Dean, Simon M. (2006): Analysis of NGR spectra from deep-sea sediments in the Philippine Sea, Site 1201

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 195
ODP 195 1201
Identifier:
2006-066612
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.195.105.2004
doi

Creator:
Dean, Simon M.
University of Southampton, School of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Southampton, United Kingdom
author

Identification:
Analysis of NGR spectra from deep-sea sediments in the Philippine Sea, Site 1201
2006
In: Shinohara, Masanao (editor), Salisbury, Matthew H. (editor), Richter, Carl (editor), Araki, Eiichiro, Barr, Samantha R., D'Antonio, Massimo, Dean, Simon M., Diekmann, Bernhard, Edwards, K. Michelle, Fryer, Patricia B., Gaillot, Philippe J., Hammon, William S., III, Hart, David, Januszczak, Nicole, Komor, Stephen C., Kristensen, Mette B., Lockwood, John P., Mottl, Michael J., Moyer, Craig L., Nakahigashi, Kazuo, Savov, Ivan P., Su Xin, Wei, Kuo-Yen, Yamada, Tomoaki, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program; scientific results; seafloor observatories and the Kuroshio Current; covering Leg 195 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution; Apra Harbor, Guam, to Keelung, Taiwan; Sites 1200-1202; 2 March-2 May 2001
Texas A&M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
195
Natural gamma ray measurements are made routinely during core logging using the physical property multisensor track. The instrument provides a measure of the natural decay of radioactive elements in the core, expressed in counts per second, which is generally used as a proxy for the clay content of nonmarginal marine sediments. At Site 1201 spikes of increased gamma ray emissions, up to six times the average for the entire core over depth intervals on the order of 20-50 cm, are observed from the sediments within 50 m of the basement contact. The spikes show a strong correlation with sediment color variations, coinciding with red/brown layers within otherwise green/gray-colored sediments. In this paper, the gamma ray spectra obtained from 21 measurements using a 4-hr counting period are analyzed to obtain the absolute concentration of the radioactive elements K (sub 2) O, U, and Th in both the intervals with spikes and the intervals with relatively low count rates. In addition, the concentration of these elements is estimated using the spectra obtained from the routine 20-s counting period measurements and which, although exhibiting a great deal of scatter due to the high statistical uncertainty in the original measurements, are roughly similar to those obtained from the 4-hr counting period. Baseline concentrations for U (1 ppm) and Th (5 ppm) match published averages for the amount present in deep-sea clays; the peak concentrations measured correspond to an additional concentration of 100%-200%. The results are compared to those from downhole logging and shipboard inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry measurements. The gamma ray spectra results do not support post-depositional fluid flow through the sediment as the source of the enrichment of radioactive elements. It is more likely that the spikes in the gamma ray emissions are simply the result of interbedding sediments from two different sources, one with relatively high concentrations of K (sub 2) O, U, and Th.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:19.1800
West:135.0500East: 135.0600
South:19.1700

Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments; Oceanography; color; deep-sea environment; gamma-ray spectra; geochemistry; ICP mass spectra; isotopes; Leg 195; marine environment; marine sediments; mass spectra; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1201; Pacific Ocean; Philippine Sea; physical properties; radioactive isotopes; sediments; spectra; variations; West Pacific; X-ray fluorescence spectra;

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