4.6 Article

Geochemistry of Surface Sediments From the Emperor Seamount Chain, North Pacific

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2021.674842

Keywords

sediment grain size; spatial distribution of sediment; Ce negative anomaly; sediment provenance; Emperor Seamount Chain

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41876065, 41476056]
  2. National Program on Global Change and Air-Sea Interaction [GASI-GEOGE-04]
  3. Taishan Scholars Program of Shandong [TSQN20182117]

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This study analyzed surface sediment samples from the Emperor Seamount Chain in the North Pacific and found that sediments can be divided into three zones with distinct features spatially. Each zone is characterized by different components, such as clayey silt, sand, and silty sand, indicating different sources and sedimentary processes in the study area.
Investigating the composition and distribution of pelagic marine sediments is fundamental in the field of marine sedimentology. The spatial distributions of surface sediment are unclear due to limited investigation along the Emperor Seamount Chain of the North Pacific. In this study, a suite of sedimentological and geochemical proxies were analyzed, including the sediment grain size, organic carbon, CaCO3, major and rare earth elements of 50 surface sediment samples from the Emperor Seamount Chain, spanning from similar to 33 degrees N to similar to 52 degrees N. On the basis of sedimentary components, we divide them into three Zones (I, II, and III) spatially with distinct features. Sediments in Zone I (similar to 33 degrees N-44 degrees N) and Zone III (49.8 degrees N-53 degrees N) are dominated by clayey silt, and mainly consist of sand and silty sand in Zone II. The mean grain size of the sortable silt shows that the hydrodynamic condition in the study area is significantly stronger than that of the abyssal plain, especially at the water depth of 1,000-2,500 m. The CaCO3 contents in sediments above 4,000 m range from 20 to 84% but decrease sharply to less than 1.5% below 4,000 m, confirming that the water depth of 4,000 m is the carbonate compensation depth of the study area. Strong positive correlations between Al2O3 and Fe2O3, TiO2, MgO, and K2O (R > 0.9) in the bulk sediments indicate pronounced contributions of terrigenous materials from surrounding continent mass to the study area. Furthermore, the eolian dust makes contributions to the composition of bulk sediments as confirmed by rare earth elements. There is no significant correlation between grain size and major and minor elements, which indicates that the sedimentary grain size does not exert important effects on terrigenous components. There is significant negative delta Ce and positive delta Eu anomalies at all stations. The negative Ce anomaly mainly exists in carbonate-rich sediments, inheriting the signal of seawater. The positive Eu anomaly indicates widespread volcanism contributions to the study area from active volcanic islands arcs around the North Pacific. The relative contributions of terrestrial, volcanic, and biogenic materials vary with latitude and water depth in the study area.

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