Browse > Article
http://dx.doi.org/10.4217/OPR.2019.41.4.265

Estimation of Sediment Provenance Using Clay Mineral Composition in the Central Basin of the Ross Sea Continental Margin, Antarctica  

Ha, Sangbeom (Department of Oceanography, College of Natural Sciences, Pusan National University)
Khim, Boo-Keun (Department of Oceanography, College of Natural Sciences, Pusan National University)
Colizza, Ester (Department of Mathematics and Geosciences, College of Technology and Science, University of Trieste)
Giglio, Federico (National Research Council-Institute of Polar Science)
Koo, Hyojin (Department of Geology, College of Natural Sciences, Gyeongsang National University)
Cho, Hyen Goo (Department of Geology, College of Natural Sciences, Gyeongsang National University)
Publication Information
Ocean and Polar Research / v.41, no.4, 2019 , pp. 265-274 More about this Journal
Abstract
To trace the provenance of fine-grained sediments in response to the growth and retreat of glaciers (i.e., Ross Ice Sheet) that affects the depositional process, various kinds of analyses including magnetic susceptibility, granulometry, and clay mineral composition with AMS 14C age dating were carried out using a gravity core KI-13-GC2 obtained from the Central Basin of the Ross Sea continental margin. The sediments mostly consist of silty mud to sand with ice-rafted debris, the sediment colors alternate repeatedly between light brown and gray, and the sedimentary structures are almost bioturbated with some faint laminations. Among the fine-grained clay mineral compositions, illite is highest (59.1-76.2%), followed by chlorite (12.4-21.4%), kaolinite (4.1-11.6%), and smectite (1.2-22.6%). Illite and chlorite originated from the Transantarctic mountains (metamorphic rocks and granitic rocks) situated to the south of the Ross Sea. Kaolinite might be supplied from the sedimentary rocks of Antarctic continent underneath the ice sheet. The provenance of smectite was considered as McMurdo volcanic group around the Victoria Land in the western part of the Ross Sea. Chlorite content was higher and smectite content was lower during the glacial periods, although illite and kaolinite contents are almost consistent between the glacial and interglacial periods. The glacial increase of chlorite content may be due to more supply of the reworked continental shelf sediments deposited during the interglacial periods to the Central Basin. On the contrary, the glacial decrease of smectite content may be attributed to less transport from the McMurdo volcanic group to the Central Basin due to the advanced ice sheet. Although the source areas of the clay minerals in the Central Basin have not changed significantly between the interglacial and glacial periods, the transport pathways and delivery mechanism of the clay minerals were different between the glacial and interglacial periods in response to the growth and retreat of Ross Ice Sheet in the Ross Sea.
Keywords
clay mineral; sediment provenance; ice sheet; Ross Sea;
Citations & Related Records
Times Cited By KSCI : 1  (Citation Analysis)
연도 인용수 순위
1 Smellie JL (1998) Sand grain detrital modes in CRP-1: Provenance variations and influence of Miocene eruptions on the marine record in the McMurdo Sound region. Terra Ant 5:579-587
2 Stokke PR, Carson B (1973) Variation in clay mineral X-ray diffraction results with the quantity of sample mounted. J Sediment Petrol 43:957-964
3 Welke B, Licht K, Hennessy A, Hemming S, Pierce Davis E, Kassab C (2016) Applications of detrital geochronology and thermochronology from glacial deposits to the Paleozoic and Mesozoic thermal history of the Ross Embayment, Antarctica. Geochem Geophy Geosy 17:2762-2780   DOI
4 Langone L, Frignani M, Labbrozzi L, Ravaioli M (1998) Present-day biosiliceous sedimentation in the northwestern Ross Sea, Antarctica. J Mar Syst 17:459-470   DOI
5 Licht KJ, Andrews JT, Dunbar NW, Jennings AE (1999) Distinguishing subglacial till and glacial marine diamictons in the western Ross Sea, Antarctica: Implications for a last glacial maximum grounding line. Geol Soc Am Bull 111:91-103   DOI
6 Licht KJ, Andrews JT, Jennings AE, Williams KM (1996) Chronology of late Wisconsin ice retreat from the western Ross Sea, Antarctica. Geology 24:223-226   DOI
7 Liu Z, Trentesaux A, Clemens SC, Colin C, Wang P, Huang B, Boulay S (2003) Clay mineral assemblages in the northern South China Sea: Implications for East Asian monsoon evolution over the past 2 million years. Mar Geol 201:133-146   DOI
8 Lucchi RG, Rebesco M, Camerlenghi A, Busetti M, Tomadin L, Villa G, Persico D, Morigi C, Bonci MC, Giorgetti G (2002) Mid-late Pleistocene glacimarine sedimentary processes of a high-latitude, deep-sea sediment drift (Antarctic Peninsula Pacific margin). Mar Geol 189:343-370   DOI
9 Orsi, AH, Bullister, JL, Johnson GC (1999) Circulation, mixing, and production of Antarctic Bottom Water. Prog Oceanogr 43:55-109   DOI
10 Orsi AH, Wiederwohl CL (2009) A recount of Ross Sea waters. Deep-Sea Res Pt II 56:778-795   DOI
11 Petschick R, Kuhn G, Gingele F (1996) Clay mineral distribution in surface sediments of the South Atlantic: sources, transport, and relation to oceanography. Mar Geol 130:203-229   DOI
12 Robert C, Chamley H (1991) Development of early Eocene warm climates, as inferred from clay mineral variations in oceanic sediments. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 89:315-331   DOI
13 Robert C, Maillot H (1990) Paleoenvironments in the Weddell Sea area and Antarctic climates, as deduced from clay mineral associations and geochemical data, ODP Leg 113. Proceedings of Ocean Drilling Program, pp 51-66
14 Bindschadler R (1998) Monitoring ice sheet behavior from space. Rev Geophys 36:79-104   DOI
15 Salvi C, Busetti M, Marinoni L, Brambati A (2006) Late Quaternary glacial marine to marine sedimentation in the Pennell Trough (Ross Sea, Antarctica). Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 231:199-214   DOI
16 Anderson JB, Brake CF, Myers NC (1984) Sedimentation on the Ross Sea continental shelf, Antarctica. Mar Geol 57:295-333   DOI
17 Andrews JT, Cunningham WL, Domack EW, Jennings AE, Jull AT, Leventer A, Licht KJ (1999) Problems and possible solutions concerning radiocarbon dating of surface marine sediments, Ross Sea, Antarctica. Quaternary Res 52:206-216   DOI
18 Arrigo KR, van Dijken GL (2004) Annual changes in seaice, chlorophyll a, and primary production in the Ross Sea, Antarctica. Deep-Sea Res Pt II 51:117-138   DOI
19 Arrigo KR, Weiss AM, Smith Jr WO (1998) Physical forcing of phytoplankton dynamics in the southwestern Ross Sea. J Geophys Res-Oceans 103:1007-1021   DOI
20 Biscaye PE (1965) Mineralogy and sedimentation of recent deep-sea clay in the Atlantic Ocean and adjacent seas and oceans. Geol Soc Am Bull 76:803-832   DOI
21 Bonaccorsi R, Brambati A, Busetti M, Fanzutti GP (2000) Relationship among X-ray lithofacies, magnetic susceptibility, P-Wave velocity and bulk density in core ANTA95-89C (Ross Sea, Antarctica): First results. Terra Ant Rept 4:185-198
22 Budillon G, Castagno P, Aliani S, Spezie G, Padman L (2011) Thermohaline variability and Antarctic bottom water formation at the Ross Sea shelf break. Deep-Sea Res Pt I 58:1002-1018   DOI
23 Chamley H (1989) Clay sedimentology. Springer, Berlin, 623 p
24 Davey FJ (1981) Geophysical studies in the Ross Sea region. J Roy Soc New Zeal 11:465-479   DOI
25 Jacobs SS (1991) On the nature and significance of the Antarctic Slope Front. Mar Chem 35:9-24   DOI
26 Hillenbrand CD, Ehrmannnn W, Larter RD, Benetti S, Dowdeswell JA, Cofaigh CO, Graham AGC, Grobe H (2009) Clay mineral provenance of sediments in the southern Bellingshausen Sea reveals drainage changes of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet during the Late Quaternary. Mar Geol 265:1-18   DOI
27 Hillenbrand CD, Ehrmann WU (2001) Distribution of clay minerals in drift sediments on the continental rise west ofthe Antarctic Peninsula, ODP Leg 178, Sites 1095 and 1096. In: Barker PF, Camerlenghi A, Acton GD, Ramsay ATS (eds) Proceedings of Ocean Drilling Program, pp 1-29
28 Howat IM, Domack EW (2003) Reconstructions of western Ross Sea palaeo-ice-stream grounding zones from highresolution acoustic stratigraphy. Boreas 32:56-75   DOI
29 Jacobs SS (2004) Bottom water production and its links with the thermohaline circulation. Ant Sci 16:427-437   DOI
30 Khim BK, Colizza E, Hong JK (2017) Paleoceanographic changes in the continental slope in the Central Basin of the Ross Sea since the last glacial. In: Abstract of Past Antarctic Ice Sheet Dynamics (PAIS) Conference, Trieste, 10-15 Sept 2017
31 Ehrmann WU (1998) Implications of late Eocene to early Miocene clay mineral assemblages in McMurdo Sound (Ross Sea, Antarctica) on paleoclimate and ice dynamics. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 139:213-231   DOI
32 Denton GH, Hughes TJ (2002) Reconstructing the Antarctic ice sheet at the Last Glacial Maximum. Quaternary Sci Rev 21:193-202   DOI
33 Dingle RV, Lavelle M (1998) Antarctic Peninsular cryosphere: Early Oligocene (c. 30 Ma) initiation and a revised glacial chronology. J Geol Soc London 155:433-437   DOI
34 Domack EW, Jacobson EA, Shipp S, Anderson JB (1999) Late Pleistocene-Holocene retreat of the West Antarctic Ice-Sheet system in the Ross Sea: Part 2-sedimentologic and stratigraphic signature. Geol Soc Am Bull 111:1517-1536   DOI
35 Ehrmann WU, Mackensen A (1992) Sedimentological evidence for the formation of an East Antarctic ice sheet in Eocene/Oligocene time. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 93:85-112   DOI
36 Ehrmann WU, Melles M, Kuhn G, Grobe H (1992) Significance of clay mineral assemblages in the Antarctic Ocean. Mar Geol 107:249-273   DOI
37 Kyle PR (1990) A McMurdo volcanic group western Ross embayment. In: LeMasurier WE, Thompson JW, Baker PE, Kyle PR, Rowley PD, Smellie JL, Verwoerd WJ (eds) Volcanoes of the Antarctic Plate and Southern Oceans. pp 18-145
38 Kim SH, Jo HG, Khim BK (2011) Changes of clay mineral assemblages in the Northern part of the Aleutian Basin in the Bering Sea during the last Glacial Period. J Miner Soc Kor 24:19-29   DOI
39 Ha SB, Khim BK, Jo HG, Colizza E (2018) Origin of clay minerals of core RS14-GC2 in the continental slope to the East of the Pennell-Iselin Bank in the Ross Sea, Antarctica. J Miner Soc Kor 31:1-12   DOI
40 Ehrmann WU, Graham AG, Hillenbrand CD, Kuhn G, Larter RD, Smith JA (2011) Provenance changes between recent and glacial-time sediments in the Amundsen Sea embayment, West Antarctica: Clay mineral assemblage evidence. Ant Sci 23:471-486   DOI
41 Ehrmann WU, Setti M, Marinono L (2005) Clay minerals in Cenozoic sediments off Cape Roberts (McMurdo Sound, Antarctica) reveal palaeoclimatic history. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 229:187-211   DOI
42 Fagel N (2007) Chapter four clay minerals, deep circulation and climate. Develop Mar Geol 1:139-184   DOI
43 Forsberg CF, Florindo F, Gruetzner J, Venuti A, Solheim A (2008) Sedimentation and aspects of glacial dynamics from physical properties, mineralogy and magnetic properties at ODP Sites 1166 and 1167, Prydz Bay, Antarctica. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 260:184-201   DOI
44 Smith WO, Nelson DM (1985) Phytoplankton bloom produced by a receding ice edge in the Ross Sea: spatial coherence with the density field. Science 227:163-166   DOI
45 Setti M, Marinoni L, Lopez-Galindo A, Aboud AB (1998) TEM observations and trace element analysis on the clay minerals of the CRP-1 Core (Ross Sea, Antarctica). Terra Ant 5:621-626
46 Setti M, Marinoni L, Lopez-Galindo A, Delgado-Hubertas A (2000) Compositional and morphological features of the smectites of the sediments of CRP-2/2A, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica. Terra Ant 7:581-587
47 Shipp S, Anderson JB, Domack EW (1999) Seismic signature of the Late Pleistocene fluctuation of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet system in Ross Sea: A new perspective, Part I. Geol Soc Am Bull 111:1486-1516   DOI
48 Giorgetti G, Talarico F, Sandroni S, Zeoli A (2009) Provenance of Pleistocene sediments in the ANDRILL AND-1B drillcore: Clay and heavy mineral data. Global Planet Change 69:94-102   DOI
49 Franke D, Ehrmann WU (2010) Neogene clay mineral assemblages in the AND-2A drill core (McMurdo Sound, Antarctica) and their implications for environmental change. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 286:55-65   DOI
50 Friedman GM, Sanders JE (1978) Principles of sedimentology. Wiley, New York, 792 p
51 Griffin JJ, Windom H, Goldberg ED (1968) The distribution of clay minerals in the world ocean. Deep-Sea Res 15:433-459
52 Grobe H, Mackensen A (1992) Late Quaternary climatic cycles as recorded in sediments from the Antarctic continental margin. Ant Res Ser 56:349-376
53 Hambrey MJ, Ehrmann WU, Larsen B (1991) Cenozoic glacial record of the Prydz Bay continental shelf, East Antarctica. In: Barron J, Larsen B (eds) Proceedings of Ocean Drilling Program, pp 77-132