Abstract

The features of the distribution of some rare and trace elements in modern bottom sediments of the Caspian Sea have been studied from samples collected during cruises 35, 39, and 41 of the R/V Rift and the cruise of the R/V Nikifor Shurekov in 2013. It was established that bottom sediments in different areas of the Caspian Sea vary to some degree in the contents of Zr, Hf, Th, V, Cr, Co, Ni, Cu, Sr, and Ba in comparison to suspended matter discharged by the Volga River and rivers originating in the Caucasus. As follows from the results of a comparison of the geochemical features of modern bottom sediments of the Volga River delta and different sedimentary subsystems of the Caspian Sea with the chemical composition of Middle Archean granitoids and Paleozoic and Mesozoic–Cenozoic basalts, which are regarded as geochemical images of such provenance areas as the basement of East European Platform, Urals, and Caucasus, none of these regions is considered the dominant provenance area for all sedimentary subsystems of the Caspian Sea region. Here, the revealed similarity between modern bottom sediments of the northern, central and southern Caspian Sea regions, the Volga River delta, and Post-Archean average Australian shale (PAAS) in some parameters, including REE spectra, assumes that the Volga River discharge plays a dominant role in the formation of the geochemical image of Caspian Sea subsystems. The role of clastics, including the fine-grained fraction, which is supplied to the Caspian Sea from the Caucasus region and Elburz Mountains, is insignificant already in the coastal area, which is determined both by influence of the marginal filter (MF) and large-scale cholestatic current circulation.

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