Deep-water depositional environments of the northwest Weddell Sea and South Sandwich Islands, Antarctica

Two transects have been sampled using short cores (multi and box), seabed photography, video sequences, and sediment profile images across the northwestern Weddell Sea and South Sandwich Forearc, Antarctica. A total of 12 core stations were examined for sediment structure, texture and composition to...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Howe, John, Shimmield, Tracy, Diaz, Robert
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.uhi.ac.uk/en/publications/8f4fa2d4-49b3-4258-8285-b4243ecb855b
Description
Summary:Two transects have been sampled using short cores (multi and box), seabed photography, video sequences, and sediment profile images across the northwestern Weddell Sea and South Sandwich Forearc, Antarctica. A total of 12 core stations were examined for sediment structure, texture and composition to determine their depositional history. Four of the core stations from the Weddell Continental Slope, Abyssal Plain and South Sandwich Forearc and Trench were further examined for trace metal analysis (Ba, U, Mn and Ph) for sediment source and palaeoproductivity, and Pb-210 for age profiles and depth of mixing by bioturbation. The 3055 m station at the base of the Weddell Continental Slope, recovered laminated muddy-silty contourites with a surface layer of hemipelagites with abundant ice-rafted debris, possibly originating from the 1995 Larsen A and 2002 Larsen B ice shelf disintegration. This is interpreted as a moderate-energy depositional environment influenced by Weddell Sea Bottom Water along-slope current, reworking sediment. Sediment sources to this station include the direct input of clastic material from ice with variation in sediment sources from in situ current winnowing and along-slope transport reflected in the Mn/Li and Ba/Li ratios. The 4760 m station on the Weddell Abyssal Plain recovered hemipelagites, interpreted as a low-energy depositional environment with sediment supplied both from direct ice-rafting and pelagic settling during productive seasonally ice-free periods. The Pb-210 profiles indicate a sedimentation rate of 0.024cm/year(-1), with the Pb-206/207 isotope ratios suggesting a principle sediment source from ice-rafting. The 2292 and 6326 m stations from the slope and floor of the South Sandwich Forearc recovered pelagic and turbiditic sediments. This is interpreted as a high-energy down-slope depositional environment, with high surface biogenic productivity and sediment supply leading to localised down-slope mass-movements on the slope and floor. High levels of Mn/Li and elevated U/Li ...