3 Seafloor Sediments and Resources
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Transcript 3 Seafloor Sediments and Resources
Seafloor Sediments &
Resources from the Seafloor
Chapter 14, Sections 3 & 4
Seafloor Sediments
Most of the ocean floor is covered with sediment
Some sediment is deposited by turbidity currents
The rest of the sediment has slowly settled onto
the seafloor from above
The sediment varies in thickness over the ocean
floor
Ocean-floor sediments can be classified
according to their origin into three broad
categories: terrigenous sediments, biogenous
sediments, and hydrogenous sediments
Terrigenous Sediment
Terrigenous Sediment – sediment that
originates on land
Terrigenous sediments consist primarily of
mineral grains that were eroded from continental
shelf and continental rocks and transported to
the ocean
Larger particles (gravel and sand) settle rapidly
near shore
Finer particles (clay) may take years to settle on
the ocean floor and may be carried thousands of
kilometers by the ocean’s currents
On continental shelves, the terrigenous
sediment is the thickest
Terrigenous Sediment
Biogenous Sediment
Biogenous Sediment – sediment that is
biological in origin
Biogenous sediments consist of shells and
skeletons of marine animals and algae
Calcareous Ooze – produced from the calcium
carbonate shells of organisms
Calcareous ooze has the consistency of thick
mud
Siliceous Ooze – composed primarily of
diatoms—single-celled algae—and
radiolarians—single-celled animals that have
shells made out of silica
Biogenous Sediment
Hydrogenous Sediment
Hydrogenous sediment consists of minerals that
crystallize directly from ocean water through
various chemical reactions
These make up only a small portion of the
ocean’s sediments
Manganese nodules are hard lumps of metals
which precipitate around grains of sand
Calcium carbonates form by precipitation directly
from ocean water in warm climates
Evaporites (salts) form where evaporation rates
are high and there is restricted open-ocean
circulation
Manganese Nodules
Distribution of Seafloor Sediments
Energy Resources
Oil and natural gas are the main energy products currently
being obtained from the ocean floor
The ancient remains of microscopic organisms are the
source of today’s deposits of oil and natural gas
The remains were buried and heated for millions of years to
be transformed into oil and gas
Gas Hydrates – compact chemical structures of water and
natural gas
Most oceanic gas hydrates are created when bacteria break
down organic matter trapped in ocean-floor sediment
These bacteria produce methane gas along with small
amounts of ethane and propane
Gas hydrates resemble chunks of ice, but will ignite when lit
by a flame
Gas Hydrates
Other Resources
Other major resources from the ocean floor include
sand and gravel, evaporative salts, and manganese
nodules
Sand and gravel from offshore are used for landfill, to
fill in recreational beaches, and to make concrete;
many high economic value minerals can also be found
in these deposits (diamonds, gold, platinum, etc.)
Manganese Nodules – hard lumps of manganese and
other metals that precipitate around a smaller object
The manganese nodules also contain many minerals
which have high economic value (iron, copper, nickel,
cobalt, etc.)
When seawater evaporates, the salts increase in
concentration until they no longer remain dissolved and
precipitate out to form salt deposits
Salt Deposits
Assignment
Read Chapter 14, Section 3 (pg. 407-409)
Do Section 14.3 Assessment #1-6 (pg. 409)
Read Chapter 14, Section 4 (pg. 410-413)
Do Section 14.4 Assessment #1-8 (pg. 413)