Origin and preservation conditions of organic matter in the Mozambique Channel: Evidence for widespread oxidation processes in the deep-water domains
BATTANI, Anne
IFP Energies nouvelles [IFPEN]
Laboratoire des Fluides Complexes et leurs Réservoirs [LFCR]
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IFP Energies nouvelles [IFPEN]
Laboratoire des Fluides Complexes et leurs Réservoirs [LFCR]
BATTANI, Anne
IFP Energies nouvelles [IFPEN]
Laboratoire des Fluides Complexes et leurs Réservoirs [LFCR]
< Leer menos
IFP Energies nouvelles [IFPEN]
Laboratoire des Fluides Complexes et leurs Réservoirs [LFCR]
Idioma
EN
Article de revue
Este ítem está publicado en
Marine Geology. 2021-10, vol. 440, p. 106589
Resumen en inglés
The Mozambique and Madagascar margins present major rivers that are responsible for the discharge of large amounts of terrestrial organic matter (OM) which can influence carbon cycling in marine environments. Therefore, ...Leer más >
The Mozambique and Madagascar margins present major rivers that are responsible for the discharge of large amounts of terrestrial organic matter (OM) which can influence carbon cycling in marine environments. Therefore, the Mozambique channel represents a unique case to study the fate of the organic carbon in deepwater domains. Using a new and extensive data set of sedimentary OM collected from sediment traps, seafloor sediments and core sediments, we address the origin of the OM that is transported and deposited in the Mozambique Channel, its degradation state and preservation conditions. A Rock-Eval 6 survey allowed us to characterize the origin and amount of OM from shallow to deep-water turbidite systems, between 500 and 4400 m water depth. Rock-Eval 6 performed on suspended sediments within particle traps at 47 m above the seabed show that the OM is transported into the deep-water domain with relatively high TOC (between 1.5 and 2.5%). However, the OM is largely oxidized close to the water-sediment interface (Oxygen Index >300 mg CO 2 /g TOC). Seafloor sediments sampled to a maximum depth of 40 cm show lower TOC values compared to those collected from particle traps suggesting that the degradation of the OM is mainly active at the water-sediment interface. Small concentrations of OM are preserved within the recent sediments of the distal area of the Zambezi turbidite system below 2500 m water depth (TOC < 0.5%). Rock-Eval results show that core sediments from the Majunga slope (NW margin of Madagascar) and the Zambezi slope (Mozambique margin) contain the highest concentration of terrestrial OM (TOC between 1 and 2%). However, the OM within core sediments from the deep-water domain is largely oxidized and degraded, probably due to the conjugate effect of low sediment accumulation rates (SARs) and high permeabilities of the coarse-grained sediments. Consequently, the deep-water domain of the Mozambique Channel does not seem to be an important sink of terrestrial OM. This process is reinforced by important bottom water currents which induce the remobilization and transport of seafloor sediments that lead to higher oxygen exposure time in the uppermost centimeters of sediments.< Leer menos
Palabras clave en inglés
Organic matter
Transport Preservation
Oxidation Mozambique Channel
Rock-Eval
Scanning Electron Microscopy
Centros de investigación