Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount

Physical oceanographic modeling and field studies have shown that kilometer-scale seafloor elevations of comparable breadth and width (abyssal hills, knolls, seamounts) are surrounded by complex flow fields. Asymmetric flow fields, reversed flow and closed streamlines around the topographic feature...

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Published in:Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Main Authors: Turnewitsch, R., Reyss, J-L., Chapman, D.C., Thomson, J., Lampitt, R.S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/9133/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:9133 2023-07-30T04:05:48+02:00 Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount Turnewitsch, R. Reyss, J-L. Chapman, D.C. Thomson, J. Lampitt, R.S. 2004 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/9133/ unknown Turnewitsch, R., Reyss, J-L., Chapman, D.C., Thomson, J. and Lampitt, R.S. (2004) Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 222 (3-4), 1023-1036. (doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2004.03.042 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2004.03.042>). Article PeerReviewed 2004 ftsouthampton https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2004.03.042 2023-07-09T20:29:46Z Physical oceanographic modeling and field studies have shown that kilometer-scale seafloor elevations of comparable breadth and width (abyssal hills, knolls, seamounts) are surrounded by complex flow fields. Asymmetric flow fields, reversed flow and closed streamlines around the topographic feature (Taylor caps), and resonantly amplified tidal currents around the seamount rim potentially control near-bottom particle dynamics, particle deposition at the seafloor and, consequently, the formation of the sedimentary record. We combine numerical modeling and field data to study how such topographically controlled flow-field features are reflected in the sedimentary record. Sediment deposition on a topographically isolated abyssal knoll (height: 900 m) on the Porcupine Abyssal Plain in the Northeast Atlantic (water depth above the abyssal plain: 4850 m) was studied, (1) by comparing the spatial distribution of 210Pb fluxes, calculated from inventories of sedimentary excess 210Pb, with 210Pb input from the water column as recorded by sediment traps; and (2) by comparing sedimentary grain-size distributions and Zr/Al ratios (an indicator for contents of the heavy mineral zircon) at slope, summit and far-field sites. Given Rossby numbers ?0.23, a fractional seamount height of ~0.2, and the absence of diurnal tides it is concluded that an asymmetric flow field without Taylor cap and without amplified tidal currents around the seamount rim is the principal flow-field feature at this knoll. The results and conclusions are as follows: (1) Geochemical and grain-size patterns in the sedimentary record largely agree with the predicted pattern of flow intensity around the topographic elevation: with increasing current strength (erosiveness) there is evidence for a growing discrepancy between water column-derived and sediment-derived 210Pb fluxes, and for increasing contents of larger and heavier particles. The topographically controlled flow field distorts a homogeneous particle-flux input signal from the ocean interior and ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Northeast Atlantic University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Knoll The ENVELOPE(169.350,169.350,-77.517,-77.517) Earth and Planetary Science Letters 222 3-4 1023 1036
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description Physical oceanographic modeling and field studies have shown that kilometer-scale seafloor elevations of comparable breadth and width (abyssal hills, knolls, seamounts) are surrounded by complex flow fields. Asymmetric flow fields, reversed flow and closed streamlines around the topographic feature (Taylor caps), and resonantly amplified tidal currents around the seamount rim potentially control near-bottom particle dynamics, particle deposition at the seafloor and, consequently, the formation of the sedimentary record. We combine numerical modeling and field data to study how such topographically controlled flow-field features are reflected in the sedimentary record. Sediment deposition on a topographically isolated abyssal knoll (height: 900 m) on the Porcupine Abyssal Plain in the Northeast Atlantic (water depth above the abyssal plain: 4850 m) was studied, (1) by comparing the spatial distribution of 210Pb fluxes, calculated from inventories of sedimentary excess 210Pb, with 210Pb input from the water column as recorded by sediment traps; and (2) by comparing sedimentary grain-size distributions and Zr/Al ratios (an indicator for contents of the heavy mineral zircon) at slope, summit and far-field sites. Given Rossby numbers ?0.23, a fractional seamount height of ~0.2, and the absence of diurnal tides it is concluded that an asymmetric flow field without Taylor cap and without amplified tidal currents around the seamount rim is the principal flow-field feature at this knoll. The results and conclusions are as follows: (1) Geochemical and grain-size patterns in the sedimentary record largely agree with the predicted pattern of flow intensity around the topographic elevation: with increasing current strength (erosiveness) there is evidence for a growing discrepancy between water column-derived and sediment-derived 210Pb fluxes, and for increasing contents of larger and heavier particles. The topographically controlled flow field distorts a homogeneous particle-flux input signal from the ocean interior and ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Turnewitsch, R.
Reyss, J-L.
Chapman, D.C.
Thomson, J.
Lampitt, R.S.
spellingShingle Turnewitsch, R.
Reyss, J-L.
Chapman, D.C.
Thomson, J.
Lampitt, R.S.
Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
author_facet Turnewitsch, R.
Reyss, J-L.
Chapman, D.C.
Thomson, J.
Lampitt, R.S.
author_sort Turnewitsch, R.
title Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
title_short Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
title_full Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
title_fullStr Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
title_sort evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount
publishDate 2004
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/9133/
long_lat ENVELOPE(169.350,169.350,-77.517,-77.517)
geographic Knoll The
geographic_facet Knoll The
genre Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet Northeast Atlantic
op_relation Turnewitsch, R., Reyss, J-L., Chapman, D.C., Thomson, J. and Lampitt, R.S. (2004) Evidence for a sedimentary fingerprint of an asymmetric flow field surrounding a short seamount. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 222 (3-4), 1023-1036. (doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2004.03.042 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2004.03.042>).
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2004.03.042
container_title Earth and Planetary Science Letters
container_volume 222
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 1023
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