Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments
Four aspects of biogenic silica diagenesis are researched under this project: signatures of ongoing silica diagenesis in pore water, drivers leading to anomalous compaction (abrupt petrophysical changes), bottom-water temperature controls on silica dissolution and recycling, and temperature-time rel...
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ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7579512019-02-05T03:29:26ZBiogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sedimentsVarkouhi, ShahabTosca, Nick ; Cartwright, Joe2018Four aspects of biogenic silica diagenesis are researched under this project: signatures of ongoing silica diagenesis in pore water, drivers leading to anomalous compaction (abrupt petrophysical changes), bottom-water temperature controls on silica dissolution and recycling, and temperature-time relationships in silica later diagenesis. Results of this project are discussed in Chapters 4-7. Chapter 4 demonstrates, based on pore chemistry, mineralogy, and thermodynamic analyses, that solubility equilibrium is reached for diagenetic silica in pore water at opal-A to opal-CT transition zone captured by Ocean Drilling Program Sites 794 and 795 in Japan Sea; thus opal-CT is precipitating across the transition. It is also argued that ion transport mechanisms have failed to erase signatures of ongoing diagenesis. Chapter 5 utilises texture and mineralogical analyses of hemipelagic sediments from Sites 794 and 795 to place anomalous compaction across the transition zone in a diagenetic context. A sharp decrease in opal-A content in the transition under dissolution causes a significant decrease in sediment stability which results in a porosity drop and other petrophysical variations. Subsequent precipitation of opal- CT has, however, had far less effects on porosity. Chapter 6 models variations in silica dissolution and recycling with bottom-water temperatures using data from 22 representative Ocean Drilling Program sites. Though model expression of early diagenesis confirms a relationship between temperature and opal-CT formation in young sediments (< 4 Ma) near the seabed in the Antarctic, the established inverse temperature-time correlation in silica diagenesis contradicts main controls from low bottom temperature over a short geological time. Chapter 7 investigates temperature-time relationships in silica diagenesis by examining 67 scientific drill sites where the opal-A to opal-CT transition zone lies in Cenozoic sediments. Based on these constraints, the reference opal-CT stability field is modified. The chapter also applies a model that formulates time-temperature dependence of silica diagenesis in representative Sites 794 and 795.University of Oxfordhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757951http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c7d3f4d9-0b43-41f6-9ce4-626aa27320bbElectronic Thesis or Dissertation |
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Four aspects of biogenic silica diagenesis are researched under this project: signatures of ongoing silica diagenesis in pore water, drivers leading to anomalous compaction (abrupt petrophysical changes), bottom-water temperature controls on silica dissolution and recycling, and temperature-time relationships in silica later diagenesis. Results of this project are discussed in Chapters 4-7. Chapter 4 demonstrates, based on pore chemistry, mineralogy, and thermodynamic analyses, that solubility equilibrium is reached for diagenetic silica in pore water at opal-A to opal-CT transition zone captured by Ocean Drilling Program Sites 794 and 795 in Japan Sea; thus opal-CT is precipitating across the transition. It is also argued that ion transport mechanisms have failed to erase signatures of ongoing diagenesis. Chapter 5 utilises texture and mineralogical analyses of hemipelagic sediments from Sites 794 and 795 to place anomalous compaction across the transition zone in a diagenetic context. A sharp decrease in opal-A content in the transition under dissolution causes a significant decrease in sediment stability which results in a porosity drop and other petrophysical variations. Subsequent precipitation of opal- CT has, however, had far less effects on porosity. Chapter 6 models variations in silica dissolution and recycling with bottom-water temperatures using data from 22 representative Ocean Drilling Program sites. Though model expression of early diagenesis confirms a relationship between temperature and opal-CT formation in young sediments (< 4 Ma) near the seabed in the Antarctic, the established inverse temperature-time correlation in silica diagenesis contradicts main controls from low bottom temperature over a short geological time. Chapter 7 investigates temperature-time relationships in silica diagenesis by examining 67 scientific drill sites where the opal-A to opal-CT transition zone lies in Cenozoic sediments. Based on these constraints, the reference opal-CT stability field is modified. The chapter also applies a model that formulates time-temperature dependence of silica diagenesis in representative Sites 794 and 795. |
author2 |
Tosca, Nick ; Cartwright, Joe |
author_facet |
Tosca, Nick ; Cartwright, Joe Varkouhi, Shahab |
author |
Varkouhi, Shahab |
spellingShingle |
Varkouhi, Shahab Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
author_sort |
Varkouhi, Shahab |
title |
Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
title_short |
Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
title_full |
Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
title_fullStr |
Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
title_full_unstemmed |
Biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
title_sort |
biogenic silica diagenesis under early burial in hemipelagic marine sediments |
publisher |
University of Oxford |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.757951 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT varkouhishahab biogenicsilicadiagenesisunderearlyburialinhemipelagicmarinesediments |
_version_ |
1718973924667031552 |