Abstract

The pattern of distribution of detrital mineral grains in the water column was investigated at three stations in the western Pacific during July through August of 1979. The sedimentation of detrital mineral grains was also studied using piston cores from two sites adjacent to the three stations. The concentration of suspended detrital mineral grains in the subsurface waters becomes lower with increasing distance from the land, and shows a prominent peak in the intermediate zone of the water column. The sharp increase in water density and viscosity in the pycnocline in the intermediate zone decreases the settling velocity of grains, and may result in the accumulation of falling grains in the intermediate layer. Proportion of detrital mineral grains to organic remains in the sediment was more than two orders of magnitude larger than in the overlying water column, and reasons for this are briefly discussed.

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