Fine sediment and nutrient dynamics related to particle size and floc ...
Marine Sedimentation. Sediment in the Sea -Sediment is classified in two ways: Size and Origin -Size...
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Transcript of Marine Sedimentation. Sediment in the Sea -Sediment is classified in two ways: Size and Origin -Size...
Sediment in the Sea
• -Sediment is classified in two ways: Size and Origin
• -Size is based on the Wentworth grain-size scale
• -Size classification divides sediment by grain size into gravel, sand, and clay. Mud is a mixture of silt and clay.
Sediment Type Diameter in mmGravel Boulder Larger than 256.0
Cobble 65.0-256.0Pebble 4.0-64.0Granule 2.0-4.0
Sand Very Coarse 1.0-2.0Coarse 0.50-1.0Medium 0.25-0.50Fine 0.125-0.25Very Fine 0.0625-0.125
Mud Silt 0.0039-0.0625Clay 0.0002-0.0039
Colloid Colloid Smaller than 0.0002
Wentworth Grain-Size Scale
Sediment in the Sea• Origin classification divides sediment into five categories:
–Terrigenous sediments – fine to coarse grains that are produced by the weathering and erosion of rocks on land, typically sand and mud.
Sediment in the Sea• Origin classification divides sediment into five categories:
– Biogenous sediments – fine to coarse grains that are derived from the hard parts of organisms, such as shells and skeletal debris, typically lime (calcium carbonate) and siliceous mud (silicates)
Sediment in the Sea• Origin classification divides sediment into five categories:
–Hydrogenous/Authigenic sediments – particles that are precipitated by chemical or biochemical reactions in seawater near the sea-floor; manganese and phosphate nodules are examples.
Sediment in the Sea• Origin classification divides sediment into five categories:
–Volcanogenic sediments – particles that are ejected from volcanoes, like ash
Sediment in the Sea• Origin classification divides sediment into five categories:
–Cosmogenic sediments – very tiny grains that originate from outer space and tend to be mixed into terrigenous and biogenic sediment.
– Hard to distinguish from other sediments due to size!
B. Factors that control sedimentation • Includes particle size and the turbulence of the
deposition environment.– So a larger, heavier sediment particle will not travel as
far down a river as a lighter, smaller sediment particle.– Heavier, larger particles require faster and stronger
water currents to move them.
Nile River Mouth
Stream bed with various
sized sediments
B. Factors that control sedimentation • Hjulstrom’s Diagram graphs the relationship between
particle size and energy for erosion, transportation, and deposition (when the sediment is too heavy to move).
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• Terrigenous sediments are found on the
continental shelf.• Seaward, water becomes deeper and more distant
from a terrigenous source.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• - Worldwide distribution of recent shelf sediments
by composition is strongly related to latitude and climate.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• - Worldwide distribution of recent shelf sediments by composition is strongly related to latitude and climate.
– 1. Calcareous biogenous sediments dominate tropical shelves.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• - Worldwide distribution of recent shelf sediments by composition is strongly related to latitude and climate.
– 2. River-supplied sands and muds dominate temperate shelves.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• - Worldwide distribution of recent shelf sediments by composition is strongly related to latitude and climate.
– 3. Glacial till and ice-rafted sediments dominate polar shelves.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• If influx of terrigenous sediment is low and the
water is warm, carbonate sediments will dominate.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• - Deep-sea Sedimentation has 4 main sources for
sediment: terrigenous material from the land (found mostly
on the shelf), biogenous and hydrogenous from the sea, and volcanic from mid-ocean ridges and other active sites.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• Deep-sea Sedimentation has 4 main sources for sediment: terrigenous material from the land (found mostly on the shelf),
biogenous and hydrogenous from the sea, and volcanic from mid-ocean ridges and other active sites.
• Major pelagic (open ocean) sediments in the ocean are red clay and biogenous oozes.
Red Clay
Sands on the ocean
floor arecomposed
of the shells
of livingthings.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• Deep-sea Sedimentation has 4 main sources for sediment: terrigenous material from the land (found mostly on the shelf),
biogenous and hydrogenous from the sea, and volcanic from mid-ocean ridges and other active sites.
– Hydrogenous deposits are chemical and biochemical precipitates that form on the sea floor and include ferromanganese nodules and phosphorite.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• - Deep-sea Sedimentation has 4 main sources for sediment: terrigenous material from the land (found mostly on the shelf),
biogenous and hydrogenous from the sea, and volcanic from mid-ocean ridges and other active sites.
–Volcanic sediments come directly from volcanoes and are found primarily near mid-ocean ridges and island hotspots.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• The distribution of sediments in the deep ocean
varies greatly, but some parts of the ocean are dominated by certain types.
C. Sedimentation in the OceanThe distribution of sediments in the deep ocean varies greatly, but some parts of the ocean are dominated
by certain types.
• New crust at the mid-ocean ridge has little sediment covering it, where the sea floor close to the continents have great amounts of sediment, and in differing layers.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• The distribution of sediments in the deep ocean varies greatly, but some parts of the ocean are
dominated by certain types.
• These sedimentary layers create the great flat expanses of the Abyssal Plains.
C. Sedimentation in the Ocean• The distribution of sediments in the deep ocean varies greatly, but some parts of the ocean are
dominated by certain types.• New crust at the mid-ocean ridge has little sediment covering it, where the sea floor close to
the continents have great amounts of sediment, and in differing layers. • These sedimentary layers create the great flat expanses of the Abyssal Plains.
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