最近墨西哥湾飓风的有孔虫特征

Pub Date : 2015-01-01 DOI:10.2113/GSJFR.45.1.82
Katrina A. Rabien
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引用次数: 7

摘要

´·Be ²³´Th和²¹´Th的下核活动以及x射线成像表明,在西南山口和密西西比峡谷之间的密西西比三角洲西部大陆边缘存在伊万(2004)、卡特里娜(2005)和丽塔(2005)飓风沉积的沉积物。然而,这些放射性核素的半衰期相当短,从几天到几十年不等,它们在识别飓风事件方面的作用随着沉积物的逐渐老化而减弱。有孔虫可以在地质上保存相当长的时间,可以作为探测飓风事件床的另一个代理。在这里,我研究了最近已知的飓风单元中包含的有孔虫组合,以确定它们是否与非飓风单元和由河流洪水事件沉积的单元有显著差异,以及这些差异是否可以深入了解飓风沉积沉积物的起源。在2004年、2005年和2007年三次不同的巡航中沿着同一样带收集岩心;收集的时间反映了飓风和非飓风影响沉积的时期。横断面从西南山口(~30米水深)向西南延伸至密西西比峡谷的源头(~170米水深)。还收集了2011年密西西比河洪水事件沉积的一个单元的表面样本,以便与飓风单元进行比较。对有孔虫的平均相对丰度进行了趋势分析,并利用方差分析和判别分析来确定飓风和非飓风单元的有孔虫组合是否具有统计离散性。飓风单元有孔虫非常靠近西南山口(9公里);~30 m水深)单位体积沉积物比飓风前有孔虫丰富。离陆架更远的飓风单元(约80米水深)每单位体积含有的有孔虫比非飓风单元少。飓风单元也比非飓风单元含有更多的禾本科类和千科类,有时还含有稀有的沼泽类群。方差分析结果表明,在飓风前和飓风后洪水和生物扰动4种单元类型中,32个最丰富的分类群中有13个的丰度在单元之间存在统计学差异。其中10个物种在飓风和非飓风单位之间存在统计学差异;在飓风单元中,沿海类群的相对丰度有所增加。判别分析表明,所有四种单元类型通常是离散的。对单元类型的区分贡献最大的物种通常是罕见的,有些物种有助于确定飓风运输沉积物的起源。相反,在方差分析中显著的物种是最丰富的。因此,无论是丰富的还是稀有的物种都有助于识别飓风沉积的沉积物。部分飓风单元沉积物可能发生了局部再悬浮和再沉积(表现为飓风前和飓风后单元中丰富的分类群相对丰度较高)。也有泥沙向海移动的证据;在飓风前和飓风后单元中只出现在样带浅端的一些物种也出现在样带较深端的飓风单元中。此外,飓风单元中还含有一些罕见的沼泽和上坡类群,这些都是飓风前和飓风后单元所没有的,表明飓风单元中的部分沉积物来自这些环境。总而言之,有孔虫可以在飓风沉积后提供有关沉积物来源的信息,但生物扰动可以迅速破坏这一信号。
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The foraminiferal signature of recent Gulf of Mexico hurricanes
Down-core activities of ⁷Be ²³⁴Th and ²¹⁰Pb as well as X-radiography have indicated the existence of sediments deposited by hurricanes Ivan (2004) Katrina (2005) and Rita (2005) on the continental margin west of the Mississippi Delta between Southwest Pass and the Mississippi Canyon. These radionuclides have fairly short half-lives on the order of days to decades however and their utility for the identification of hurricane events decreases with progressively older deposits. Foraminifera which can be preserved for geologically significant amounts of time may serve as another proxy for the detection of hurricane event beds. Here I investigate foraminiferal assemblages contained within recent known hurricane units to determine whether they differ significantly from those of non-hurricane units and a unit deposited by a river flood event and whether these differences might give insight into where the hurricane-deposited sediment originated. Cores were collected along the same transect during three different cruises in: 2004 2005 and 2007; the timing of collection reflected periods of hurricane and non-hurricane influenced deposition. The transect runs southwest from Southwest Pass (~30 m water depth) to the head of the Mississippi Canyon (~170 m depth). Surface samples of a unit deposited by the 2011 Mississippi River flood event were also collected to allow comparison with hurricane units. Average relative abundances of foraminifera were analyzed for trends and ANOVA and discriminant analysis were utilized to determine whether the foraminiferal assemblages of hurricane and non-hurricane units were statistically discrete. Hurricane unit foraminifera very close to the mouth of Southwest Pass (9 km; ~30 m water depth) were more abundant per unit volume of sediment than pre-hurricane foraminifera at this location. Hurricane units further out on the shelf (> 80 m water depth) tended to contain less foraminifera per unit volume than did the non-hurricane units. Hurricane units also contained more textulariids and miliolids than the non-hurricane units and sometimes contained rare marsh taxa. ANOVA results show that the abundances of 13 of the 32 most abundant taxa were statistically different between units when comparing all four unit types (hurricane pre- and post-hurricane flood and bioturbated). Ten of these species were statistically different between hurricane and non-hurricane units; relative abundance of coastal taxa increased in the hurricane units. Discriminant analysis indicates that all four unit types are generally discrete. The species that contributed most to the discrimination of unit types were generally rare and some were helpful in the determination of the origin of the hurricane-transported sediment. In contrast the species that were significant in the ANOVA were among the most abundant. Thus both abundant and rare species are useful for identifying hurricane deposited sediment. A portion of hurricane unit sediments was likely locally resuspended and redeposited (indicated by high relative abundances of those taxa which were abundant in the pre- and post- hurricane units). There is also evidence of seaward transport of sediment; some species that occur in the pre- and post-hurricane units only at the shallow end of the transect also occurred in hurricane units at the deeper end of the transect. In addition hurricane units contained some rare marsh and upper slope taxa which were absent from the pre- and post-hurricane units indicating some portion of the sediment in the hurricane units is derived from these environments. In summary foraminifera can provide information on the provenance of hurricane-deposited sediment soon after deposition but bioturbation can destroy this signal rapidly.
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