Brine formation and gypsum precipitation in the Bannock Basin, Eastern Mediterranean

C Corselli, FS Aghib - Marine Geology, 1987 - Elsevier
Marine Geology, 1987Elsevier
Sixty kilograms of gypsum crystals were collected at two dredging stations within a small
anoxic, hypersaline basin, named the Bannock Basin, close to the Sirte Abyssal Plain. The
basin was investigated in some detail by means of ten precision-positioned piston and
gravity cores, one Nansen-bottle hydrocast and three CTD stations. The sediments of the
basin floor are dark, H 2 S rich and commonly laminated, and contain centimetric crystals of
gypsum. The water column above the basin has normal salinity down to a depth of 3150 m; …
Abstract
Sixty kilograms of gypsum crystals were collected at two dredging stations within a small anoxic, hypersaline basin, named the Bannock Basin, close to the Sirte Abyssal Plain. The basin was investigated in some detail by means of ten precision-positioned piston and gravity cores, one Nansen-bottle hydrocast and three CTD stations. The sediments of the basin floor are dark, H2S rich and commonly laminated, and contain centimetric crystals of gypsum.
The water column above the basin has normal salinity down to a depth of 3150 m; below this depth the basin is filled with hypersaline brines, formed from the dissolution of Messinian evaporites, outcropping on the steep eastern wall. When the brines reach the necessary concentration in Ca and in SO4, gypsum may precipitate along the steep eastern wall and within the sediments on the basin floor.
The very recent age of the gypsum is proved by the inclusions of Quaternary planktonic fauna (formainifera and pteropods) and by radiometric techniques.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果