Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability

The Perseverance Drift, on the northern Antarctic Peninsula continental shelf, records changes in ocean and ice conditions throughout the Holocene. This study uses the sedimentary archive contained in a 25.81m jumbo piston core taken from a ~100m thick sedimentary drift deposit. The drift deposit is...

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Main Author: Staszyc, Alicia Barbara 1990-
Other Authors: Wellner, Julia S., Saylor, Joel E., Strom, Kyle B.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1669
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivhouston:oai:uh-ir.tdl.org:10657/1669 2023-05-15T13:46:38+02:00 Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability Staszyc, Alicia Barbara 1990- Wellner, Julia S. Saylor, Joel E. Strom, Kyle B. December 2014 application/pdf born digital http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1669 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1669 The author of this work is the copyright owner. UH Libraries and the Texas Digital Library have their permission to store and provide access to this work. Further transmission, reproduction, or presentation of this work is prohibited except with permission of the author(s). Antarctic Peninsula Sediment transport Drift deposit Grain size Grain shape Grain texture Holocene Sedimentology Facies Silica precipitation Thesis Text 2014 ftunivhouston 2022-04-03T15:47:11Z The Perseverance Drift, on the northern Antarctic Peninsula continental shelf, records changes in ocean and ice conditions throughout the Holocene. This study uses the sedimentary archive contained in a 25.81m jumbo piston core taken from a ~100m thick sedimentary drift deposit. The drift deposit is composed of laminated, black- to olive-colored diatomaceous mud and ooze; several horizons of ikaite crystals occur throughout the section. Grain size, grain shape, and grain textures of sediments in the drift deposit can be used to determine sediment transport history and assess variations in the relative proportions of current-transported, iceberg-rafted, and aeolian-transported sediment. Based on grain size and lithologic description, four sediment facies were assigned. Facies 1 and Facies 3 contain a high abundance of terrigenous material brought to the site by strong currents and aeolian processes to sea ice. The presence of sea ice causes a decrease in phytoplankton growth. The lack of biogenic material amplifies the terrigenous signal. Facies 2 and Facies 4 are dominated by biogenic sedimentation; in these two facies terrigenous sediment is delivered by currents and ice rafting. In all facies, there is an input of terrigenous sediment by aeolian processes. Ikaite occurs throughout the core, and there is no direct correlation between ikaite intervals and the facies. Based on the four facies, two units are assigned to the site: Unit 1, representing a warmer, open marine environment, and Unit 2, representing an open marine environment with varied sea ice. These are interpreted to be a Warm Period, from present to 1,700 cal. yr. BP, and the Neoglacial, from 1,700 to >3,375 cal. yr. BP. The end of the Neoglacial in the Bransfield Basin to the west of the Perseverance Drift occurs at nearly the same time. Grain microtextures show a very high abundance of silica precipitation, covering textures that would give clues about the transport history to the site. The silica precipitation is interpreted to form quickly and in situ. The high-resolution grain-shape results are inconclusive because authogenically precipitated silica obscures the original shape of the grain. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Iceberg* Sea ice University of Houston Institutional Repository (UHIR) Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Perseverance ENVELOPE(162.200,162.200,-76.800,-76.800)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Houston Institutional Repository (UHIR)
op_collection_id ftunivhouston
language English
topic Antarctic Peninsula
Sediment transport
Drift deposit
Grain size
Grain shape
Grain texture
Holocene
Sedimentology
Facies
Silica precipitation
spellingShingle Antarctic Peninsula
Sediment transport
Drift deposit
Grain size
Grain shape
Grain texture
Holocene
Sedimentology
Facies
Silica precipitation
Staszyc, Alicia Barbara 1990-
Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability
topic_facet Antarctic Peninsula
Sediment transport
Drift deposit
Grain size
Grain shape
Grain texture
Holocene
Sedimentology
Facies
Silica precipitation
description The Perseverance Drift, on the northern Antarctic Peninsula continental shelf, records changes in ocean and ice conditions throughout the Holocene. This study uses the sedimentary archive contained in a 25.81m jumbo piston core taken from a ~100m thick sedimentary drift deposit. The drift deposit is composed of laminated, black- to olive-colored diatomaceous mud and ooze; several horizons of ikaite crystals occur throughout the section. Grain size, grain shape, and grain textures of sediments in the drift deposit can be used to determine sediment transport history and assess variations in the relative proportions of current-transported, iceberg-rafted, and aeolian-transported sediment. Based on grain size and lithologic description, four sediment facies were assigned. Facies 1 and Facies 3 contain a high abundance of terrigenous material brought to the site by strong currents and aeolian processes to sea ice. The presence of sea ice causes a decrease in phytoplankton growth. The lack of biogenic material amplifies the terrigenous signal. Facies 2 and Facies 4 are dominated by biogenic sedimentation; in these two facies terrigenous sediment is delivered by currents and ice rafting. In all facies, there is an input of terrigenous sediment by aeolian processes. Ikaite occurs throughout the core, and there is no direct correlation between ikaite intervals and the facies. Based on the four facies, two units are assigned to the site: Unit 1, representing a warmer, open marine environment, and Unit 2, representing an open marine environment with varied sea ice. These are interpreted to be a Warm Period, from present to 1,700 cal. yr. BP, and the Neoglacial, from 1,700 to >3,375 cal. yr. BP. The end of the Neoglacial in the Bransfield Basin to the west of the Perseverance Drift occurs at nearly the same time. Grain microtextures show a very high abundance of silica precipitation, covering textures that would give clues about the transport history to the site. The silica precipitation is interpreted to form quickly and in situ. The high-resolution grain-shape results are inconclusive because authogenically precipitated silica obscures the original shape of the grain. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of
author2 Wellner, Julia S.
Saylor, Joel E.
Strom, Kyle B.
format Thesis
author Staszyc, Alicia Barbara 1990-
author_facet Staszyc, Alicia Barbara 1990-
author_sort Staszyc, Alicia Barbara 1990-
title Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability
title_short Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability
title_full Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability
title_fullStr Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the Perseverance Drift, Antarctic Peninsula: Sediment transport history and Holocene variability
title_sort investigation of the grain size, shape, and texture of the perseverance drift, antarctic peninsula: sediment transport history and holocene variability
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1669
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.200,162.200,-76.800,-76.800)
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Perseverance
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Perseverance
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Iceberg*
Sea ice
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Iceberg*
Sea ice
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10657/1669
op_rights The author of this work is the copyright owner. UH Libraries and the Texas Digital Library have their permission to store and provide access to this work. Further transmission, reproduction, or presentation of this work is prohibited except with permission of the author(s).
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