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Christopher M. Reaves

Bio: Christopher M. Reaves is an academic researcher from Mobil. The author has contributed to research in topics: Terrigenous sediment & Calcium carbonate. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 1220 citations.

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TL;DR: In this article, a chromium reduction method was used for the determination of reduced inorganic sulfur compounds (pyrite + elemental sulfur + acid volatile monosulfides) in modern sediments and shales.

1,268 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Christopher M. Reaves1
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined intertidal mud flat and tidal creek sediments from Sapelo Island, Georgia and Indian Neck, Connecticut and found that variations in the degree of calcium carbonate preservation exist between these localities.
Abstract: Examination of intertidal mud flat and tidal creek sediments from Sapelo Island, Georgia, and Indian Neck, Connecticut, indicates that variations in the degree of calcium carbonate preservation exist between these localities. Although the preservation of calcium carbonate in modern nearshore terrigenous marine muds has previously been shown to be strongly dependent on the physical and biological attributes of the depositional environment (Berger and Soutar 1970; Sholkovitz 1973; Aller 1982), the phenomenon documented in this study occurs in the absence of significant variations in benthic faunas or physical conditions. Evidence for variations in the degree of calcium carbonate preservation is provided by analyses of sediment chemistry and observations of mollusc shells recovered from he sediments. The pattern of sediment chemistry and calcium carbonate preservation is shown to be related to seasonal climatic variations and the metabolizability of organic matter supplied to the sediments. During the summer the presence of readily metabolizable organic matter in the Connecticut sediments results in high rates of microbial decay, establishment of anoxic-sulfidic conditions at the sediment-water interface, and the production of large amounts of ferrous sulfide minerals. During periods of reduced microbial activity (winter), ferrous sulfide minerals in the surficial sediments are oxidized, resulting in dramatically lower in situ pH values, and undersaturation with respect to calcium carbonate. In Georgia, temperatures remain relatively warm throughout the year and therefore macrofau al and microbial activity do not exhibit the extreme seasonal variations present in Connecticut. Because the destruction of reactive organic matter continues throughout the year, the organic matter supplied to the Georgia sediments is less readily metabolizable. As a result, the inception of anoxic-sulfidic conditions is depressed below the sediment-water interface; only limited amounts of ferrous sulfide minerals are formed in the surficial sediments; and saturation or supersaturation with respect to calcium carbonate is maintained throughout the year. This relationship between organic matter metabolizability and calcium carbonate preservation has the potential to be used as an indicator of the environmental conditions present at the time of sediment deposition. Application of the results of this modern sediment study to facies-dependent variations in calcium carbonate preservation in ancient marine shales suggests that prior interpretations of the paleoenvironmental significance of these variations may be in error.

64 citations


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1,235 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a multiproxy technique for assessing redox facies in black shale samples: euxinic conditions were considered to have existed if at least two of four trace-indicator trace elements (Mo, U, V, Zn, and Pb), and nonsulfidic anoxic conditions were inferred otherwise.

1,209 citations

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TL;DR: It appears that distinct microenvironments may exist in marine sediments, where, in one microenvironment, sulfide reacts with Fe oxides locally precipitating Fe sulfide minerals, and in another, Fe reduced and solubilized by microorganisms migrates freely into solution.

983 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the development of a sequential extraction procedure for iron in modern and ancient sediments is presented, which recognizes seven operationally derived iron pools: (1) carbonate associated Fe (Fe carb ), including siderite and ankerite; (2) easily reducible oxides (Fe ox1 ), including ferrihydrite and lepidocrocite; and (3) reducible Oxides(Fe ox2 ), including goethite, hematite and akaganeite, (4) magnetite (Fe mag ); (5)

975 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a survey was made of framboid size distributions in recently deposited sediments from euxinic (Black Sea; Framvaren Fjord, Norway; Pettaquamscutt River Estuary, Rhode Island, USA), dysoxic (Peru Margin), and oxic (Wallops Island, Virginia, USA; Great Salt Marsh, Delaware, USA) environments.

912 citations