Sedimentological and geochemical characteristics of Leg 129 siliceous deposits

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Abstract

Siliceous deposits drilled on Ocean Drilling Program Leg 129 accumulated within a few degrees of the equator during the Jurassic through early Tertiary, as constrained by paleomagnetic data. During the Jurassic and Early Cretaceous, radiolarian ooze, mixed with a minor amount of pelagic clay, was deposited near the equator, and overall accumulation rates were moderate to low. Accumulation rates are influenced by relative contributions from various sediment sources. Several elements and element ratios are useful for discriminating sedimentary sources for the equatorial depositional environments. On Si-Fe-Mn ternary plots, the samples from all three sites fall on a trend between equatorial mid-ocean spreading ridges and north Pacific red clay. Copper-barium ratios show units that have low accumulation rates plot in the authigenic field, and radiolarite and limestone samples that have high accumulation rates in the biogenic field. -from Authors

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Karl, S. M., Wandless, G. A., & Karpoff, A. M. (1992). Sedimentological and geochemical characteristics of Leg 129 siliceous deposits. Proc., Scientific Results, ODP, Leg 129, Old Pacific Crust, 31–79. https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.129.111.1992

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