Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea

Sediment deposition along the East Scotia Ridge (ESR) in the Southern Oceanis dominated by biogenic sediment due to its location within the diatom belt and is influenced by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current mainly flowing west to east. Hydrothermal vent systems occur along the ESR, are characterized...

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Main Author: Provenza, Calli M.
Other Authors: Riedinger, Natascha, Burkett, Ashley, Quan, Tracy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://shareok.org/handle/11244/338805
id ftoklahomaunivs:oai:shareok.org:11244/338805
record_format openpolar
spelling ftoklahomaunivs:oai:shareok.org:11244/338805 2023-08-27T04:05:35+02:00 Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea Provenza, Calli M. Riedinger, Natascha Burkett, Ashley Quan, Tracy 2022-12 application/pdf https://shareok.org/handle/11244/338805 en_US eng https://shareok.org/handle/11244/338805 Copyright is held by the author who has granted the Oklahoma State University Library the non-exclusive right to share this material in its institutional repository. Contact Digital Library Services at lib-dls@okstate.edu or 405-744-9161 for the permission policy on the use, reproduction or distribution of this material. East Scotia Ridge geochemistry geology Scotia Sea trace metal deposition Thesis Text 2022 ftoklahomaunivs 2023-08-10T17:32:57Z Sediment deposition along the East Scotia Ridge (ESR) in the Southern Oceanis dominated by biogenic sediment due to its location within the diatom belt and is influenced by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current mainly flowing west to east. Hydrothermal vent systems occur along the ESR, are characterized by nine tectonic segments (E1-E9). Sediment cores in the vicinity of ridge segments E2 and E9 from the ESR were analyzed to gain a better understanding of potential vent fluids related to trace metal distributions in surrounding modern marine sediments. Solid phase multicore and porewater samples collected during the R/V Polarstern Expedition PS_119 were located on both east and west sides of the ESR. Samples were selected at different distances from the hydrothermal vents along two west to east transects crossing E2 and E9 to gain a broader understanding of how chemical signatures within the sediment column change due to their proximity to the vents. As hydrothermally emitted plumes move throughout the water column, they affect where trace metals are deposited onto underlying sediments. Each core was analyzed using an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Analysis across the transects show a steady increase in trace metal concentrations on the eastern side of the ESR compared to samples from the western side indicating a currents-induced eastward movement of hydrothermal plumes from the ESR. In addition, sediments near E9 exhibited much higher trace metal enrichments compared to segment E2 signifying a more trace metal-rich magmatic substrate source and different water-rock interactions increased metal concentrations within plumes and their deposits. Understanding the effects of hydrothermal activity on marine sediment is crucial when studying the productivity of an area using trace metal proxies because trace metal input from hydrothermal vents can overprint chemical signatures left from phytoplankton in marine sediments. Silver seems to be relatively unaffected by hydrothermal activity as it has similar ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Scotia Sea University of Oklahoma/Oklahoma State University: SHAREOK Repository Antarctic East Scotia Ridge ENVELOPE(-29.250,-29.250,-57.917,-57.917) Scotia Sea The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Oklahoma/Oklahoma State University: SHAREOK Repository
op_collection_id ftoklahomaunivs
language English
topic East Scotia Ridge
geochemistry
geology
Scotia Sea
trace metal deposition
spellingShingle East Scotia Ridge
geochemistry
geology
Scotia Sea
trace metal deposition
Provenza, Calli M.
Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea
topic_facet East Scotia Ridge
geochemistry
geology
Scotia Sea
trace metal deposition
description Sediment deposition along the East Scotia Ridge (ESR) in the Southern Oceanis dominated by biogenic sediment due to its location within the diatom belt and is influenced by the Antarctic Circumpolar Current mainly flowing west to east. Hydrothermal vent systems occur along the ESR, are characterized by nine tectonic segments (E1-E9). Sediment cores in the vicinity of ridge segments E2 and E9 from the ESR were analyzed to gain a better understanding of potential vent fluids related to trace metal distributions in surrounding modern marine sediments. Solid phase multicore and porewater samples collected during the R/V Polarstern Expedition PS_119 were located on both east and west sides of the ESR. Samples were selected at different distances from the hydrothermal vents along two west to east transects crossing E2 and E9 to gain a broader understanding of how chemical signatures within the sediment column change due to their proximity to the vents. As hydrothermally emitted plumes move throughout the water column, they affect where trace metals are deposited onto underlying sediments. Each core was analyzed using an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Analysis across the transects show a steady increase in trace metal concentrations on the eastern side of the ESR compared to samples from the western side indicating a currents-induced eastward movement of hydrothermal plumes from the ESR. In addition, sediments near E9 exhibited much higher trace metal enrichments compared to segment E2 signifying a more trace metal-rich magmatic substrate source and different water-rock interactions increased metal concentrations within plumes and their deposits. Understanding the effects of hydrothermal activity on marine sediment is crucial when studying the productivity of an area using trace metal proxies because trace metal input from hydrothermal vents can overprint chemical signatures left from phytoplankton in marine sediments. Silver seems to be relatively unaffected by hydrothermal activity as it has similar ...
author2 Riedinger, Natascha
Burkett, Ashley
Quan, Tracy
format Thesis
author Provenza, Calli M.
author_facet Provenza, Calli M.
author_sort Provenza, Calli M.
title Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea
title_short Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea
title_full Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea
title_fullStr Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea
title_full_unstemmed Depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the Scotia Sea
title_sort depositional behaviors of trace metals around hydrothermal vents in the scotia sea
publishDate 2022
url https://shareok.org/handle/11244/338805
long_lat ENVELOPE(-29.250,-29.250,-57.917,-57.917)
geographic Antarctic
East Scotia Ridge
Scotia Sea
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Scotia Ridge
Scotia Sea
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Scotia Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Scotia Sea
op_relation https://shareok.org/handle/11244/338805
op_rights Copyright is held by the author who has granted the Oklahoma State University Library the non-exclusive right to share this material in its institutional repository. Contact Digital Library Services at lib-dls@okstate.edu or 405-744-9161 for the permission policy on the use, reproduction or distribution of this material.
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