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Sulfidization in a shallow coastal depositional setting: Diagenetic and palaeoclimatic implications

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Sulfidization in a shallow coastal depositional setting: Diagenetic and palaeoclimatic implications
 
Creator Mazumdar, A.
Peketi, A.
Joao, H.M.
Dewangan, P.
Borole, D.V.
Kocherla, M.
 
Subject pyrite
sulphur isotopes
palaeoclimate
diagenesis
 
Description The nature of pyrite and C–Fe–S geochemistry in a sediment core (covering the last 378 years) at a water depth of 17 m off Goa, west coast, India has been investigated to understand the diagenetic and palaeoclimatic/oceanographic processes. The chromium reducible sulfur (CRS) and highly reactive iron (FeHR) profiles show significant fluctuations and a negative correlation with delta sup(34)S sub(CRS), which is attributed to relative availability of highly reactive and less reactive iron bearing minerals close to the sediment water interface. Low delta sup(34)S sub(CRS) corresponding to high CRS content characterizes early diagenetic pyritization near the sediment-water interface, whereas high delta sup(34)S sub(CRS) and low CRS content indicate late diagenetic pyritization of less reactive iron during burial. High OBS/CRS ratios suggest the important role played by the labile organic compound in binding sulfur in the sediment. Partitioning of stable sulfur isotopes into organic and iron bound phases is apparently linked to FeHR and labile organic matter availability. We have proposed FeHR profile and FeHR/FeT ratios as a potential tool to understand runoff/monsoonal fluctuations in a shallow marine depositional setting. To develop this tool into a potential paleoclimatic/ oceanographic proxy and to link it to other proxies within a chronological framework, needs high resolution sampling and age dating.
 
Date 2012-07-27T11:52:25Z
2012-07-27T11:52:25Z
2012
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Chemical Geology, vol.322-323; 2012; 68-78
no
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4106
 
Language en
 
Relation Chem_Geol_322-323_68.jpg
 
Rights An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2012] Elsevier
 
Publisher Elsevier