In The Name Of God
Transcription
In The Name Of God
In The Name Of God Marine Sediments Classification Of Marine Sediments Based On Origin Marine Sediments Lithogenous Biogenous Hydrogenous Cosmogenous Lithogenous Sediment • Lithogenous (lithos = stone, generare = to produce) sediment is derived from preexisting rock material. Since most lithogenous sediment comes from the landmasses, it is also called terrigenous (terri = land, generare = to produce) sediment. However, volcanic islands in the open ocean are also important sources of lithogenous sediment. Lithogenous sediment in the ocean is ubiquitous: At least a small percentage of lithogenous sediment is found nearly everywhere on the ocean floor . • Origin Lithogenous sediment originate from continents & Islands. Rock material is eroded by weathering & broken into smaller pieces .Smaller pieces are transported to : - Bays , Lagoons , continental margins , shorelines , beaches by actions such as wind , glaciers , streams - Deep oceans by turbidity currents & gravity . Composition Mainly composed of quartz , one of the most abundant and Chemically stable minerals. Weathering Often occurs along weaknesses • Sediment texture Grain size : indicate the energy of environment. • Sorting : Poorly sorted sediment like those carried by glacial. Well sorted sediment like beach sand . • Maturity : it depends on the distance of transportation . Increasing sediment maturity is indicated by: (1) decreasing clay content, (2) increased sorting, (3) decrease of non-quartz minerals, and (4) increased rounding of the grains within the deposit. • Mature sediment : well sorted beach sand • Immature sediment : glacial sediment Sediment Maturity Lithogeneous Beach Sand Biogenous Sediment These sediment is derived from the remains of hard parts of organisms. Under appropriate environmental conditions that allow marine organisms to live, biogenous material slowly settles onto the ocean floor. • Origin Biogeneous sediments originate from the hard remains of living organisms. organisms- from minute algae and protozoan to large animals hard parts are constructed directly from the dissolved materials in seawater or from the material supplied by feeding. Biogenous sediment classification • Macroscopic biogenous sediment Seen without the aid of a microscope and includes shells, bones, and teeth of large organisms. Founds in certain tropical beach localities, is volumetrically rare in the marine environment • Microscopic biogenous sediment Contains particles so small that a microscope is needed to see these hard remains. Microscopic organisms produce tiny shells called tests. These microscopic tests can accumulate on the deepocean floor and form deposits called ooze. Composition • They are composed from two most • common chemical compounds, calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and silica (SiO2). Calcium Carbonate Two significant contributor are microscopic algae called coccolithophores (coccus = berry; lithos = stone;phorid = carrying and the foraminifers (foramen = an opening), close relatives of radiolarians, are a source for calcium carbonate biogenous ooze Microscopic Calcareous Tests Coccolithophores Foraminifera Calcareous Ooze • Silica Contributing most of the silica in biogenous ooze are microscopic algae called diatoms (diatoma = cut in half) and protozoans called radiolarians (radio = a spoke or ray). Diatom Radiolarian Siliceous Ooze Hydrogenous Sediment Hydrogenous sediment is derived from the dissolved material in water. • Origin Seawater contains many dissolved materials. Chemical reactions within seawater cause certain minerals to come out of solution or precipitate. • Composition Hydrogenous sediments are volumetrically not very significant in the ocean, they have many different compositions and environments of deposition. • Manganese Nodules: Manganese nodules are rounded, hard lumps of manganese, iron, and other metals up to 30 centimeters (12 inches) long. • Phosphates: Phosphorus-bearing compounds (phosphates) occur abundantly as coatings on rocks and as nodules on the continental shelf and on banks at depths shallower than 1000 meters (3300 feet). • Carbonates: The two most important carbonates (a mineral containing CO3 in its chemical formula) in marine sediment are the minerals aragonite and calcite. • Metal Sulfides: Associated with hydrothermal vents and black smokers along the mid-ocean ridge are deposits of metal sulfides. The composition of these metal sulfides includes iron, nickel, copper, zinc, silver and other metals in varying proportions. • Evaporites: Evaporite minerals form where there is restricted open ocean circulation and where evaporation rates are high. Cosmogenous Sediment Cosmogenous (cosmos = universe, generare = to produce) sediment is derived from extraterrestrial sources. Volumetrically insignificant on the ocean floor. Cosmogenous Sediment Microscopic Spherules Macroscopic Meteor Debris Cosmogenous sediment classification • Spherules are microscopic globular masses composed of silicate • rock material, called tektites (tektos = molten), or composed mostly of iron and nickel and form in the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter and are produced when asteroids collide. Meteor debris is rare on Earth and is associated with the more than 110 meteor impact sites identified. Mixtures • Rarely do lithogenous and biogenous sediment occur as an absolutely pure deposit that does not contain other types of sediment Classification Of Marine Sediments Based On Depth Deposition Marine Sediments Neritic Deposits Pelagic Deposits Neritic deposits • Lithogenous sediment dominates most. This is not • surprising, since lithogenous material is derived from rocks on nearby landmasses. It consists of coarsegrained deposits and accumulates rapidly on the continental shelf, slope, and rise. Neritic deposits also contain biogenous, hydrogenous, and cosmogenous particles, but these constitute only a minor percentage of the total sediment mass. Neritic Deposits ((Continental Margin Sediments )) Neritic Deposits Relict Sediments Turbidite Deposits Glacial Deposits Carbonate Deposits Relict Sediments • At the end of the last Ice Age, around 18,000 years ago, glaciers melted and sea level rose. As a result, many rivers of the world today deposit their sediment in drowned river mouths rather than carry it onto the continental shelf as they did during the geologic past. In many areas the sediments that cover the continental shelf, called relict sediments, were deposited from 3000 to 7000 years ago and have not yet been covered by deposits, which are more recent. Such sediments presently cover about 70 percent of the world’s continental shelves. Turbidite Deposits • Wave action and ocean current systems could carry • • coarse material beyond the continental shelf into the deep- ocean basin, there is evidence that much neritic material has been deposited at the base of the continental slope forming the continental rise. These accumulations thin gradually toward the abyssal plains. Such deposits are called turbidite deposits and are thought to have been deposited by turbidity currents that periodically move down the continental slopes through the submarine canyons, carrying loads of neritic material that spreads out across the continental rise. Turbidite deposits are composed of characteristic layering called graded bedding. Glacial Deposits • Poorly sorted deposits containing particles of all sizes, • • from boulders to clays, may be found in the highlatitude portions of the continental shelf. These glacial deposits were laid down by melting glaciers that covered the continental shelf area during the Ice Age, when glaciers were more widespread than today and sea level was lower. Glacial deposits are still forming around the continent of Antarctica and around the island of Greenland by ice rafting. Carbonate Deposits • During the geologic past, deposits of limestone (CaCO3) in the marine environment appear to have been widespread and indicate shallow, warm water conditions. Pelagic deposits • Pelagic deposits are composed of fine-grained material • • that accumulates at a slow rate on the deep-ocean floor. Biogenous ooze is the most common type of pelagic deposit. The reason is because there is so little lithogenous sediment deposited at great distances from the continents. In areas deeper than about 4.5 kilometers (3 miles), there is very little biogenous sediment, and fine-grained lithogenous sediment dominates the deeper regions of the ocean floor. In shallower pelagic areas, biogenous and hydrogenous components are abundant. Pelagic Deposits ((Deep-Ocean Sediments)) Pelagic Deposits Biogenous Oozes Siliceous Oozes Abyssal Clay Carbonate Oozes Biogenous Oozes • At somewhat shallower depths than those where abyssal clay • • • • • forms, biogenous ooze is a significant portion of the sediment. It consists of at least 30 percent biogenous material from the hard tests of microscopic organisms. The rate of accumulation of biogenous material on the ocean floor depends on three fundamental processes-productivity, destruction, and dilution. Productivity is the amount of organisms present in the surface water above the ocean floor. Destruction of skeletal remains occurs by dissolving in seawater at depth. Dilution refers to the inability of oozes to form where other sediments keep the amount of biogenous test material below 30 percent of the sediment. Siliceous Ooze • Siliceous ooze contains at least 30 percent of the hard • • remains of silica-secreting organisms. If accumulations consist mostly of diatoms, diatomaceous ooze is produced. The ocean is under-saturated with silica at all depths, so seawater continually but slowly dissolves silica. One way is to accumulate the siliceous tests faster than seawater dissolves them. siliceous ooze is commonly found in areas below surface waters with high biologic productivity of silicasecreting organisms . Calcareous ooze • Calcareous ooze contains at least 30 percent of the hard • • remains of calcareous-secreting organisms. If accumulations consist mostly of coccolithophores, coccolith ooze is formed. If foraminifers abound, it is called a foraminifer ooze. Calcium Carbonate In Modern Surface Sediments Of The World’s Oceans Abyssal Clay • Abyssal clay is composed of at least 70 percent by weight clay-sized particles derived from the continents and carried by winds or ocean currents. Distribution of Neritic and Pelagic Deposits • Coarse-grained neritic deposits dominate continental • • • margin areas . Abyssal clays dominate the deep-ocean basins. Calcareous oozes are abundant on the relatively shallow deep-ocean areas along the mid- ocean ridge. Siliceous oozes are found beneath areas of unusually high biologic productivity such as the Antarctic and equatorial Pacific Ocean . Distribution Of Plagic And Neritic Sediments Ocean Sediments as a Resource Ocean Sediments Petroleum Sand and Gravel Evaporative Salts Phosphorite Manganese Nodules Offshore Drilling Rig Petroleum • The remains of microscopic organisms, buried within marine sediments before they could decompose, are the source of our most valuable marine resource-petroleum (oil and natural gas). Of the nonliving resources extracted from the oceans, more than 95 percent of the value is in petroleum products. Sand and Gravel • This resource, which includes rock fragments and shells • of marine organisms, is mined by offshore barges using a suction dredge. The resource is used primarily for resupplying recreational beaches, filling in areas on which to build, and for use as an aggregate in concrete. Some gravel deposits are rich in valuable minerals. For example, diamonds are recovered from gravel deposits offshore of South Africa and Australia. Other sediments rich in tin have been mined for years from Thailand to Indonesia. Platinum and gold have been found in deposits in gold mining areas throughout the world, and some Florida beach sands are rich in titanium. Evaporative Salts • When seawater evaporates, water is removed and the • salts remain. Once the salts increase in concentration, they can no longer be held in solution. Consequently, the salts precipitate out of solution and form salt deposits. The most economically notable salts are gypsum and halite. Evaporite Salt Phosphorite (Phosphate Minerals) • Phosphorite is a sedimentary rock made of various • phosphate minerals, which contain the element phosphorus, an important plant nutrient. Phosphorite Occurs at depths less than 300 meters (1000 feet) on the continental shelf and slope. Manganese Nodules and Crusts • Manganese nodules contain significant concentrations • of manganese and iron and smaller concentrations of copper, nickel, and cobalt. Of the five metals, cobalt is the only metal deemed "strategic" to the United States, which means that it is essential to national security. It is required to produce dense, strong alloys with other metals for use in highspeed cutting tools, powerful permanent magnets, and jet engine parts. Mining Manganese Nodules