Origin of Authigenic Mn-Fe Carbonates and Pore-Water Evolution in Marine Sediments: Evidence from Cenozoic Strata of the Arctic Ocean and Norwegian-Greenland Sea (Odp Leg 151)

2000 ◽  
Vol Vol. 70 (2000), ◽  
Author(s):  
Nancy Chow (1), Sadoon Morad (2), I
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daria Elkina ◽  
Thomas Frederichs ◽  
Walter Geibert ◽  
Jens Matthiessen ◽  
Frank Niessen ◽  
...  

<p>Accurate dating of marine sediments from the Arctic Ocean remains a subject of great debate over the last decades. Due to the lack of adequate materials for biostratigraphy and stable isotope analyses, paleomagnetic reconstructions came into play here but though yielded ambiguous interpretations. Moreover, sedimentation rates in the Quaternary, determined for isolated morphological features in the Arctic Ocean, are often applied to the entire Arctic Ocean realm resulting in an inappropriate oversimplification of probably diverging regional depositional regimes.</p><p>Paleomagnetic studies on four long sediment cores, collected from the Mendeleev Ridge and the Lomonosov Ridge, complemented by the results from one core from the Podvodnikov Basin, have provided an opportunity to compare the sedimentation history of these profound structures in the Arctic Ocean. Cores PS72/396-5 and PS72/410-3 (Mendeleev Ridge), PS87/023-1, PS87/030-1 (Lomonosov Ridge) and PS87/074-3 (Podvodnikov Basin) were retrieved during expeditions of RV Polarstern in 2008, and 2014. Paleomagnetic, rock magnetic and physical properties measurements were carried out at the Center for Geo-Environmental Research and Modeling (GEOMODEL) of the Research Park in St. Petersburg State University, at the University of Bremen, and the Alfred Wegener Institute.</p><p>According to the results on the Mendeleev Ridge’s cores, complemented with 230Th excess study on core PS72/396-5, the Brunhes Matuyama boundary (0.78 Ma) is observed at the first meters below the seafloor. That, together with the Matuyama Gauss transition (2.58 Ma) recorded in both cores, implies the mean sedimentation rate in this area to be in the order of mm/kyr.</p><p>In contrast to the Mendeleev Ridge, the cores from the Lomonosov Ridge and the Podvodnikov Basin have shown a more complex paleomagnetic record with a relevant shift to negative inclinations significantly deeper downcore. This could signify a relevant difference in the sedimentation regimes between both ridges during the Quaternary.    </p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hannah Grant ◽  
Christine Lockwood-Ireland ◽  
John Howe ◽  
Heather Stewart

<p>Sub-surface sampling of marine sediments allows investigation of paleo-depositional conditions and subsequent modification by post-depositional geochemical processes. This sedimentary record can encompass many thousands of years and record discrete events where proximal and distal material is incorporated into the pelagic sediment column. The Arctic Ocean is the world’s smallest ocean, however evidence from sedimentary records show it has a pivotal role in the regulation of many oceanographic and physiographic processes. Despite this, there are only limited studies on the distribution and geochemical behaviour of metals within sub-surface marine sediments of the Arctic Ocean basin. This study presents a detailed geochemical investigation for two sediment piston cores to a maximum of 5.7 metres depth and spanning at least 44,000 years BP, from two seamounts bordering the western flanks of the Molloy Hole in the Fram Strait.</p><p>Comparison to other studies of sub-surface ridge sediments below 60<sup>o</sup>S on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge reveals these piston cores contain elevated metal concentrations, particularly for Mn, Co, and Ni. Distinct variability is observed within, and between the cores; particularly the interplay between Fe and Mn, the two most common authigenic elements in marine pelagic sediments. Within the Molloy Ridge neovolcanic zone, in the upper half of the easternmost core (PC127/79), Fe and Mn are decoupled and metal distribution is controlled by redox front migration. Decoupling occurs as Mn is more readily dissolved compared to Fe, and Fe in solution is more reactive and precipitates quicker during remobilisation. In PC127/79, Mn is strongly associated with other redox-sensitive metals (e.g., Co, Ni, Mo, U) likely in Mn-oxide dominated horizons, and Fe is strongly associated with V and As. Towards the base of the core, Fe and Mn are coupled, but are not associated with a distinct discrete metalliferous signature of Co, Ni, Cd and Ti. These metals are also negatively associated with major rock-forming elements such as Si, Al, Mg, and Ca. In the western core (PC127/80), Fe and Mn are coupled, are positively associated with the majority of metals and the major rock forming elements, and negatively correlated with common clay-derived components.</p><p>Investigation of pelagic versus hydrothermal component indices indicate that the distinct metalliferous signature towards the base of PC127/79 may have a hydrothermal origin. Hydrothermal activity associated with ultramafic oceanic core complexes is known on superslow-spreading ridges to the north and south of the Molloy Ridge, however contributions of metals from ice-rafted debris or past mass wasting events off the Spitsbergen margin cannot be ruled out.</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 841-851 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bert Rudels ◽  
Meri Korhonen ◽  
Gereon Budéus ◽  
Agnieszka Beszczynska-Möller ◽  
Ursula Schauer ◽  
...  

Abstract Rudels, B., Korhonen, M., Budéus, G., Beszczynska-Möller, A., Schauer, U., Nummelin, A., Quadfasel, D., and Valdimarsson, H. 2012. The East Greenland Current and its impacts on the Nordic Seas: observed trends in the past decade. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 69: 841–851. For the past 30 years, it has been known that dense waters are created in the Arctic Ocean. However, before the late 1980s, observations indicated that Arctic Ocean deep waters only modified the deep water in the Greenland Sea, which was still thought of as the major source of dense water. In the mid-1990s, this picture began to fade. The deep convection in the Greenland Sea weakened and only Arctic Intermediate Water was formed. A deep salinity maximum was reinforced and a temperature maximum emerged at mid-depth. The densities of the salinity and temperature maxima were those of the deep waters in the Arctic Ocean, and one possibility was that waters below the convection were ventilated by Arctic Ocean deep waters from the East Greenland Current. Between 1998 and 2010, the salinity and temperature of the deep water in the Greenland Sea increased, implying continuous input from the East Greenland Current. Water from the Greenland Sea advected to Fram Strait now has almost Arctic Ocean characteristics and cannot significantly change the outflowing Arctic Ocean waters by mixing in the East Greenland Current, leading to a more-rapid transformation of the deep Greenland Sea water column.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document