_version_ 1867170955106713600
author Balsam, William L
Damuth, John E
author_facet Balsam, William L
Damuth, John E
collection Datos científicos de ciencias marinas y ambientales
contents Diffuse reflectance spectra measured during shipboard core description with a hand-held Minolta spectrophotometer are reliable data for interpreting sediment composition. Factor analysis of these spectra indicates that only Glad Cling WrapTM, a polyethylene food wrap, should be used to cover wet cores during measurement because it introduces substantially less noise into the spectra than other brands of plastic food wrap. This validates our previous recommendation that only Glad Cling WrapTM should be used to cover wet core surfaces before spectral analysis on board ship. Factor analysis also indicates that the red end of the spectrum was a little noisy; however, it is unclear if this noise was produced by the Glad Cling WrapTM, by the Minolta instrument, or by the sediment being analyzed when wet (water tends to affect the red end of the spectrum more than the violet). Comparison of spectra taken directly from wet cores on board ship with the Minolta CM-2002 to those taken from dried, prepared samples with our shore-based Perkin-Elmer Lambda 6 spectrophotometer indicates that water mutes the spectral signal. Although factor analysis of the Perkin-Elmer data produced five factors, four of those factors are the same as the factors extracted from the wet core data with the Minolta. This suggests that the water content in the wet cores was not high enough to seriously hinder interpretation of sediment composition. These four common factors are interpreted as carbonate, chlorite or glauconite, organic matter, and iron oxides (probably a mixture of hematite and goethite). The presence of hematite can be attributed to hematite-rich sediment derived from the Canadian Maritime provinces, which has been transported southward by the Western Boundary Undercurrent (WBUC) along North American continental margin. Based on the distribution of hematite down the Leg 164 holes, the WBUC apparently has washed over the Leg 164 sites on the crest of the Blake Ridge only during the Holocene and very latest Pleistocene.
format Dataset Open Access
id pangaea_https___doi_org_10_1594_PANGAEA_804401
institution PANGAEA
language en
publishDate 2000
publisher PANGAEA
record_format pangaea
spellingShingle (Table 1) Calcium carbonate abundance in ODP Leg 164 sites
Balsam, William L
Damuth, John E
164-991A; 164-992A; 164-993A; 164-994C; 164-995A; 164-996E; 164-997A; Calcium carbonate; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Element analysis, Vacuum-gasometric (Jones & Kaiteris, 1983); Elevation of event; Event label; Joides Resolution; Latitude of event; Leg164; Longitude of event; Nicaraguan Rise, North Atlantic Ocean; North Atlantic Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
Diffuse reflectance spectra measured during shipboard core description with a hand-held Minolta spectrophotometer are reliable data for interpreting sediment composition. Factor analysis of these spectra indicates that only Glad Cling WrapTM, a polyethylene food wrap, should be used to cover wet cores during measurement because it introduces substantially less noise into the spectra than other brands of plastic food wrap. This validates our previous recommendation that only Glad Cling WrapTM should be used to cover wet core surfaces before spectral analysis on board ship. Factor analysis also indicates that the red end of the spectrum was a little noisy; however, it is unclear if this noise was produced by the Glad Cling WrapTM, by the Minolta instrument, or by the sediment being analyzed when wet (water tends to affect the red end of the spectrum more than the violet). Comparison of spectra taken directly from wet cores on board ship with the Minolta CM-2002 to those taken from dried, prepared samples with our shore-based Perkin-Elmer Lambda 6 spectrophotometer indicates that water mutes the spectral signal. Although factor analysis of the Perkin-Elmer data produced five factors, four of those factors are the same as the factors extracted from the wet core data with the Minolta. This suggests that the water content in the wet cores was not high enough to seriously hinder interpretation of sediment composition. These four common factors are interpreted as carbonate, chlorite or glauconite, organic matter, and iron oxides (probably a mixture of hematite and goethite). The presence of hematite can be attributed to hematite-rich sediment derived from the Canadian Maritime provinces, which has been transported southward by the Western Boundary Undercurrent (WBUC) along North American continental margin. Based on the distribution of hematite down the Leg 164 holes, the WBUC apparently has washed over the Leg 164 sites on the crest of the Blake Ridge only during the Holocene and very latest Pleistocene.
title (Table 1) Calcium carbonate abundance in ODP Leg 164 sites
topic 164-991A; 164-992A; 164-993A; 164-994C; 164-995A; 164-996E; 164-997A; Calcium carbonate; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Element analysis, Vacuum-gasometric (Jones & Kaiteris, 1983); Elevation of event; Event label; Joides Resolution; Latitude of event; Leg164; Longitude of event; Nicaraguan Rise, North Atlantic Ocean; North Atlantic Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
url https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.804401