Published on 01 January 1998

Grain size analysis on core plugs of sediment core CRP-1 (Table 1, 2)

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DeSantis, L D;Barrett, Peter J

Description

Twenty four core samples from CRP-1, seven from Quaternary strata (20-43.55 meters below sea floor or mbsf) and seventeen from early Miocene strata (43.55 to 147.69 mbsf), have been analysed for their grain-size distribution using standard sieve and Sedigraph techniques. The results are in good agreement with estimates of texture made as part of the visual core description for the 1 :20 core logs for CRP-1 (Cape Roberts Science Team, 1998). Interpretation of the analyses presented here takes into account the likely setting of the site in Quaternary times as it is today, with CRP-1 high on the landward flank of a well-defined submarine ridge rising several hundred metres above basins on either side. In contrast, seismic geometries for strata deposited in early Miocene times indicate a generally planar sea floor dipping gently seaward. Fossils from these strata indicate shallow water depths (< 100 m), indicating the possibility that waves and tidal currents may have influenced sea floor sediments. The sediments analysed here are considered in terms of 3 textural facies: diamict, mud (silt and clay) and sand. Most of the Quaternary section but only 30% of the early Miocene section is diamict, a poorly sorted mixture of sand and mud with scattered clasts, indicating little wave or current influence on its texture. Although not definitive, diamict textures and other features suggest that the sediment originated as basal glacial debris but has been subsequently modified by minor winnowing, consistent with the field interpretation of this facies as ice-proximal and distal glaciomarine sediment. Sediments deposited directly from glacier ice appear to be lacking. Mud facies sediments, which comprise only 10% of the Quaternary section but a third of the early Miocene section, were deposited below wave base and largely from suspension, and show features (described elsewhere in this volume) indicative of the influence of both glacial and sediment gravity flow processes. Sand facies sediments have a considerable proportion of mud, normally more than 20%, but a well-sorted fine-very fine sand fraction. In the context of the early Miocene coastal setting we interpret these sediments as shoreface sands close to wave base.

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Metrics

Dataset Index

1.0

FAIR Score

88%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

PANGAEA

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Ocean Engineering

Field

Engineering

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

85%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

DEPTH, sediment/rockSize fraction (-1.0) to (-0.5) phiSize fraction (-0.5)-0.0 phiSize fraction 0.0-0.5 phiSize fraction 0.5-1.0 phiSize fraction 1.0-1.5 phiSize fraction 1.5-2.0 phiSize fraction 2.0-2.5 phiSize fraction 2.5-3.0 phiSize fraction 3.0-3.5 phiSize fraction 3.5-4.0 phiSize fraction 4.0-4.5 phiSize fraction 4.5-5.0 phiSize fraction 5.0-5.5 phiSize fraction 5.5-6.0 phiSize fraction 6.0-6.5 phiSize fraction 6.5-7.0 phiSize fraction 7.0-7.5 phiSize fraction 7.5-8.0 phiSize fraction 8.0-8.5 phiSize fraction 8.5-9.0 phiSize fraction 9.0-9.5 phiSize fraction 9.5-10.0 phiSize fraction 10.0-10.5 phiSize fraction &lt; 10.5 phiPercentile 01Percentile 05Percentile 16Percentile 25Percentile 50Percentile 75Percentile 84Percentile 95Grain size, meanMean, standard deviationSkewnessSize fraction &gt; 2 mm, gravelSandSiltSize fraction &lt; 0.002 mm, clayLithology/composition/faciesCore wireline systemGrain size, SEDIGRAPH 5000CalculatedCalculated after FOLKGrain size, sievingGrain size, sieving/settling tubeCRP-1Sampling/drilling iceCape Roberts Project (CRP)

Normalization Factors

FT

30.77

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00