11:45 AM - 12:00 PM
[MIS20-11] Consideration of Cape Darnley Bottom Water inflow-index based on Grain Size and Mineral Composition of deep-sea sediments in Cape Darnley, East Antarctica
Keywords:Antarctic bottom water, Grain size analysis, Mineral composition
In this research, we used the Wild Canyon sediments collected by the R/V Hakuho-maru during the KH-20-1 cruise (channel: MC01, MC02, levee: WIC-6PC, CAD-4PC) and the Mac. Robertson shelf sediments (CD1_KG, CD4_KG) collected by the 61st Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition. From the deep-sea camera attached to the multiple-corer, a sandy wave ripple was observed in the downstream region (MC02), suggesting the formation of the present-day seafloor topography by the CDBW. On the other hand, the lower layer of MC02 is characterized by the massive sandy silt that shows fining-upward sequence (D50: 108 µm to 4.2 µm) and reversal in 14C ages (bulk OM) possibly due to the erosion of the underlying sediments. These features are interpreted as the deposition by turbidity currents. Heavy minerals in the Mac. Robertson shelf and Wild Canyon sediments are dominated by garnet and sillimanite. Clay mineral composition shows that biotitic illite is dominant in sediments derived by CDBW, while kaolinite content increases in sediments derived by turbidity currents. In the Lambert Glacier basin of Mac. Robertson Land, garnet and sillimanite containing tillite and pelitic metasediments are distributed, and kaolinite matrix is included partly in metasediments. No similar sedimentary rocks have been identified around Prydz Bay, suggesting that the Mac. Robertson shelf and the Wild Canyon sediments mainly come from the Mac. Robertson Land. This observation further suggests that garnet and sillimanite are the unique minerals in this region of western Prydz Bay. Therefore, the existence of these minerals in marine sediments around Antarctica can be an indicator of the presence of active grain transportation through the Wild Canyon. In the future, it will be necessary to confirm the usefulness of the index using piston cores and to consider mineral compositions with a wider spatial range.