Iron And Manganese Oxide Deposits As Environmental Records: Examples In The NW Pacific Ocean And The Baltic Sea

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 25 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2004
Abstract
Iron and manganese are very mobile metallic elements in the surface aqueous environment, particularly in the oceans. The elements are easily precipitated as oxides or dissolved back into water, controlled mainly by redox conditions, and the oxide precipitates often selectively accumulate other metallic elements. We have found clear evidence of fine-scale variations in chemistry, mineralogy, isotope composition and microstructures within various iron-manganese nodules and crusts, such as in the deep-sea basins and seamounts of the Pacific Ocean, and in shallow waters in the Baltic Sea. The patterns of variation with depth (that is time-lapse profiles of the deposits) are often correlated among samples and sometimes between remote localities. These fine-scale variations most probably reflect past depositional conditions and possibly image the environmental change, although they remain to be correlated to any physicochemical, geological, or oceanographic parameters. The hydrogenetic ferromanganese crusts have grown widely in the northwestern Pacific, accelerated by intensive circulation of oxygenated bottom waters during the last several millions of years, or earlier. The fine-scale (in millimeter) in-depth compositional and textural patterns with Be-10 growth-rate curves suggest significant changes in growth rate and also occasionally show a common microstratigraphic pattern among samples. Some of the samples indicate a correlation in growth pattern between remote locations, while others suggest short-range difference of oceanographic conditions with water depths.
Citation
APA:
(2004) Iron And Manganese Oxide Deposits As Environmental Records: Examples In The NW Pacific Ocean And The Baltic SeaMLA: Iron And Manganese Oxide Deposits As Environmental Records: Examples In The NW Pacific Ocean And The Baltic Sea. International Marine Minerals Society, 2004.