MARINE SEDIMENTS
Pre-Lab Exercise
Use
the information below to answer the pre-lab questions.
This
information is adopted from materials developed by Professor Alan Trujillo,
Palomar College
The sea floor is composed of basalt that originates at
mid‑ocean ridges. However, the sea floor is covered in most places by
layers of sediment. Sediment is any
accumulation of loose material. Examples are sand lying on a beach, mud at the
bottom of a lake, or gravel on a riverbed.
Rivers
and glaciers carry large amounts of sediment off the continents to the ocean.
Likewise, wind blows fine particles from the land out to sea. Organisms in the surface waters provide a
continuous supply of skeletal material that rains down onto the sea floor.
Other sediments are formed in place by chemical reactions. The types of
sediment on the ocean floor are determined by factors such as its distance from
land, climate, water temperature, biological productivity, and water
depth.
Because
marine sediments accumulate under specific conditions, an understanding of
modern sediment distributions helps us interpret events in the geologic past,
particularly for the last 200 million years of Earth's history (the maximum age
of the ocean floor). Sediment cores
are long cylinders of sediment brought up by ocean floor drilling.
Oceanographers use these cores to look at the layers of sediment that have
accumulated on the sea floor over time. Collectively, studies of cores reveal
information about past climate, composition of atmospheric gases, evolution of
animal and plant species, and movement of surface and deep-water currents.
Because of the keen interest in understanding changes in Earth’s atmosphere
today, the study of marine sediments is a very important area of research in
oceanography.
Classification
of Marine Sediments
We classify marine sediments by their source. The four
main types of sediment are lithogenous, biogenous, hydrogenous
and cosmogenous (Table 1 below). In
this lab, you will primarily examine lithogenous,
biogenous, and hydrogenous
sediments. All three types of sediment
are important for a number of reasons.
For example, lithogenous sediments can tell us about changing plate
tectonic activity, such as the uplift of mountains, which increases the amount
of sediment that rivers deliver to the ocean. Biogenous
sediments can tell us about environmental conditions in ocean surface waters;
for example, changes in surface seawater temperature may cause shifts in the
types of planktonic organisms that accumulate on the sea floor, telling us
about the coming and going of ice ages.
Hydrogenous sediments are economically important, providing substances
ranging from the salt on your table to various metals in your computer.
Lithogenous
Sediment
Lithogenous
sediments (lithos
= rock, generare
= to produce) are sediments derived from erosion of rocks on the continents. A
look at the “Sources” section of Table 1 (below) illustrates the diverse ways
in which sediments from the continents enter the marine environment. Rivers and
glaciers deliver large amounts of sediment the continental shelves. Turbidity
currents transport some of this material down submarine canyons to the
continental rise and further onto the abyssal plains. Along tectonically active margins, turbidity
currents can carry sediments into a trench, where thesediments
may be either subducted or accreted (added on) to the adjacent plate.
An example of lithogenous sediment: this river delivers
sand and silt to the ocean, shown by the light colors in the water beyond the
river mouth. From Essentials of Oceanography, 11th Edition, Trujillo and
Thurman, © 2014, Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
Although most lithogenous sediments accumulate along the
continental margins, winds may blow small particles (clay, silt, and volcanic
ash, for example) far out to sea. These
particles settle slowly through the water and accumulate on the ocean floor.
These small particles accumulate very slowly, at rates averaging 1 millimeter
(0.04 inch) per 1000 years, which is equivalent to the size of the thickness of
a dime. When these tiny particles settle in areas where little other material
is being deposited (usually in the deep-ocean basins far from land), they form
a sediment called abyssal clay.
Table
1. Classification of the four main types of marine sediments
showing composition, sources, and main locations found. From Essentials
of Oceanography, 11th Edition, Trujillo and Thurman, © 2014,
Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
Biogenous Sediment
Biogenous
sediments (bio = life, generare = to
produce) are sediments made from the skeletal remains of once-living organisms.
These hard parts include a wide variety of particles such as shells of
microscopic organisms (called tests),
coral fragments, sea urchin spines, and pieces of mollusc shells.
The most important type of biogenous sediment comes from the tests of one-celled
microscopic algae and protozoans living in the surface waters of the oceans. When
these tests comprise greater than 30% of the particles in the sediment, the sediment
is called an ooze. Oozes are
most abundant beneath open ocean areas where nutrients are available to enhance
productivity. In these areas, oozes accumulate at an average rate of 1
centimeter (0.4 inch) per 1000 years. Oozes are generally absent on the
continental margins where lithogenous sediments dominate.
Two Types of Oozes
There are two major types of ooze based on the
composition of the tests: calcareous
ooze is made of calcium carbonate (CaCO3); siliceous ooze is made of silica (SiO2 )
or opal (SiO2 .
nH2O).
About 48% of all deep-ocean
sediment is calcareous ooze. This
sediment is composed of the tests of protozoans called foraminifers (or “forams” for short), and tiny algae called coccolithophores,
which produce tiny plates called coccoliths (Figure 1). These calcite-secreting organisms are most productive in warm
surface waters where seawater is saturated with calcium carbonate.
50 microns |
b. |
||
Figure
1. Examples of
common microscopic calcite-secreting organisms. (a) A test from a
single-celled protozoan called a foraminifer. (b) A test from a single-celled
algae called a coccolithophore, which has
individual plates called coccoliths. The bars
indicate scale; 1 micron equals 1 millionth of a meter or 0.00004 inch. |
Deeper in the ocean, changes in temperature, pressure,
and water chemistry cause calcareous tests to dissolve. At a certain depth, the
tests dissolve faster than they accumulate, so calcareous oozes do not form
below this depth; this depth is called the calcite
compensation depth (CCD) (Figure 2). The depth of the CCD varies from one
ocean basin to another, but on average occurs at approximately 4500 meters (2.8
miles) below sea level. The result is that calcareous oozes accumulate in areas
above 4500 meters in the middle and low latitudes, usually on the mid-ocean
ridges. In fact, there is a strong correlation between the locations of
mid-ocean ridges and the distribution of calcareous ooze. As these sediments
are buried, they are subjected to increasing pressure and heat, which causes
the calcareous ooze to harden into chalk.
Figure 2. Schematic profile view of the
ocean showing the calcite compensation depth (CCD). Above the CCD, calcite is stable
and does not dissolve. Below the CCD, ocean conditions cause calcite to
dissolve rapidly. From Essentials of
Oceanography, 11th Edition, Trujillo and Thurman, © 2014,
Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
About 14% of all deep-ocean sediments are siliceous oozes. Siliceous ooze is made
from the tests of another protozoan, radiolarians
(or “rads” for short), and algae called diatoms (Figure 3). These organisms are
most abundant in regions of high productivity, which are commonly associated
with high levels of nutrients and cold surface water. Siliceous oozes are
typically found on the deep-sea floor where calcareous oozes are absent. Two
major zones where siliceous oozes accumulate are in polar
regions and beneath the zone of equatorial upwelling.
Hardened deposits of diatom-rich siliceous ooze and clay are referred to as diatomaceous earth, which is used in a
wide variety of industrial applications, including making filters, abrasives,
and heat-resistant insulators.
a.
|
b.
|
Figure
3. Examples of common microscopic silica-secreting
organisms. (a) A test from a single-celled protozoan called a radiolarian.
(b) A test from a single-celled algae called a diatom. The bars indicate
scale; 1 micron equals 1 millionth of a meter or 0.00004 inch. |
Not all silica from siliceous microorganisms winds up as
siliceous ooze. In some cases, minor amounts of silica are deposited with
calcareous ooze. Although the exact method of formation is unclear, during burial
siliceous material combines to form hard rounded lumps or nodules called chert nodules. For example, the white cliffs
of Dover (England) are made of chalk and also contain abundant chert nodules. Chert, a
microcrystalline form of silica, is so hard that it is often used as a
whetstone to sharpen knives.
Hydrogenous
Sediment
Hydrogenous sediments are created from chemical reactions
in seawater. Under special chemical conditions, dissolved materials in seawater
precipitate (form solids). Many
types of hydrogenous sediments have economic value.
Hydrogenous
sediments include evaporites,
meaning any type of sediment that forms from the evaporation of seawater. As seawater evaporates, the ions that remain
behind can become so concentrated that they will combine with one another to
form crystals that precipitate. The two
most common types of evaporates are gypsum and halite. Gypsum
is hydrous calcium sulfate (CaSO4·2H2O), and is mined
worldwide to make fertilizer, plaster, and cement. Halite
is sodium chloride (NaCl), which is common table
salt. When you salt your food, you are
eating the evaporated remains of ancient ocean water!
Manganese nodules are
another type of hydrogenous sediment.
They form marble-size to tennis ball-size lumps of iron and manganese
oxide that lie scattered across the deep sea floor where sedimentation rates
are particularly low. Although they contain large amounts of manganese, these
nodules are economically most important for their cobalt, nickel, and chromium.
Their formation is not well understood; however, we do know that they form as
concentric layers (like an onion), adding layers of iron and manganese minerals
slowly over time. The rates of formation are on the order of 1 to 10
millimeters (0.04 to 0.4 inch) per million years.
Figure 4. Manganese nodules, a type of
hydrogenous sediment. From Essentials of
Oceanography, 11th Edition, Trujillo and Thurman, © 2014,
Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
The beach sands in some tropical areas are composed of
another type of hydrogenous sediment called oolites (oo = egg, ite = stone). Oolites
are sand-sized grains made of calcium carbonate precipitated out of seawater in
warm, tropical regions, such as in the Bahamas.
Oolites need to roll back-and-forth to form , so they form only in shallow areas where waves cause
back-and-forth motion on the seabed. The
back-and-forth motion causes the grains to accrete layer after layer, somewhat
like a snowball, so that each oolite has a spherical
shape with a layered, onion-like internal structure.
***
Describing
Sediment Characteristics
Figure
5 shows a hypothetical distribution of sediment types
across a passive continental margin and adjacent ocean basin. Note that those sediments
found close to the continent along the continental shelf are known as neritic sediments and are largely lithogenous. Those sediments found
further from the continent are known as pelagic
sediments and are often dominated by biogenous
particles.
Figure
5. Schematic view of the distribution of various sediment
types across an idealized passive margin and adjacent ocean basin. Notice that
with increasing distance from the continent that the grain size of lithogenous sediments decreases. From Essentials of
Oceanography by Trujillo and Thurman, © Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
Lithogenous
sediments exhibit characteristics that reflect the processes involved in their
transportation and deposition. These characteristics are described as the
sediment's texture, which includes
the size and shape of the particles. For example, grain size is the size of the individual particles (Table 2),
whereas rounding describes how
angular versus how smooth the particles are (Table 3).
Grain
Size |
Term |
Size
Designation |
Example |
Coarse-grained |
Gravel |
Greater than 2mm |
Large rock fragments |
|
Sand |
0.062‑2mm |
Most beach sand |
|
Silt |
0.004‑0.062mm |
Gritty; usually quartz |
Fine-grained |
Clay |
Less than 0.004mm |
Microscopic, flat particles |
Table
2. Lithogenous sediment grain sizes and common examples.
Table
3. Terms used to describe the rounding of sediment grains.
Grain
size and rounding (see
the tables on the previous page) can both indicate the energy of the environment in which the sediment accumulated. By
“energy of the environment,” we mean the ability of water, wind, or gravity to
move the sediment particles. For
example, a beach is a “high-energy” environment because of the breaking waves
and fast currents, whereas the deep ocean floor is a “low-energy” environment
because water movement is sluggish. In a
high-energy environment such as a beach, small grains are washed away leaving
mostly larger grains behind, and vigorous wave activity on the beach rolls the
grains around to make them smooth. In
contrast, low-energy environments often have smaller grain sizes, and possibly
more angular grains. Note that these
generalizations apply best to lithogenous sediments. Caution
should be used when applying such characteristics to biogenous
sediments because, for example, some biological shells may start out round and
thus are not useful indicators of environmental energy.