Abstract

The behavior of rare earth elements (REE) and Th is studied along the west–east transect at 22°N across the Atlantic Ocean. It is shown that both REE and Th contents, relative to Al (the most lithogenic element), increase toward the pelagic region. The increasing trend becomes more complicated due to variations in the content of biogenic carbonate that serves as a diluting component in sediments. The REE composition varies symmetrically relative to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) emphasizing a weak hydrothermal influence on sediments of the ridge axis, although the well-known criteria for hydrothermal contribution, such as Al/(Al + Mn + Fe) and (Fe + Mn)/Ti, do not reach critical values. Variations in the REE content and composition allowed us to distinguish the following five sediment zones in the transect: (I) terrigenous sediments of the Nares abyssal plain; (II) pelagic sediments of the North American Basin; (III) carbonate ooze of the MAR axis; (IV) pelagic sediments of the Canary Basin; and (V) terrigenous clay and calcareous mud of the African continental slope and slope base. Ferromanganese nodules of the hydrogenetic type with extremely high Ce (up to 1801 ppm) and Th (up to 138 ppm) contents occur in pelagic sediments. It is ascertained that P, REE, and Th concentrations depend on Fe content in Atlantic sediments. Therefore, one can suggest that only a minor amount of phosphorus is bound in bone debris. The low concentration of bone debris phosphorus is a result of relatively high sedimentation rates in the Atlantic, as compared with those in pelagic regions of the Pacific.

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