scholarly journals Composition and sources of sedimentary organic matter in the deep Eastern Mediterranean Sea

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (13) ◽  
pp. 9935-9989 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Pedrosa-Pàmies ◽  
C. Parinos ◽  
A. Sanchez-Vidal ◽  
A. Gogou ◽  
A. Calafat ◽  
...  

Abstract. Surface sediments collected from deep slopes and basins (1018–4087 m depth) of the oligotrophic Eastern Mediterranean Sea have been analysed for bulk elemental and isotopic composition of organic carbon, total nitrogen and selected lipid biomarkers, jointly with grain size distribution and other geochemical proxies. The distribution and sources of sedimentary organic matter (OM) have been subsequently assessed and general environmental variables, such as water depth and currents, have been examined as causative factors of deep-sea sediment characteristics. Lithogenic and biogenic carbonates are the dominant sedimentary fractions, while both bulk and molecular organic tracers reflect a mixed contribution from autochthonous and allochthonous sources for the sedimentary OM, as indicated by relatively degraded marine OM, terrestrial plant waxes and anthropogenic OM including degraded petroleum by-products, respectively. Wide regional variations have been observed amongst the studied proxies, which reflect the multiple factors controlling sedimentation in the deep Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Our findings highlight the role of deep Eastern Mediterranean basins as depocentres of organic-rich fine-grained sediments (mean 5.4 ± 2.4 μm), with OM accumulation and burial due to aggregation mechanisms and hydrodynamic sorting. A multi-proxy approach is hired to investigate the biogeochemical composition of sediment samples, which sheds new light on the sources and transport mechanisms along with the impact of preservation vs. diagenetic processes on the composition of sedimentary OM in the deep basins of the oligotrophic Eastern Mediterranean Sea.

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (24) ◽  
pp. 7379-7402 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Pedrosa-Pàmies ◽  
C. Parinos ◽  
A. Sanchez-Vidal ◽  
A. Gogou ◽  
A. Calafat ◽  
...  

Abstract. Surface sediments collected from deep slopes and basins (1018–4087 m depth) of the oligotrophic eastern Mediterranean Sea have been analysed for bulk elemental and isotopic composition of organic carbon, total nitrogen and selected lipid biomarkers, jointly with grain size distribution and other geochemical proxies. The distribution and sources of sedimentary organic matter (OM) have been subsequently assessed and general environmental variables, such as water column depth and physical circulation patterns, have been examined as causative factors of deep-sea sediment characteristics. Lithogenic and biogenic carbonates are the dominant sedimentary fractions, accounting for up to 85.4 and 66.5 % of the total weight respectively. The low OC and TN contents in the surface sediments of the study area, which ranged from 0.15 to 1.15 % and 0.06 to 0.11 % respectively, reflect the oligotrophic character of the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Both bulk and molecular organic tracers reflect a mixed contribution from autochthonous and allochthonous sources for the sedimentary OM, as indicated by relatively degraded marine OM, terrestrial plant waxes and anthropogenic OM (e.g. degraded petroleum by-products) respectively. Wide regional variations have been observed amongst the studied proxies, which reflect the multiple factors controlling sedimentation in the deep eastern Mediterranean Sea. Our findings highlight the role of deep eastern Mediterranean basins as depocentres of organic-rich fine-grained sediments (mean 5.4 ± 2.4 μm), with OM accumulation and burial being attributed to aggregation mechanisms and hydrodynamic sorting. A multi-proxy approach is applied aiming to investigate the biogeochemical composition of sediment samples, which sheds new light on the sources and transport mechanisms along with the impact of preservation vs. diagenetic processes on the composition of sedimentary OM in the deep basins of the oligotrophic eastern Mediterranean Sea.


Author(s):  
Sebastian Grohmann ◽  
Susanne W. Fietz ◽  
Ralf Littke ◽  
Samer Bou Daher ◽  
Maria Fernanda Romero-Sarmiento ◽  
...  

Several significant hydrocarbon accumulations were discovered over the past decade in the Levant Basin, Eastern Mediterranean Sea. Onshore studies have investigated potential source rock intervals to the east and south of the Levant Basin, whereas its offshore western margin is still relatively underexplored. Only a few cores were recovered from four boreholes offshore southern Cyprus by the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) during the drilling campaign Leg 160 in 1995. These wells transect the Eratosthenes Seamount, a drowned bathymetric high, and recovered a thick sequence of both pre- and post-Messinian sedimentary rocks, containing mainly marine marls and shales. In this study, 122 core samples of Late Cretaceous to Messinian age were analyzed in order to identify organic-matter-rich intervals and to determine their depositional environment as well as their source rock potential and thermal maturity. Both Total Organic and Inorganic Carbon (TOC, TIC) analyses as well as Rock-Eval pyrolysis were firstly performed for the complete set of samples whereas Total Sulfur (TS) analysis was only carried out on samples containing significant amount of organic matter (>0.3 wt.% TOC). Based on the Rock-Eval results, eight samples were selected for organic petrographic investigations and twelve samples for analysis of major aliphatic hydrocarbon compounds. The organic content is highly variable in the analyzed samples (0–9.3 wt.%). TS/TOC as well as several biomarker ratios (e.g. Pr/Ph < 2) indicate a deposition under dysoxic conditions for the organic matter-rich sections, which were probably reached during sporadically active upwelling periods. Results prove potential oil prone Type II kerogen source rock intervals of fair to very good quality being present in Turonian to Coniacian (average: TOC = 0.93 wt.%, HI = 319 mg HC/g TOC) and in Bartonian to Priabonian (average: TOC = 4.8 wt.%, HI = 469 mg HC/g TOC) intervals. A precise determination of the actual source rock thickness is prevented by low core recovery rates for the respective intervals. All analyzed samples are immature to early mature. However, the presence of deeper buried, thermally mature source rocks and hydrocarbon migration is indicated by the observation of solid bitumen impregnation in one Upper Cretaceous and in one Lower Eocene sample.


2010 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 2227-2244 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Denis ◽  
M. Thyssen ◽  
V. Martin ◽  
B. Manca ◽  
F. Vidussi

Abstract. The basin-scale distribution of ultraphytoplankton (<10 μm) was determined in the upper 200 m of the eastern Mediterranean Sea during the winter season. Four clusters were resolved by flow cytometry on the basis of their optical properties and identified as Synechococcus, Prochlorococcus, pico- (<3 μm) and nanoeukaryotes (3–10 μm). Synechococcus was the most abundant population (maximum abundance of about 37 000 cells cm−3) and contributed up to 67.7% to the overall ultraphytoplanktonic carbon biomass, whereas the contribution of Prochlorococcus never exceeded 6.5%. The maximum integrated carbon biomass was 1763, 453, 58 and 571 mg C m−2 for nanoeukaryotes, picoeukaryotes, Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus respectively. Water mass properties were analyzed on the basis of temperature and salinity distributions in order to account for the general circulation and locate the main hydrodynamic structures (fronts, gyres, transition between western and eastern basins). The effect of the main hydrodynamic structures and nutrients on the ultraphytoplankton distribution was investigated. No positive correlation between nutrients and phytoplankton could be established when considering large scales. However, below 50 m depth, nutrient ratios between particular stations were correlated to corresponding density ratios. In contrast, significant relationships were found between Synechococcus abundance and density, resulting from the impact of a gyre in southern Adriatic basin and a thermohaline front in the Ionian basin. A significant relationship was also found between picoeukaryotes and salinity in the comparison of western and eastern Mediterranean Sea.


Five sections (0-7, 29-36, 53-60, 78-85 and 104-111 cm), of a 0-2 m sediment core from the Hellenic Outer Ridge, in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, have been examined for lipids. Three of these sections were from a 73 cm thick S 1 ( ca . 6000—9000 years b.p.) sapropel layer, one from an upper ooze layer and one from a lower marl. The lipids were extracted and the major classes analysed in detail by gas chromatography and computerized gas chromatography—mass spectrometry. In all sections, the n -alkanes were dominated by C 25 —C 31 components, showing a high odd-over-even predominance, with smaller amounts of lower chain-length components. The acyclic ketone fraction consisted mainly of C 37 —C 39 di- and triunsaturated alken-2-ones and alken-3-ones. Alkanols, ranging from C 12 —C 32 with a high even-odd preponderance, were present in all sections, maximizing at n -C 22 or n -C 26 . The sapropel contained abundant phytol (up to 7000 ng g -1 dry sediment), and considerable amounts of 22 :1, 24:1 and 26 :1 n -alkenols; in the non-sapropelic sediment, phytol was only a minor com ponent, and no n -alkenols were detected. In addition to these alcohols, the sapropel also contained C 28 —C 32 1,13-, 1,14- and 1,15- diols and 15-keto-alkan-l-ols, the 30 :0 compound predominating in both series. In all sections, fatty acids were the most abundant lipid class. These were mainly C 12 —C 30 straight-chain compounds, maximizing at 16:0 with a high even—odd predominance; most were saturated, but C 16 , C 18 , C 20 , C 22 and C 24 monoenoic acids and small amounts of C 16 , C 18 , C 20 , C 22 and C 24 polyenoic acids were present. A range of branched and cyclic acids were also identified. The non-sapropelic upper and lower sediments differed from the sapropel in containing higher levels of branched acids (especially C 15 and C 17 iso- and anteiso-compounds) and C 18 monoenoic acids: these differences could be related to differing inputs, especially in terms of microbial communities. The sterol distributions of the sapropel displayed a wide range of structures (C 26 —C 31 ), totalling over sixty different components. These included both 4-methyland 4-desmethylnuclei, a variety of C 8 —C 11 side-chains, and encompassed Δ 5 , Δ 5,22 , Δ 5,24 , Δ 5,24(28) , Δ 22 , Δ 24(28) , Δ 7 and Δ 8(14) unsaturation plus a range of fully saturated stands. Major components were 4α, 23, 24-trimethyl-5α-cholest-22-en-3β-ol (dinosterol), cholest-5-en-3|I-ol (cholesterol), 24-methylcholesta-5,22-dien-3β-ol and 24-ethylcholest-5-en-3β-ol. In contrast, the non-sapropelic sediments contained very low levels of only a few sterols, chiefly cholesterol and dinosterol, probably due to input differences. In addition to sterols, the sapropel also contained small amounts of stanones and sterenes. A significant terrigenous input of lipids is evident throughout the core (especially from the n -alkane data), but the sapropel lipid composition appears to be predominantly of marine origin. Individual ‘biological marker’ lipids suggest inputs from Dinophycean and Haptophycean algae to the sapropel. Potential contributions of lipids from organisms such as foraminifera and pteropods, remains of which were observed in the sediment, are difficult to assess due to a paucity of data on the lipid compositions of such organisms. The lipids of the non-sapropelic sediments showed a much less prominent marine signal, especially in terms of the lower levels of phytol and sterols and the higher relative abundance of terrestrial n -alkanes. Two main models have been proposed to explain the formation of organic-rich sapropel facies; (i) stagnation of the water column and the establishment of anoxic conditions in bottom water and sediments, resulting in enhanced preservation of sedimentary organic matter, and (ii) increased biological production providing an increased input of organic matter to the sediments. The lipid composition strongly suggests that this sapropel received a large marine-derived input of organic matter. Since this was less evident in the overlying and underlying sediments, sapropel deposition appears to have been associated with an increased autochthonous input. The anoxic nature of the sapropel, by restricting degradation to anaerobic processes, will also have contributed to the differences in lipid composition between the sediment types. Little diagenesis of lipids in the sapropel was evident. Small amounts of sterenes and 5β(H)-stands were present, probably formed by dehydration and reduction, respectively, of precursor sterols. Diagenetic dehydration of phytol may have contributed to the presence of minor amounts of certain other isoprenoid lipids.


2017 ◽  
Vol 68 (10) ◽  
pp. 1950 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Azzurro ◽  
M. Bariche

Public participation is increasingly used to both study and manage marine bio-invasions. Here, we outline the use of public surveys to rapidly acquire information on the very first stages of colonisation by the invasive Pterois miles in the Mediterranean Sea. Interviews with 105 fishermen, spearfishers and scuba divers in Lebanon provided evidence of a proliferation and rapid expansion of the species, whose presence at the time of the survey was less than that of a true invasion. We also evaluate the role of stakeholders and sea users in responding to this emerging hazard, investigating awareness and willingness to collaborate on managing efforts. These findings showed the potential of local communities to acquire ecological knowledge not available to scientists working alone. This participative approach also consolidates the dialogue and partnership between researchers and stakeholders ameliorating the civil response to time-sensitive conservation issues.


2009 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
pp. 1729-1741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgi Sutyrin ◽  
Alexander Stegner ◽  
Isabelle Taupier-Letage ◽  
Samuel Teinturier

Abstract The datasets of the Eddies and Gyre Path Tracking (EGYPT)/EGITTO program in the eastern Mediterranean Sea reveal a large mesoscale anticyclone traveling along the Libyan shelf. Surface drifter trajectories combined with a CTD transect accurately quantify the horizontal velocity and the vertical structure of this surface-intensified anticyclone. The observed westward drift speed is significantly higher than expected from the beta effect alone. To study the impact of a steep shelf topography on the propagation of compact surface-intensified vortices, the authors used a two-layer beta-plane model with steep continental slope and nearly zonal boundary. A perturbation theory derived by G. Sutyrin for a circular vortex in the upper layer with the lower layer at rest as a basic state is generalized for nonuniform slope in the presence of the image effect. An integral momentum balance is used to derive the drifting velocity of an upper-layer vortex with the main assumption that a stable and steady drifting solution of the two-layer system exists. The interface is described by a steady drifting circular dome at the leading order. This approach allows the problem to be reduced to the calculation of the deep-flow pattern, depending on the interface shape and topography. When the topographic slope beneath the eddy changes rapidly from a steep continental slope to a gentle continental rise, most of the deep-flow pattern is shifted offshore. The corresponding anticyclonic deep-flow feedback provides an additional along-slope propagation, which is proportional to the basic drift speed and the steepness parameter.


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