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A Re‐Evaluation of Facies on Great Bahama Bank II: Variations in the δ 13 C, δ 18 O and Mineralogy of Surface Sediments
Author(s) -
Peter K. Swart,
John J. G. Reijmer,
R. S. Otto
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
vu research portal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.1002/9781444312065.ch4
Subject(s) - facies , stratigraphy , geology , isotopes of carbon , isotope , δ18o , stable isotope ratio , paleontology , carbon fibers , geochemistry , mineralogy , mathematics , nuclear physics , physics , tectonics , algorithm , structural basin , composite number
In order to investigate the spatial distribution of 13C and 18O of modern carbonate sediments on Great Bahama Bank, ~290 surface samples were collected from a grid of stations approximately 10 km apart between 2001 and 2004. These samples were classifi ed using a modifi ed Dunham scheme, physically separated into six size fractions and subsequently analysed for their mineralogy (aragonite, low-Mg calcite and high-Mg calcite) and 13C and 18O values. A striking feature of these data is the relatively positive 13C values of all the samples. Based on measurements of 13C and 18O of the dissolved inorganic carbon and the water, most of the sediments can be considered to be in C and O isotopic equilibrium with the ambient waters. The high 13C values are suggested to arise from isotopic enrichment of the dissolved inorganic carbon pool by photosynthesis of seagrasses, benthic algae and cyanobacteria on the platform and through the fractionation of HCO3− during the precipitation of calcium carbonate. Sediments that are not in C and O isotopic equilibrium are dominated more by skeletal material. The data showed an absence of signifi cant spatial variation in 13C of the sediments on the Great Bahama Bank and no clear spatial patterns relative to the margin of the platform. The 18O of the sediment showed more variation, with the interior sediments being isotopically enriched relative to the platform margin. The absence of signifi cant variations in the 13C in the modern surface sediments of Great Bahama Bank irrespective of facies type suggests that in the case of Great Bahama Bank, downcore variations in 13C cannot be related to changes in facies.

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