Lake Chala turbidites produced by surficial slope sediment remobilization: A mechanism to bring near-shore macrofossils to the deep basin with only limited time offset

Author(s):  
Maarten Van Daele ◽  
Violeth Swai ◽  
Thijs Van der Meeren ◽  
Christian Wolff ◽  
Inka Meyer ◽  
...  

<p>In paleoclimate and paleoenvironmental studies, turbidites are usually considered as interruptions of the sedimentary sequence and therefore ignored. However, turbidites are composed of sediments from the (shallow) slopes along the lake’s periphery where fossil assemblages are often different to those in the deep basin. Turbidites may thus be valuable as carriers of this near-shore proxy information to a profundal core site. However, as turbidites are composed of reworked (older) sediments, their fossil content can only be exploited if their “mean time offset” can be readily estimated or ascertained to be minimal.</p><p>Several recent studies have shown that turbidites can indeed form as a result of surficial slope sediment remobilization, a process – independent of slope failure – in which only a thin veneer (20 cm) of surficial sediment is being remobilized, for example by earthquake shaking, and subsequently transported by a turbidity current. However, demonstrating that this process is active in a basin and determining the remobilization depth, is challenging, especially in the absence of slope cores. Here we study the turbidite record of the 215 m (~260 kyr) long composite core of Lake Chala in the framework of the ICDP project DeepCHALLA. We analyzed its sediment color at a 0.5-cm interval using a spectrophotometer and determined the average color for each of the 391 thickest turbidites (> 3 datapoints) in the L*a*b* color space. For the entire dataset, we performed a linear regression of the turbidite color against the average color of different intervals (2-55 cm) of laminated sediment below. For each combination of paired values, the highest R² values are found for the upper 7-15 cm of matrix sediment below the turbidites, which can thereby be interpreted as the average remobilization depth. These results are mainly based on the a* value, which shows (i) relatively poor correlations between adjacent intervals of laminated sediment (thereby not smearing the signal), and (ii) the most constant values in sediments from across the basin as determined by short-core transects. Depth-dependent variations of sediment color as determined from these transects further allows to estimate the water depth from which the turbidites were sourced.</p><p>Our results show that the sediments of most Lake Chala turbidites are 100-200 yrs older than the laminated sediments upon which they are deposited. We conclude that the turbidites can be used as ‘sampling windows’ to study temporal trends in macrofossils such as ostracods, chironomids and fish teeth, which are much more common along the basin periphery than in the deep basin.</p>

2017 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
pp. 115-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antony Berger

At various coastal and inland sites in and around Gros Morne National Park in western Newfoundland, photographs taken periodically over many decades illustrate the physical stability of landforms. ἀese images provide a convenient, qualitative way to track the development of stone rings and patterned ground, the movement of rocks along intertidal platforms, changes to marine estuaries and to alluvial rivers and fans, temporal trends in late-lying snow beds along mountain tops, and slope failure by landslides and rock falls. ἀis study has established a spatial and temporal photographic record of slope failures along the steep cliḀs of Western Brook Pond, showing that nearly all of the sites identiᴀed in earlier studies as high risk of failure have remained stable. In contrast, thin-skinned landslides along Winter House Brook have remained active for at least 100 years. Little evidence of physical changes in patterned ground features in Trout River Gulch was found, other than frost-heaving in soils disturbed by road construction. Fluctuations from year to year in the level of gravel beaches along parts of the coast are common, and blow-outs continue to modify coastal sand dunes. Apart from certain engineered sites where change was obviously driven by direct human activities, the immediate cause or “driver” of change was natural (non-human), the result of gravitational instability, heavy precipitation, wave and storm action, frost heaving, and other background processes of the sort that long pre-date the coming of people to the region. Continuation of this kind of inexpensive, non-invasive monitoring can assist in assessing ecological integrity, managing public safety, and interpreting landscape processes for Park visitors.


2006 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 432-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helge W. Arz ◽  
Frank Lamy ◽  
Jürgen Pätzold

AbstractPartly laminated sediments were sampled from the brine-filled, anoxic Shaban Deep basin in the northern Red Sea. At about 4200 cal yr BP more than two millennia of anoxic sedimentation is replaced by a sub-oxic facies strongly suggesting the episodic absence of the brine. At the same time stable oxygen isotopes from surface dwelling foraminifera show a sharp increase (within less than 100 yr) pointing to a strong positive salinity anomaly at the sea surface. This major evaporation event significantly enhanced the renewal of deep water and the subsequent ventilation of the small Shaban Deep basin. The timing and strength of the reconstructed environmental changes around 4200 cal yr BP suggest that this event is the regional expression of a major drought event, which is widely observed in the neighboring regions, and which strongly affected Middle East agricultural civilizations.


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (12) ◽  
pp. 1711-1722 ◽  
Author(s):  
C PS Larsen ◽  
W A Morris ◽  
G M MacDonald

We assess whether absolutely aged declination changes can be used to date recent, massive lake sediments at the sub-century scale. Three issues limiting such studies are addressed: recovery of undisturbed recent lake sediments, assessment of the reliability of the geomagnetic record, and the comparison of lake-sediment records with historic records. A 793-year long geomagnetic chronology was obtained from the annually laminated sediment of Rainbow Lake A. Sediment disturbance was minimized by freezing the sediment in situ and maintaining this state for geomagnetic analyses. Geomagnetic chronologies ca. 600 years long from the massive sediments of Fariya Lake and Ninisith Lake were collected in removable plastic tubes using a piston-corer. Sediment disturbance was minimized by ex situ draining of water from the plastic tubes. The reliability of the geomagnetic record was assessed using a measure of internal coherence with an absolute cutoff of 15°. By further separating the samples at coherence values of 5° and 7.5°, it was possible to identify zones of disturbance and reduced compaction. The most reliable samples had a high magnetic intensity due to high inputs of magnetic minerals, sediment compression, and inputs of stable magnetic minerals. Neither freezing nor dewatering of the sediments appeared to decrease reliability of the geomagnetic record. The declination chronology from the annually laminated sediments was significantly correlated with a 230-year long historical record from Churchill, Manitoba, and with the massive lake sediment chronology from Fariya Lake. Geomagnetic dating was not possible, however, because of the large amplitude in the annually laminated sediment declination record, the large number of years of sediment in many specimens, and the lack of reliability for samples that contain few years of sediment per specimen.


2015 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Andrén ◽  
B. Barker Jørgensen ◽  
C. Cotterill ◽  
S. Green ◽  

Abstract. The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) expedition 347 cored sediments from different settings of the Baltic Sea covering the last glacial–interglacial cycle. The main aim was to study the geological development of the Baltic Sea in relation to the extreme climate variability of the region with changing ice cover and major shifts in temperature, salinity, and biological communities. Using the Greatship Manisha as a European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling (ECORD) mission-specific platform, we recovered 1.6 km of core from nine sites of which four were additionally cored for microbiology. The sites covered the gateway to the North Sea and Atlantic Ocean, several sub-basins in the southern Baltic Sea, a deep basin in the central Baltic Sea, and a river estuary in the north. The waxing and waning of the Scandinavian ice sheet has profoundly affected the Baltic Sea sediments. During the Weichselian, progressing glaciers reshaped the submarine landscape and displaced sedimentary deposits from earlier Quaternary time. As the glaciers retreated they left a complex pattern of till, sand, and lacustrine clay, which in the basins has since been covered by a thick deposit of Holocene, organic-rich clay. Due to the stratified water column of the brackish Baltic Sea and the recurrent and widespread anoxia, the deeper basins harbor laminated sediments that provide a unique opportunity for high-resolution chronological studies. The Baltic Sea is a eutrophic intra-continental sea that is strongly impacted by terrestrial runoff and nutrient fluxes. The Holocene deposits are recorded today to be up to 50 m deep and geochemically affected by diagenetic alterations driven by organic matter degradation. Many of the cored sequences were highly supersaturated with respect to methane, which caused strong degassing upon core recovery. The depth distributions of conservative sea water ions still reflected the transition at the end of the last glaciation from fresh-water clays to Holocene brackish mud. High-resolution sampling and analyses of interstitial water chemistry revealed the intensive mineralization and zonation of the predominant biogeochemical processes. Quantification of microbial cells in the sediments yielded some of the highest cell densities yet recorded by scientific drilling.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 206-217
Author(s):  
Jianyuan Ni ◽  
Monica L. Bellon-Harn ◽  
Jiang Zhang ◽  
Yueqing Li ◽  
Vinaya Manchaiah

Objective The objective of the study was to examine specific patterns of Twitter usage using common reference to tinnitus. Method The study used cross-sectional analysis of data generated from Twitter data. Twitter content, language, reach, users, accounts, temporal trends, and social networks were examined. Results Around 70,000 tweets were identified and analyzed from May to October 2018. Of the 100 most active Twitter accounts, organizations owned 52%, individuals owned 44%, and 4% of the accounts were unknown. Commercial/for-profit and nonprofit organizations were the most common organization account owners (i.e., 26% and 16%, respectively). Seven unique tweets were identified with a reach of over 400 Twitter users. The greatest reach exceeded 2,000 users. Temporal analysis identified retweet outliers (> 200 retweets per hour) that corresponded to a widely publicized event involving the response of a Twitter user to another user's joke. Content analysis indicated that Twitter is a platform that primarily functions to advocate, share personal experiences, or share information about management of tinnitus rather than to provide social support and build relationships. Conclusions Twitter accounts owned by organizations outnumbered individual accounts, and commercial/for-profit user accounts were the most frequently active organization account type. Analyses of social media use can be helpful in discovering issues of interest to the tinnitus community as well as determining which users and organizations are dominating social network conversations.


1993 ◽  
Vol 32 (01) ◽  
pp. 79-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Millard ◽  
S. McClean

Abstract:The flow of patients through geriatric hospitals has been previously described in terms of acute and long-stay states where the bed occupancy at a census point is modelled by a mixed exponential model. Using data for sixteen years the model was fitted to successive annual census points, in order to provide a description of temporal trends. While the number of acute patients has remained fairly stable during the period, the model shows that there has been a decrease in the number of long-stay patients. Mean lengths of stay in our geriatric hospital before death or discharge have decreased during the study period for both acute and long-stay patients.Using these fits of the mixed exponential model to census data, a method is provided for predicting future turnover of patients. These predictions are reasonably good, except when the turnover patterns go through a period of flux in which assumption of stability no longer holds. Overall, a methodology is presented which relates census analysis to the behaviour of admission cohorts, thus producing a means of predicting future behaviour of patients and identifying where there is a change in patterns.


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