11:00 AM - 1:00 PM
[MIS18-P12] Sedimentary rhythms of ferromanganese crust induced by glacial-interglacial cycles
Keywords:Ferromanganese, Glacial-interglacial cycles, Global environmental changes
We used 4 ferromanganese crust samples from 1940~2700 m depth around the Shotoku Seamounts. Ultrafine-scale magnetostratigraphy measured by scanning SQUID microscopy has been reported for one sample (Oda et al., 2011). We focused on the past 1-million-year interval where the sedimentary rhythms were particularly developed. We observed the internal structure using a reflected light fluorescence microscope and micro-focus X-ray CT, and analyzed the elemental compositions using EPMA.
The X-ray CT observation of 3D internal structure in ferromanganese crusts reveals that the sedimentary rhythms were formed by the alternating layers of the columnar structure, which resembles to stromatolite and the fenestral structure (Hofmann, 2000). The columnar structure has a higher density (high CT value), whereas the fenestral structure has a much lower density. The fenestral structure also consists of a double-layered structure with slightly different densities inside and outside. The outside layer of the fenestral structure shows weak fluorescence features.
EPMA analysis reveals that the columnar structure was mainly composed of Mn and Fe, while the fenestral structure was composed of Si (outside layer) and Al and K (inside layer). Comparison with magnetostratigraphic time-scale based on SQUID microscopy and benthic foraminiferal oxygen isotope record (Lisiecki & Raymo, 2005) suggests that the columnar structure with Mn enrichment likely formed during the interglacial period.
Given that Mn accumulation is thought to be higher during the interglacial period (Eisenhauer et al., 1992) and eolian dust deposition is enhanced during the glacial period (Maher et al., 2010; Lamy et al., 2014), we interpreted that the columnar structure of the Mn-enriched area was formed during interglacial while the fenestral structure consisting of clastic particles of eolian dust origin was formed during glacial.