Posted on 10/15/2006 6:09:44 PM PDT by blam
Nearly Naked: Large swath of Pacific lacks seafloor sediment
Sid Perkins
Oceanographers have discovered a broad, almost-bare patch of seafloor in the remote South Pacific. An unusual combination of circumstances has left the region without the mineral and organic sediments hundreds of meters deep that are typical elsewhere in the world's oceans, the scientists say.
BARE FACTS. A 2-million-square-kilometer region (orange) is almost devoid of seafloor sediment. E. Roell
The sediment-poor region is about the size of the Mediterranean Sea and centered approximately 4,000 kilometers east of New Zealand. Researchers discovered the area, which they dubbed the South Pacific Bare Zone, during a cruise early last year, says David K. Rea, a marine geologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
The scientists were surprised when their seismic equipment, which detects sediment only when it's at least 5 meters thick, indicated that there was no sediment in that region. The team then sent sampling equipment more than 4 km to the seafloor and discovered as little as 50 centimeters of sediment in some places.
A unique combination of factors seems to have dictated the area's dearth of sediment that's accumulated since the basalt crust below formed between 85 million and 34 million years ago, Rea and his colleagues report in the October Geology.
First, the area has nutrient-poor surface waters and so is home to few organisms. Therefore, there aren't large quantities of plankton to die, fall to the bottom, and accumulate, as they do in seas with high biological content, says Rea.
Second, the deepest waters in this area contain less carbonate and silica than those in other locations do, so skeletons of organisms that reach the seafloor dissolve.
Third, the bare zone is far from any major landmass, so little windblown dust ends up in the surface waters and eventually sinks. Finally, the region has little if any hydrothermal activity to spew water containing dissolved minerals that would precipitate.
Rea says that he and his colleagues had expected to find at least a dozen meters of sediment in the region. "It's fun to be wrong sometimes," he notes.
Neil C. Mitchell, a marine geologist at Cardiff University in Wales, suggests another factor that may contribute to the sediment skimpiness of the area. It's out of the path of major ocean currents, so Antarctic icebergs carrying material scraped from that continent don't pass over the bare zone and drop sediment, says Mitchell.
The sparse sediments may permit researchers to find seafloor substances that are typically hidden, says David Scholl, a marine geologist at Stanford University. For instance, meteor dust, which falls evenly over Earth's surface, may be more easily detectable in the bare zone than elsewhere, says Scholl.
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While others will perceive it as proof that the earth is several trillion years older than first believed, thus allowing mindless matter more time to accident itself into what we are today.
Ain't it the truth. LOL
Those who would do so neither need, require, nor use evidence.
It was me. I was testing out my new vacuum cleaner. Works pretty good, doncha think?
What I'm saying is, the Med. isn't as large a body of water as I thought.
Sorry if it sounds silly to you.
Bush should start a campaign for the UN to add the necessary sediment to this section of the Pacific Ocean. Financed by the US, of course.
Sorry my bad ... wrong thread
"ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn"
("In his house at R'lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming")
Don't wake up the Cthulhu. ;-)
I see where we could dump some nuclear waste.
They've discovered the secret location where Oreck tests his vacuum cleaners.
Mine as well. I was on diesel subs in the early 60's.
"Sorry my bad ... wrong thread"
Actually it strangely fits... all of the sediment was sucked up by Max Factor to be used as foundation makeup for Pelosi.
Sounds like some sort of Canadian Shield in the Pacific but probably has no comparison in geologic terms.
Is it described as naked or nekkid? There is a difference.
Ahem, around these parts, it would be nekkid.
Thanks for your "silent service".
Ain't that the truth...Everybody knows that this sediment just grew legs and walked away...Some of 'em are probably in NZ right now sittin' in a Starbucks sippin' on a Latte'...
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