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Grain-size and geochemical evidence for sediment transport mechanisms in the northeastern part of the East Siberian Sea and on the adjacent continental slope

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Title
Grain-size and geochemical evidence for sediment transport mechanisms in the northeastern part of the East Siberian Sea and on the adjacent continental slope
Other Titles
북동 동시베리아해와 인접 대륙붕 지역에서의 퇴적물 운반 기작에 대한 입자크가와 지구화학적 증거
Authors
Ovsepyan Ekaterina
Dorokhova Evgeniia
Ovsepyan Yaroslav
Aliev Ramiz
Jin, Young Keun
Keywords
Bottom currentsEnd-member analysisLate Pleistocene Ice Complex depositsSea iceSediment transportSedimentation rstes
Issue Date
2025-12
Citation
Ovsepyan Ekaterina, et al. 2025. "Grain-size and geochemical evidence for sediment transport mechanisms in the northeastern part of the East Siberian Sea and on the adjacent continental slope". JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 252(0): 0-0.
Abstract
Grain-size analyses, end-member modeling, X-ray fluorescence, and radionuclide activity measurements were conducted on sediment minicores collected from the middle-outer shelf of the East Siberian Sea (ESS) and the upper part of the adjacent continental slope to elucidate the sedimentation mechanisms in this poorly studied region. The grain-size data demonstrate that clayey silt and silt strongly dominate on the ESS shelf and the continental slope. In contrast, sandy silt has a patchy distribution. End-member modeling, applied here for the first time, indicates that sea ice (frazil and anchor ice) rafting, and nepheloid transport are the primary processes responsible for distributing sedimentary material across the ESS. The XRF data confirm the results of previous studies, reporting a predominantly lithogenic origin for ESS deposits. Combined grain size and geochemical records suggests that the shelf break area serves as a depocenter for fine silt particles, likely supplied by nepheloid flow, and represents the most productive area in the northeastern ESS. High sea surface productivity likely results from influence of nutrient-rich Pacific-derived waters, the upwelling of transformed Atlanticderived waters, or a combination of both. The accumulation of the high amount of fine silt near the shelf break is suggested to be related to relatively calm bottom-water conditions, resulting from the potential interaction of the northward-flowing cross-shelf currents and episodic southward-moving compensatory flows. Wind direction is considered a key factor controlling the intensity of fine-grained material distribution by nepheloid flows and anchor ice across the ESS shelf. Sedimentation rates derived from the radionuclide activity measurements vary from 1.3 mm yr(-1) on the outer shelf to 1.0 mm yr(-1) on the upper continental slope.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/16471
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmarsys.2025.104140
Type
Article
Station
Araon
Indexed
SCIE
Appears in Collections  
2020-2020, Investigation of submarine resource environment and seabed methane release in the Arctic (20-20) / Jin, Young Keun (PM20050)
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