Sources of mud based on Clay mineralogical analysis Edwin Zeelmaekers & Noël Vandenberghe with collaboration of Kathleen Fontaine, Liesbeth Grégoire Wathab.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Geology of Sylt MarMic October Relevant Gelogical Ages at Sylt Holocene - Miocene Holocene present Pleistocene1.8 Mio B.P. – Weichsel.
Advertisements

Sediment budget for the 2000 LSSF Experiment, in context of the last half century David J. Topping, David M. Rubin, Nancy J. Hornewer, Gregory G. Fisk,
Marine Sedimentation. Streams Rivers Glaciers Landslide (Gravity)
Introduction to Oceanography
Beaches and Coastal Environments of Washington Southern WA Coast – sandy beaches, spits, lagoons, sediment supply from Columbia River, northward longshore.
Sediment and Sedimentary Rocks Physical Geology, Chapter 6
8th Grade Science Unit 8: Changes Over Time
SALINITY SALINITY OCEAN OCEAN by Robert Perry
Case Study: Christchurch Bay
Reading Material On reserve in: Ocean-Fisheries library (Oceanography Teaching Building) Undergrad Library (web access) “Sediments”, from “Oceanography”
Beaches and Coastal Environments of Washington Southern WA Coast – sandy beaches, spits, lagoons, sediment supply from Columbia River, northward longshore.
Environment and Subsistence Chronology and climate Landscape Archaeology Plants & Environment Animals & Environment.
Fun Ocean Facts and Properties of Water. Ocean Facts and Figures Canada has the world’s longest coastline with a length of 244,000 km. If stretched out.
Reading Material See class website “Sediments”, from “Oceanography” M.G. Gross, Prentice-Hall.
Evidence for Evolution Review what we know so far: Mutations provide variability within species Some traits give individuals within a species an advantage.
Lesson 16: Coastal Dynamics Geological Oceanography
Ice Ages and Climate Change Chestnut Ridge, NY Jan 23 in the year 16,004 BC.
Topic 18 Coasts, Beaches, and Estuaries GEOL 2503 Introduction to Oceanography.
Coastal Zones and Processes
Native and immigrant fertility patterns in Greece: a comparative study based on aggregated census statistics and IPUMS micro-data Cleon Tsimbos 1, Georgia.
FLANDERS HYDRAULICS RESEARCH FLEMISH ADMINISTRATION - DEPARTEMENT OF MOBILITY AND PUBLIC WORKS Sea level rise and its danger for the Belgian coast ir.
Table of Contents Chapter Preview 3.1 Changing Earth’s Surface
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Modeling sand transport and sandbar evolution along the Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam.
Composition and Movement of Ocean Water. Salinity Seawater is a solution containing a variety of salts dissolved in water Expressed in grams of salt per.
RA-228 AND RA-226 FROFILES FROM THE NORTHERN SOUTH CHINA SEA Hsiu-Chuan Lin, Yu-Chia Chung and Chi-Ju Lin Institute of Marine Geology and Chemistry, National.
Saco Bay Scallop Stock Enhancement Project A Collaboration: Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance Local fishermen University of New England Maine Sea Grant.
Evolution of the Marine Intrusion Using Geophysical Methods after 25 years in the Motril-Salobreña Aquifer (Southern Spain) C. Duque, M.L. Calvache, A.
Physical Features of Estuaries. Basic Information Estuaries vary in origin, size and type Estuaries vary in origin, size and type Also called: lagoons,
Fossils as Clues / Post Lab Was Wegener Correct???
Timeline Impaired for turbidity on Minnesota’s list of impaired waters (2004) MPCA must complete a study to determine the total maximum daily load (TMDL)
Aquatic Biomes. Aquatic ecosystems cover about 75 percent of Earth’s surface The salt content, water temperature, water depth, and speed of water flow.
Nutrient Determination in the Belgian Coastal Waters of the North Sea By Sheku Sei and Enyue Xue 1 st Year Ecomama.
CLIMATE CHANGE THE GREAT DEBATE Session 5.
Unit 7 - Ice Is Nice Glacier=pile of ice and snow that flows; Forms if snow exceeds melt enough to make a pile; Takes water (as ice) and sediment from.
Marine Sedimentation n The central topics of this chapter are the nature and significance of the tremendous amount of sediment that blankets the deep sea.
The major landforms of advancing (depositional) coastlines
Ghent University, Renard Centre of Marine Geology Management Unit of the Mathematical Models of the North Sea Catholic University Leuven, Hydraulics Laboratory.
Earth Science 3.3 S edimentary Rocks.  S edimentary Rocks begin to form when existing rocks are broken down into sediments.  These sediments, which.
Sediment and Sedimentary Rocks Formation and Characteristics
Do Now. The theory of plate tectonics explains that earth’s lithosphere moves due to the unbalanced forces occurring within the mantle. Alfred Wegner.
Whitewater Field Trip 6th grade stream erosion and deposition lesson.
Shaping and reshaping.  Landforms are the natural features of the Earth’s surface.  They are the landscapes around us.  They are shaped by volcanoes,
Marine Sediment and Water. I. Marine Sediment A. Sediments are dissolved particles of dirt, dust and debris that have settled in the ocean.
Salinity and Density Differences VERTICAL STRUCTURE, THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION & WATER MASSES.
The Size, Sorting and Roundness of Sand. Energy Levels of Water  Moving water provides a large amount of energy that is required to transport large sand.
Cycles of Change: Part II The Ventura River: before and after the big storm In the three weeks following Christmas, the South Coast was hit with a series.
Chapter 4 Marine Sedimentation ©2003 Jones and Bartlett Publishers.
Beaches and Coastal Environments of Washington Southern WA Coast – sandy beaches, spits, lagoons, sediment supply from Columbia River, northward longshore.
Cenozoic Era. The Cenozoic Era makes up the past 66 million years. Humans evolved during this period.
An introduction to cohesive sediment transport processes
Barrier Islands… The low down.. On these important depositional features The low down.. On these important depositional features.
Marine Sedimentation.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 11 The Coastal Ocean Types of Coastal Waters.
The Fundamental Laws of Geology Several principles or “laws” are fundamental to the geologic interpretation of a sequence of events.
Do now List and describe as many ways that you think scientists used to figure out the age of the earth and different time periods. Think about what kinds.
California’s Geologic History. Location, location, location…  Three continental plates come together  Very complex history.
Coasts.
Climate Change Impacts on Estuarine Larval Fish Composition Jamie F. Caridad and Kenneth W. Able Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences. Rutgers University.
Previous Studies. Pleistocene Glaciation in the Southern Part of the North Cascade Range, Washington.
Late Quaternary sea-level fluctuation and the development of coastal estuaries such as San Francisco Bay Jonathan Najarro, Hide Takahashi, & Marisela Mendoza.
Coastal Forcing Coasts are the ribbons that form the interface between regions dominated by terrestrial and marine surface processes, respectively, and.
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
Coastal Landforms.
Why do sea levels change globally???
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
Lesson 16: Coastal Dynamics Geological Oceanography
As a stream forms, it erodes soil and rock to make a channel.
Water Biomes Mr. D.
Fifth Grade Part 4 Review 2 Ocean.
Presentation transcript:

Sources of mud based on Clay mineralogical analysis Edwin Zeelmaekers & Noël Vandenberghe with collaboration of Kathleen Fontaine, Liesbeth Grégoire Wathab Mohammad, Nancy Weyns, Ria Brepoels

1 2 3 The problem : several potential sources cited 1.Dover Strait (coastal erosion, rivers, Atlant. Ocean) 2.Sea bottom erosion (Tertiary, Pleistocene, Holocene) and * dredging mud dump site 3.River input from Scheldt The issue : How to find out what happens in reality ? *

Clay mineral approach ± 250samples Rigorous quantification possible if illitic and smectitic components of interstratifications and the discrete minerals are quantified together and split in a subsequent step by CEC Details of clay mineralogy determined on oriented slides Techniques used are XRD and CEC Compare clay minerals: - geographically in present day environment as provenance indicators - progressively back in time (Holocene,Eemian & Pleistocene salt marshes …) looking for a relationship with the main riversystem

Type of clay mineralogy present in the the BCS muds R0 IS, smectite, illite, kaolinite, small amounts of chlorite and vermiculite XRD records

BCS recent and modern muds The clay mineralogy of muds identified as ‘Holocene’ and as ‘recent’ is identical The clay mineralogy of BCS bottom samples and BCS suspension samples is identical Small differences in clay mineralogy between samples taken in different parts of the BCS exist, but they are never systematic

Recent North Sea bottom and suspension clays are similar to recent Scheldt & Rupel suspension and bottom sediment. ± 25 samples in Scheldt

Source Area: Scheldt river system ? The clay mineralogy of suspension, bottom and riverbank samples of the Scheldt river (upstream & estuary), the Paulinaschor and its tributary Rupel is very similar to the BCS muds. The former group is slightly more variable. The samples from the Scheldt river system also appear to be slightly more smectitic than the BCS muds, especially upstream from Antwerp and in the Rupel.

Source Area: Dover Strait Suspension samples Beach samples

Source Area: Dover Strait – English coast Clay mineralogy comparison: more smectite & kaolinite– quasi no vermiculite & chlorite Provenance conclusion: no major contribution to BCS Muds from English coast 7 samples between Portsmouth and Folkstone

Source Area: Dover Strait – French coast observations - Samples taken near the Belgian border are very similar to the BCS muds (up to Gravelines) - Samples taken between Calais and the Somme Estuary appear more different from the BCS muds, exhibit a higher variability, slightly different crystal-chemistry of the minerals.. ….. the Pas de Calais between La Manche and the North Sea also seems to be a clay mineralogical boundary…… Provenance conclusion: not entirely excluded but not likely

Source Area: Dover Strait – Atlantic Ocean Provenance conclusion: major contribution from the Atlantic Ocean unlikely Clay mineralogy comparison: Almost no IS & smectite, only illite, kaolinite, chlorite

Source Area: Northern North Sea Clay mineralogy comparison: much more chlorite, kaolinite & illite Provenance Conclusion: unlikely source for the North Sea muds Scotland-Norway

Conclusions Dover Strait and northern North Sea provenance: British and Atlantic component of Dover Strait origin are excluded French coastal component is inconclusive but likely not a main contributor Northern North Sea is excluded as a source

Source Area: Erosion of Sea bottom - Eocene Clay mineralogy comparison: more discrete smectite, minor illite and kaolinite; no vermiculite & chlorite Provenance conclusion: no major contribution from Eocene smectite

Source Area: Erosion of Sea bottom - Pleistocene Equivalents sampled from Upper Pleistocene (Weichsel) cover sands and loams Lower Pleistocene clays from Belgium (Campine Clays) and Dutch Roer area (Tegelen Clays) Clay mineralogy comparison: variable clay mineralogy, often (distinctly) different from BCS muds (containing mixed- layered chlorite-smectite,...). The overall smectite content is clearly lower than BCS muds. Conclusion: no major contribution from these specific deposits

Source Area: Erosion of Sea bottom - Pleistocene

And erosion of interglacial salt marsh clays ? Are Holocene pre-modern and pre- recent salt marshes present ? Probably not much eroded if present at all…. Since 600BC

However interesting that the clay mineralogy of some ‘Roman and medieval’ salt marshes (Holocene Polder klei) are similar to BCS muds ….

Source Area/Comparison – Holocene ‘Polderkleien’ Sampled in the coastal zone from undeep drill cores Clay mineralogy comparison: near coast samples (Veurne) are very similar to the BCS Muds, others are much more smectitic (Diksmuide). Provenance conclusion: if the more smectitic samples can be assumed to be Eocene influenced, then for the remaining samples a link with the BCS muds is probable

was there Eem marsh clay to be eroded?

…. and again identical clay mineralogy Provenance conclusion: strong link between BCS muds and Eem clay is very likely

In Early Pleistocene time the Scheldt system was flowing north and Campine-Tegelen clays have mineralogy different from BCS …but BCS has same clay mineralogy as the interglacial Scheldt system when it was flowing eastwards in the Flemish valley (Holsteinian, Eemian …) and in the Westerschelde (Holocene )

General conclusions Several potential source areas could be excluded as major contributors The results for the French coast remain somewhat inconclusive The BCS muds appear to be strongly related to the present and the past east-flowing Scheldt River system If the muds have a marine origin, the sediment must potentially be transported as far as St-Amands in the Scheldt and Rumst in the Rupel.