colder water, in acidic water, and at higher pressures. In the deep ocean, all three of these conditions exist. Therefore, the dissolution rate of calcium carbonate increases greatly below the thermocline. This change in dissolution rate is called the lysocline. Below the lysocline, more and more calcium carbonate dissolves, until eventually, there is none left. The depth below which all calcium carbonate is dissolved is called the carbonate compensation depth or CCD.
  • 27.
  • 28. • Hydrogenous (or Authigenic) Sediments: • produced by chemical processes in seawater • essentially solid chemical precipitates of several common forms • non-biogenous carbonates – form in surface waters supersaturated with calcium carbonate – common forms include short aragonite crystals and oolites • phosphorites – phosphate crusts (containing greater than 30% P2O5) occurring as nodules – formed as large quantities of organic phosphorous settle to the ocean floor – unoxidized material is transformed to phosphorite deposits – found on continental shelf and upper slope in regions of high productivity
  • 29. • manganese nodules – surficial deposits of manganese, iron, copper, cobalt, and nickel – accumulate only in areas of low sedimentation rate (e.g., the Pacific) – develop extremely slowly (1 to 10 mm/million years) •
  • 30.
  • 31. • The term evaporites is used for all deposits, such as salt deposits, mainly chemical sediments that are composed of minerals that precipitated from saline solutions concentrated by evaporation. Evaporite deposits are composed dominantly of varying proportions of halite (rock salt) (NaCl), anhydrite (CaSo4) and gypsum (CaSo4.2H2O). Evaporites may be classified as chlorides, sulfates or carbonates on the basis of their chemical composition (Tucker, 1991).
  • 32. evaporites ('salt' deposits') occur in regions of enhanced evaporation (e.g., marginal seas) evaporative process removes water and leaves a salty brine e.g., Mediterranean 'Salinity Crisis' between 5 and 6 million years
  • 33. • Cosmogenous Sediments: • sediments derived from extraterrestrial materials • includes micrometeorites and tektites • tektites result from collisions with extraterrestrial materials – fragments of earth's crust melt and spray outward from impact crater – crustal material re- melts as it falls back through the atmosphere – forms 'glassy' tektites
  • 34. • Distribution of Marine Sediments: • sediments thickest along continental margins, thin at mid-ocean ridges • coastlines – dominated by river-borne and wave reworked terrigenous sediments – shelf and slope characterized by turbidites and authigenic carbonate deposits – glacial deposits and ice-rafted debris common at high latitudes – high input of terrigenous sediments 'dilutes' biogenous components • deep-sea (pelagic) basins – abyssal clays (wind blown deposits) common – lower quantities of biogenic material • distribution of biogenous sediments dependent upon three primary factors – production in surface waters – dissolution in deep waters – dilution by other sediments types
  • 35. • high productivity in zones of upwelling and Nearshore sediments, turbidites:Up to nutrient-rich high km/my (kilometers/million years) latitude waters Hemipelagic deposits: Tens to hundreds • calcareous oozes more common in warmer or of m/myDrift deposits40-400 m/my shallower water Mid-latitude eolian deposits: 3 to 10 • siliceous oozes more m/my common in colder or deeper water Ice rafted material: 10+ m/my • terrigenous Carbonate oozes: Up to 50 m/my sedimentation rates Siliceous oozes: Up to 10 m/my range from ~1 mm to 10's cm/1000 years Hydrothermal deposits: (off ridge • biogenous axes)About 0.5 m/my sedimentation rates Hydrogenous sediments: Rarely exceed typically ~1 cm/1000 years 0.2 m/my Ferromanganese nodules: 0.0002 to 0.005 m/my (0.2 to 5 mm/my)
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38. Shelf sedimentation is 4-2 Sedimentation in the Ocean strongly controlled by tides, waves and currents, but their influence decreases with depth. • Shoreline turbulence prevents small particles from settling and transports them seaward where they are deposited in deeper water. • Particle size decreases seaward for recent sediments. • Past fluctuations of sea level has stranded coarse sediment (relict sediment) across the shelf including most areas where only fine sediments are deposited today.
  • 39.
  • 40. 4-2 Sedimentation in the Ocean Geologic controls of continental shelf sedimentation must be considered in terms of a time frame. • For a time frame up to 1000 years, waves, currents and tides control sedimentation. • For a time frame up to 1,000,000 years, sea level lowered by glaciation controlled sedimentation and caused rivers to deposit their sediments at the shelf edge and onto the upper continental slope. • For a time frame up to 100,000,000 years, plate tectonics has determined the type of margin that developed and controlled sedimentation.
  • 41. 60% of the world’s shelves are covered with relict sediments that were formed about 15,000 y BP under a different energy regime.
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44.
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 47.
  • 48.
  • 49.
  • 50.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55.
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 58.
  • 59.
  • 60.
  • 61.
  • 62.
  • 63. • Gas Methane Hydrates (Clathrates) • Hydrates store immense amounts of methane, with major implications for energy resources and climate, but the natural controls on hydrates and their impacts on the environment are very poorly understood • The worldwide amounts of carbon bound in gas hydrates is conservatively estimated to total twice the amount of carbon to be found in all known fossil fuels on Earth (USGS). • Methane bound in hydrates amounts to approximately 3,000 times the volume of methane in the atmosphere.