MARINE SEDIMENT PART #2

in geopolis •  7 years ago  (edited)

Biogenuos sediments

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• They are hard remains of once-living organisms. The two major types include:

  • macroscopic:
    Visible to the naked eyes.
    (like shells, bones, teeth)
  • Microscopic:
    Tiny shells of tests
    (e.g biogenic ooze)
    mainly algae and protozoans.

Biogenic sediment composition

Two main common chemical compounds.
• Calcium carbonate (Caco³)
• Silica (Sio2) or Sio2 n H2o)

Calcium carbonate in biogenic sediment.

Cocci lithospheres (also called) nanoplankton.

  • Photosynthetic algae.
  • Coccoliths individual plates from dead organism.
  • Rock chalk.
  • Lithified coccolith rich ooze.
  • Foraminefera.
  • Protozoans.
  • Use external food.
  • Calcerous oozes.

Silica in biogenous sediments

• Diatoms

  • photosynthetic algae
  • diatomaceous earth

• Radiolarians

  • Protozoans
  • use external food

Distribution of biogenic sediment

  • Productivity
  • Destruction
  • Dilution

Neritic deposits

Neritic deposits are deposited by Lithogenous sediments, and contain biogenous sediments.
Marine Sediments

Carbonate deposits;

  • Carbonate minerals containing Co3
  • Marine carbonates primarily limestone- CaCo3.
  • Most limestone contain fossil shells
    suggests biogenic origin.
    Ancient marine carbonates constitute 25% of all sedimentary rocks on earth.

Carbonate deposits

• Stromatolites

  • Fine layers of carbonate
  • Warm, shallow-ocean, high salinity
  • Cyanobacteria

Calcareous ooze and the CCD

  • CCD: Calcite compensation depth.
    Depth where CaCo3 readily dissolves.
    Rate of supply= rate at which the shell dissolve.

  • Warm, shallow ocean saturated with calcium carbonate.

  • they are majorly found in a cool, deep ocean undersaturated with calcium carbonate present.

  • Lysocline: found at a depth at which a significant amount of CaCo3 begins to dissolve rapidly.

• Scarce calcareous ooze below 5000meters (16,400feet) in modern ocean.
• Most ancient calcareous oozes are at greater depths, moved by sea floor spreading actions

Hydrogenous marine sediments

  • Minerals precipitate directly from seawater:
    • Phosphates
    • Manganese nodules
    • Metal sulphides

  • Small proportion of marine sediments

  • Distributed in diverse environments

Manganese nodules

  • they are first sized lumps of manganese, iron and other metals.
  • Very slow accumulations rates.
  • Mainly commercial uses.
  • Unsure why they are not buried by seafloor sediments.

Phosphates and carbonates

• phosphorus-bearing
Occur beneath areas in surface ocean of very high biological productivity.
• Economically useful as fertilizer.

Carbonates

  • Aragonite and calcite
  • Oolites

Metal sulfides

  • Metal sulfides contains:
  • Iron
  • Nickel
  • Copper
  • Zinc
  • Silver
  • Other metals associated with hydrothermal vents.

Evaporites

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Image source
File:Halite Teepee structure Dead Sea 031712.JPG - Wikimedia

Evaporites are minerals that are formed when seawater evaporates.

  • Restricted open ocean circulation
  • High evaporation rates
  • Halite (common table salt) and gypsum.

Cosmogenous Marine sediments

  • Macroscopic meteor debris
  • Microscopic iron-nickel and silicate spherules (small globular masses)

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Image source

File:Tektites, Indochinite - Center for Meteorite Studies - Arizona State University - Tempe, AZ

Tektites, space dust
Overall, insignificant proportion of marine sediments.

References

Link

• Oxford geology dictionary

link

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