Oceanography 4
Siliceous ooze is particularly abundant on the seafloor at __________ and at __________.
high latitudes; equatorial upwelling zones
Two common types of chemical compounds found in biogenous sediments are __________ and __________.
calcium carbonate; silica
What is calcareous ooze?
a fine-grained, deep ocean sediment containing the skeletal remains of calcite-secreting microbes
Carbon dioxide (CO2) combines with water (H2O) to form __________.
Carbonic acid (H2CO3)
The depth at which calcite dissolves rapidly in the ocean is called the __________.
calcite compensation depth or CCD
What would happen if the depth of the CCD were above the top of the mid-ocean ridge?
Calcareous ooze would not be found below the CCD.
How does siliceous ooze accumulate on the seafloor if silica-based residues are dissolved slowly at all depths?
Silica tests accumulate faster than seawater can dissolve them.
As a whole, the pH of surface waters of the ocean is slightly __________.
alkaline
Sediments derived from the remains of the hard parts of once-living organisms are called __________ sediments.
biogenous
Calcite-secreting organisms such as __________ and __________ live in the ocean's sunlit surface waters and form the basis of most marine food webs.
coccolithophores; foraminifers
What three steps are required for calcareous ooze to exist below the CCD?
deposition of calcite shells above the CCD, cover of these shells by a non-calcareous material, and movement of the sea floor over millions of years
The two major types of microscopic, planktonic organisms that produce siliceous oozes are __________ and __________.
diatoms; radiolarians
The pH scale is a measure of the __________ ion concentration of a solution.
hydrogen
What is the calcite compensation depth, or CCD?
the ocean depth below which calcite is unstable and will dissolve quickly