Sedimentary sources and processes in the eastern Arabian Sea: Insights from environmental magnetism, geochemistry and clay mineralogy

被引:26
作者
Avinash, Kumar [1 ]
Kurian, P. John [1 ]
Warrier, Anish Kumar [1 ]
Shankar, R. [2 ]
Vineesh, T. C. [1 ]
Ravindra, Rasik [3 ]
机构
[1] Minist Earth Sci MoES, Earth Syst Sci Org, Natl Ctr Antarctic & Ocean Res ESSO NCAOR, Vasco Da Gama 403804, Goa, India
[2] Mangalore Univ, Dept Marine Geol, Mangalagangothri 574199, Karnataka, India
[3] Minist Earth Sci MoES, Earth Syst Sci Org, Lodhi Rd, New Delhi 110003, India
关键词
Calcium carbonate; Eastern Arabian Sea; Magnetic minerals; Major elements; Organic carbon; Terrigenous fluxes;
D O I
10.1016/j.gsf.2015.05.001
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The spatial distribution patterns of surficial sediment samples from different sedimentary domains (shallow to deep-sea regions) of the eastern Arabian Sea were studied using sediment proxies viz. environmental magnetism, geochemistry, particle size and clay mineralogy. Higher concentrations of magnetic minerals (high chi(lf)) were recorded in the deep-water sediments when compared with the shallow water sediments. The magnetic mineralogy of one of the shallow water samples is influenced by the presence of bacterial magnetite as evidenced from the chi(ARM)/chi(lf) vs. chi(ARM)/chi(fd) biplot. However, the other samples are catchment-derived. The high correlation documented for chi(lf), anhysteretic remanent magnetisation (chi(ARM)) and isothermal remanent magnetisation (IRM) with Al indicates that the deep-sea surficial sediments are influenced by terrigenous fluxes which have been probably derived from the southern Indian rivers, the Sindhu (the Indus) and the Narmada-Tapti rivers. A lower Mn concentration is recorded in the upper slope sediments from the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) but a higher Mn/Al ratio is documented in the lower slope and deep-sea sediments. Clay minerals such as illite (24-48.5%), chlorite (14.1-34.9%), smectite (10.6-28.7%) and kaolinite (11.9-27.5%) dominate the sediments of shallow and deep-sea regions and may have been derived from different sources and transported by fluvial and aeolian agents. Organic carbon (OC) data indicate a low concentration in the shallow/shelf region (well oxygenated water conditions) and deeper basins (increased bottom-water oxygen concentration and low sedimentation rate). High OC concentrations were documented in the OMZ (very low bottom-water oxygen concentration with high sedimentation rate). The calcium carbonate concentration of the surface sediments from the continental shelf and slope regions (<1800 m) up to the Chagos-Laccadive Ridge show higher concentrations (average = 58%) when compared to deep basin sediments (average = 44%). Our study demonstrates that particle size as well as magnetic grain size, magnetic minerals and elemental variations are good indicators to distinguish terrigenous from biogenic sediments and to identify sediment provenance. (C) 2015, China University of Geosciences (Beijing) and Peking University. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:253 / 264
页数:12
相关论文
共 73 条
[1]  
Agnihotri R., Kurian S., Recently studied sedimentary records from the eastern Arabian Sea: implications to Holocene monsoonal variability, E-Journal Earth Science India, 1, pp. 188-207, (2008)
[2]  
Alagarsamy R., Environmental magnetism and application in the continental shelf sediments of India, Marine Environmental Research, 68, pp. 49-58, (2009)
[3]  
Angino E.E., Billings G.K., Atomic Absorption Spectrometry in Geology, (1972)
[4]  
Aprile F.M., Bouvy M., Distribution and Enrichment of Heavy metals in sediments at the Tapacurá river Basin, Northeastern Brazil, Brazilian Journal of Aquatic Science and Technology, 12, 1, pp. 1-8, (2008)
[5]  
Bazylinski D.A., Williams T.J., Ecophysiology of magnetotacticbacteria, Magnetoreception and Magnetosomes in Bacteria, pp. 37-75, (2007)
[6]  
Berner R.A., Burial of organic carbon and pyrite sulfur in the modern ocean: its geochemical and environmental significance, American Journal of Science, 282, pp. 451-473, (1982)
[7]  
Borole D.V., Sarin M.M., Somayajlulu B.L.K., Composition of Narbada and Tapti estuarine particles and adjacent Arabian Sea sediments, Indian Journal of Marine Science, 11, pp. 51-62, (1982)
[8]  
Brown E.T., Le Callonnec L., German C.R., Geochemical cycling of redox-sensitive metals in sediments from Lake Malawi: a diagnostic paleotracer for episodic changes in mixing depth, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 64, pp. 3515-3523, (2000)
[9]  
Calvert S.E., Pedersen T.F., Productivity, accumulation and preservation of organic matter, Recent and Ancient Sediments, pp. 231-263, (1992)
[10]  
Calvert S.E., Pedersen T.F., Divakarnaidu P.D., Von Stackelberg U., On the organic carbon maximum on the continental slope of the eastern Arabian Sea, Journal of Marine Research, 53, pp. 269-296, (1995)