Composition and characteristics of the ferromanganese crusts from the western Arctic Ocean
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Ore Geology Reviews
Abstract
Layered ferromanganese crusts collected by dredge from a water depth range of 2770 to 2200 m on Mendeleev
Ridge, Arctic Ocean,were analyzed formineralogical and chemical compositions and dated using the excess 230Th
technique. Comparison with crusts from other oceans reveals that Fe-Mn deposits of Mendeleev Ridge have the
highest Fe/Mn ratios, are depleted inMn, Co, and Ni, and enriched in Si and Al aswell as some minor elements, Li,
Th, Sc, As and V. However, the upper layer of the crusts shows Mn, Co, and Ni contents comparable to crusts from
the Atlantic and Indian Oceans. Growth rates vary from3.03 to 3.97mm/Myr measured on the uppermost 2mm.
Mn and Fe oxyhydroxides (vernadite, ferroxyhyte, birnessite, todorokite and goethite) and nonmetalliferous detrital
minerals characterize the Arctic crusts. Temporal changes in crust composition reflect changes in the depositional
environment. Crust formation was dominated by three main processes: precipitation of Fe-Mn
oxyhydroxides from ambient ocean water, sorption of metals by those Fe and Mn phases, and fluctuating but
large inputs of terrigenous debris.