Biogenuos sediments
• 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 sulphidesSmall 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
- Phosphates
Image source
File:Copper(II) phosphate
• 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
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)
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
• link