(Table A1) CaCO3 contents and Sr/Ca ratios in ODP Leg 130, 138 and 154

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Andreasen, Gretchen Hampt;Delaney, Margaret Lois

Description

Strontium/calcium (Sr/Ca) ratios in bulk and foraminiferal calcite have been used to constrain the history of Sr/Ca in the oceans and to evaluate calcite diagenetic alteration. However bulk Sr/Ca records also may be influenced by differences in Sr uptake and/or in the diagenetic susceptibility of different calcium carbonate sedimentary components. We present data on the sediment size fraction and calcium carbonate distribution in bulk samples, Sr/Ca in a range of sedimentary size components, and Sr/Ca in bulk sediments. Ocean Drilling Program samples from sites on Ontong Java Plateau and Ceara Rise (in the western equatorial Pacific and Atlantic, respectively) and from sites in the eastern equatorial Pacific were selected to represent progressive stages in the diagenetic pathway from the sea floor through a range of burial depths equivalent to sediment ages of ~5.6, ~9.4, and ~37.1 Ma. Samples were subdivided by size to produce a unique data set of size-specific Sr/Ca ratios. Fine fraction (<45 ?m) Sr/Ca ratios are higher than those of all corresponding coarse fractions, indicating that fine nannofossil-dominated calcite has a Sr partition coefficient 1.3–1.5 times greater than that of coarse foraminifera-dominated calcite. Thus, absolute values of bulk Sr/Ca in contemporaneous samples reflect, in part, the ratio of fine to coarse calcite sedimentary components. Sr/Ca values in fine and coarse components also behave differently in their response to pre-burial dissolution and to recrystallization at depth. Coarse size components are sensitive to bottom water carbonate ion undersaturation, and they lose original Sr/Ca differences among contemporary samples over not, vert, similar10 my. In contrast, fine components recrystallize faster in more deeply buried samples. Interpretation of the historical Sr/Ca record is complicated by post-depositional diagenetic artifacts, and thus our data do not provide clear evidence of specific temporal changes in oceanic Sr/Ca ratios over the past 10 million years. This paper represents the first systematic attempt to examine trends in calcite Sr/Ca as a function of sediment size fraction and age.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

1.3

FAIR Score

88%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

PANGAEA

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Geology

Field

Earth and Planetary Sciences

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

96%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

Event labelSample code/labelDEPTH, sediment/rockAGECalcium carbonateStrontium/Calcium ratioSize fraction &gt; 0.425 mmSize fraction 0.425-355 mmSize fraction 0.355-0.250 mmSize fraction 0.250-0.125 mmSize fraction 0.125-0.063 mmSize fraction 0.063-0.045 mmSize fraction &lt; 0.045 mmMassSize fraction &gt; 0.063 mm, sandDrilling/drill rigComposite CoreDSDP/ODP/IODP sample designationCoulometryICP-MS, Thermo Finnigan Mat, ElementCalculatedLeg130Leg138Leg154Joides ResolutionOcean Drilling Program (ODP)

Normalization Factors

FT

30.77

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00