학술논문

Chemical composition of oceanic water during Tertiary time; evidence from pore-water studies on JOIDES drill cores
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
The American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin. 54(5):858-859
Subject
07|Oceanography
Atlantic Ocean
Cenozoic
Central
composition
drill core
JOIDES
marine geology
oceanography
sea water
Tertiary
Language
English
ISSN
0002-7464
Abstract
Chemical analyses have been performed on pore solutions from more than 25 drillholes in the North and South Atlantic Ocean. Several holes penetrated Tertiary-Mesozoic sediments and bottomed in basalt. The data indicate that in the central areas of the Atlantic Ocean the salinity and chlorinity of pore fluids approach the values for bottom waters and vary less than about 1-2% with depth, with a few exceptions. Diagenetic changes in major inorganic ions are relatively minor, regardless of depth, lithology, or proximity to basalt bottom. Significant effects include chiefly loss of magnesium, partial loss of sulfate, and corresponding increases in alkalinity. Nearer the continents, fluid compositions range over somewhat wider limits, especially in the direction of lower salinity. With due allowance for molecular diffusion and other disturbing effects, the data offer no evidence that the oceans varied appreciably in either chloride, salinity, or ionic composition during Tertiary time.

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