Title of article
Sediment focusing in the Panama Basin, Eastern Equatorial Pacific Ocean
Author/Authors
Singh، نويسنده , , Ajay K. and Marcantonio، نويسنده , , Franco and Lyle، نويسنده , , Mitchell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
12
From page
33
To page
44
Abstract
Age-model derived sediment mass accumulation rates (MARs) are consistently higher than 230Th-normalized MARs in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean during the past 25 ka. The offset, being highest in the Panama Basin, suggests a significant role for deep-sea sediment redistribution (i.e., sediment focusing) in this region. Here, we test the hypothesis that downslope transport of sediments from topographically high regions that surround the Panama Basin is the cause of higher-than-expected xs230Th inventories over the past 25 ka in the deeper parts of the basin. We find little difference in xs230Th inventories between the highest and lowest reaches of the basin. Furthermore, there is no correlation between xs230Th-derived sediment focusing factors and water depth which suggests that the topographic highs do not serve as a source of xs230Th. A spatial analysis suggests that there may be an enhanced scavenging effect on xs230Th concentrations in sediment closest to the equator where productivity is the highest, although further data is necessary to corroborate this. At the equator xs230Th-derived focusing factors are high and range from about 1 to 5 during the Holocene and about 1 to 11 during the last glacial. In contrast, non-equatorial cores show a smaller range in variability from about 0.7 to 2.8 during the Holocene and from 0.7 to 3.6 during the last glacial. Based on 232Th flux measurements, we hypothesize that the location at which eolian detrital fluxes surpass the riverine detrital fluxes is approximately 300 km from the margin. While riverine fluxes from coastal margins were higher during the Holocene, eolian fluxes were higher during the last glacial.
Keywords
Sediment focusing , Boundary scavenging , Mass accumulation rate , Eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean , Thorium-230 , Panama Basin
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number
2329465
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