Abstract

Vast ferromanganese nodule fields have been found on the deep-sea floor of all oceans worldwide. They have received attention because they potentially provide high-grade metal resources to develop future high- and green-technology. However, how these vast nodule fields were formed and developed owing to their widespread nature or tendency to be denser with an increasing number of nodules has not yet been established. In this study, the fine-scale inner structure of nodules of various sizes was analyzed on the basis of chemical mapping using microfocus X-ray fluorescence. We found that nodules distributed in the vast field around Minamitorishima (Marcus) Island have several types of innermost layers, which correspond to different chemostratigraphic layers of nodules that have been previously reported by us in this region. As nodules grow in order from the center to the outside, the different types in the innermost layer indicate a difference in the timing of the beginning of their growth. Moreover, because the differences in the chemical features of each layer reflect differences in the composition of the original deep-sea water, our results imply that the beginning of nodule formation occurred intermittently at each time of a water mass replacement due to new deep-sea currents flowing into this region. We recognized that the northern part of the study area was dominated by large nodules that started to grow in relatively earlier times, while the southern part tended to have many nodules that grew in relatively later times. Based on these observations, we hypothesize that the intermittent beginning of nodule formation is governed by the northward inflow of the deep-sea current that originated from the Lower Circumpolar Deep Water for an extended time to form the vast nodule field. Because patterns in the timing of nodule formation were different in the eastern and western regions, we thus further propose that the topographic framework, i.e., the arrangement of individual large seamounts and the cluster of small knolls and petit-spot volcanoes, strongly regulates the flow path of the deep-sea current, even if the position of the entire seamount changes owing to plate motion. The deep-sea current might supply some materials to be nuclei, resulting in the nodule formation at the beginning of the process.

Highlights

  • Ferromanganese nodules are considered a prospective resource for critical metals, for Co, Ni, Mo, W and rare-earth elements

  • Based on these chemical fingerprints, it has been demonstrated that element(s) characterizing the individual ferromanganese layers of nodules can be visualized by a “multichemical feature map” which is constructed by merging the compositional maps for Fe, Mn, Ti, P, Si, and Cu into a single map

  • Upon dividing the nodule field into northern (6K#1207/1459 in the East exclusive economic zone (EEZ) region and 6K#1460 in the Around Takuyo Daigo Seamount region) and southern (6K#1462 and 6K#1463 in the Southeast EEZ region, and 6K#1464 and 6K#1461/1465 in the Around Takuyo Daigo Seamount region) sides, we found that the variation in the innermost layer was larger on the southern side of the field in each region compared to that on the northern side (Figure 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Ferromanganese nodules are considered a prospective resource for critical metals, for Co, Ni, Mo, W and rare-earth elements. The distribution of P, Si, and Cu represent the contribution of biogenic or pelagic sediment components filling the non-oxide and -oxyhydroxide portions Based on these chemical fingerprints, it has been demonstrated that element(s) characterizing the individual ferromanganese layers of nodules can be visualized by a “multichemical feature map” which is constructed by merging the compositional maps for Fe, Mn, Ti, P, Si, and Cu into a single map. As discussed by Machida et al [14], the structure of the ferromanganese layers of nodules in the Minamitorishima EEZ is the same as that of the ferromanganese crust on seamounts or knolls in the Prime Crust Zone [15,16,17,18,19] This implies that a common deep-sea water mass had contributed to the formation of hydrogenous nodules and crusts across a vast region of the western Pacific. We evaluated whether the water-mass transformation history of the LCDW can be represented as the structural change of ferromanganese nodules in this region

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