Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Susann Henkel is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Susann Henkel.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2011

An interdisciplinary investigation of a recent submarine mass transport deposit at the continental margin off Uruguay

Susann Henkel; Michael Strasser; Tilmann Schwenk; Till J J Hanebuth; Johannes Hüsener; Gail L. Arnold; Daniel Winkelmann; Michael J. Formolo; Juan Tomasini; Sebastian Krastel; Sabine Kasten

Assessing frequency and extent of mass movement at continental margins is crucial to evaluate risks for offshore constructions and coastal areas. A multidisciplinary approach including geophysical, sedimentological, geotechnical, and geochemical methods was applied to investigate multistage mass transport deposits (MTDs) off Uruguay, on top of which no surficial hemipelagic drape was detected based on echosounder data. Nonsteady state pore water conditions are evidenced by a distinct gradient change in the sulfate (SO42−) profile at 2.8 m depth. A sharp sedimentological contact at 2.43 m coincides with an abrupt downward increase in shear strength from ∼10 to >20 kPa. This boundary is interpreted as a paleosurface (and top of an older MTD) that has recently been covered by a sediment package during a younger landslide event. This youngest MTD supposedly originated from an upslope position and carried its initial pore water signature downward. The kink in the SO42− profile ∼35 cm below the sedimentological and geotechnical contact indicates that bioirrigation affected the paleosurface before deposition of the youngest MTD. Based on modeling of the diffusive re-equilibration of SO42− the age of the most recent MTD is estimated to be <30 years. The mass movement was possibly related to an earthquake in 1988 (∼70 km southwest of the core location). Probabilistic slope stability back analysis of general landslide structures in the study area reveals that slope failure initiation requires additional ground accelerations. Therefore, we consider the earthquake as a reasonable trigger if additional weakening processes (e.g., erosion by previous retrogressive failure events or excess pore pressures) preconditioned the slope for failure. Our study reveals the necessity of multidisciplinary approaches to accurately recognize and date recent slope failures in complex settings such as the investigated area.


Geology | 2013

A slump in the trench: Tracking the impact of the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake

Michael Strasser; Martin Kölling; C. dos Santos Ferreira; Hiske G Fink; Toshiya Fujiwara; Susann Henkel; Ken Ikehara; Toshiya Kanamatsu; Kiichiro Kawamura; Shuichi Kodaira; Miriam Römer; Gerold Wefer; Jamstec Cruise Mr E scientists

We present differential bathymetry and sediment core data from the Japan Trench, sampled after the 2011 Tohoku-Oki (offshore Japan) earthquake to document that prominent bathymetric and structural changes along the trench axis relate to a large (∼27.7 km 2 ) slump in the trench. Transient geochemical signals in the slump deposit and analysis of diffusive re-equilibration of disturbed SO 4 2– profiles over time constrain the triggering of the slump to the 2011 earthquake. We propose a causal link between earthquake slip to the trench and rotational slumping above a subducting horst structure. We conclude that the earthquake-triggered slump is a leading agent for accretion of trench sediments into the forearc and hypothesize that forward growth of the prism and seaward advance of the deformation front by more than 2 km can occur, episodically, during a single-event, large mega-thrust earthquake.


Geology | 2015

A continental-weathering control on orbitally driven redox-nutrient cycling during Cretaceous Oceanic Anoxic Event 2

Simon W. Poulton; Susann Henkel; Christian März; Hannah Urquhart; Sascha Flögel; Sabine Kasten; Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté; Thomas Wagner

The Cretaceous period (~145–65 m.y. ago) was characterized by intervals of enhanced organic carbon burial associated with increased primary production under greenhouse conditions. The global consequences of these perturbations, oceanic anoxic events (OAEs), lasted up to 1 m.y., but short-term nutrient and climatic controls on widespread anoxia are poorly understood. Here, we present a high-resolution reconstruction of oceanic redox and nutrient cycling as recorded in subtropical shelf sediments from Tarfaya, Morocco, spanning the initiation of OAE2. Iron-sulfur systematics and biomarker evidence demonstrate previously undescribed redox cyclicity on orbital time scales, from sulfidic to anoxic ferruginous (Fe-rich) water-column conditions. Bulk geochemical data and sulfur isotope modeling suggest that ferruginous conditions were not a consequence of nutrient or sulfate limitation, despite overall low sulfate concentrations in the proto–North Atlantic. Instead, fluctuations in the weathering influxes of sulfur and reactive iron, linked to a dynamic hydrological cycle, likely drove the redox cyclicity. Despite the potential for elevated phosphorus burial in association with Fe oxides under ferruginous conditions on the Tarfaya shelf, porewater sulfide generation drove extensive phosphorus recycling back to the water column, thus maintaining widespread open-ocean anoxia.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2017

Sulfur Cycling in an Iron Oxide-Dominated, Dynamic Marine Depositional System: The Argentine Continental Margin

Natascha Riedinger; Benjamin Brunner; Sebastian Krastel; Gail L. Arnold; Laura Mariana Wehrmann; Michael J. Formolo; Antje Beck; Steven M Bates; Susann Henkel; Sabine Kasten; Timothy W. Lyons

The interplay between sediment deposition patterns, organic matter type and the quantity and quality of reactive mineral phases determines the accumulation, speciation and isotope composition of pore water and solid phase sulfur constituents in marine sediments. Here, we present the sulfur geochemistry of siliciclastic sediments from two sites along the Argentine continental slope—a system characterized by dynamic deposition and reworking, which result in non-steady state conditions. The two investigated sites have different depositional histories but have in common that reactive iron phases are abundant and that organic matter is refractory—conditions that result in low organoclastic sulfate reduction rates. Deposition of reworked, isotopically light pyrite and sulfurized organic matter appear to be important contributors to the sulfur inventory, with only minor addition of pyrite from organoclastic sulfate reduction above the sulfate-methane transition (SMT). Pore-water sulfide is limited to a narrow zone at the SMT. The core of that zone is dominated by pyrite accumulation. Iron monosulfide and elemental sulfur accumulate above and below this zone. Iron monosulfide precipitation is driven by the reaction of low amounts of hydrogen sulfide with ferrous iron and is in competition with the oxidation of sulfide by iron (oxyhydr)oxides to form elemental sulfur. The intervals marked by precipitation of intermediate sulfur phases at the margin of the zone with free sulfide are bordered by two distinct peaks in total organic sulfur. Organic matter sulfurization appears to precede pyrite formation in the iron-dominated margins of the sulfide zone, potentially linked to the presence of polysulfides formed by reaction between dissolved sulfide and elemental sulfur. Thus, SMTs can be hotspots for organic matter sulfurization in sulfide-limited, reactive iron-rich marine sedimentary systems. Furthermore, existence of elemental sulfur and iron monosulfide phases meters below the SMT demonstrates that in sulfide-limited systems metastable sulfur constituents are not readily converted to pyrite but can be buried to deeper sediment depths. Our data show that in non-steady state systems, redox zones do not occur in sequence but can reappear or proceed in inverse sequence throughout the sediment column, causing similar mineral alteration processes to occur at the same time at different sediment depths.


Henkel, S., Schwenk, T., Hanebuth, T. J. J., Strasser, M., Riedinger, N., Formolo, M., Arnold, G. L., Tomasini, J., Krastel, Sebastian and Kasten, S. (2012) Pore water geochemistry as a tool for identifying and dating young mass-transport deposits Submarine mass movements and their consequences. Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research . Springer, Dordrecht, pp. 87-97. ISBN 978-94-007-2161-6 DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-2162-3_8 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2162-3_8>. | 2012

Pore Water Geochemistry as a Tool for Identifying and Dating Recent Mass-Transport Deposits

Susann Henkel; Tilmann Schwenk; Till J J Hanebuth; Michael Strasser; Natascha Riedinger; Michael J. Formolo; Juan Tomasini; Sebastian Krastel; Sabine Kasten

Several previous studies have shown that submarine mass-movements can profoundly impact the shape of pore water profiles. Therefore, pore water geochemistry and diffusion models were proposed as tools for identifying and dating recent (max. several thousands of years old) mass-transport deposits (MTDs). In particular, sulfate (SO 4 2− ) profiles evidentially indicate transient pore water conditions generated by submarine landslides. After mass-movements that result in the deposition of sediment packages with distinct pore water signatures, the SO 4 2− profiles can be kink-shaped and evolve into the concave and linear shape with time due to molecular diffusion. Here we present data from the RV METEOR cruise M78/3 along the continental margin off Uruguay and Argentina. SO 4 2− profiles of 15 gravity cores are compared with the respective acoustic facies recorded by a sediment echosounder system. Our results show that in this very dynamic depositional setting, non-steady state profiles occur often, but are not exclusively associated with mass-movements. Three sites that show acoustic indications for recent MTDs are presented in detail. Where recent MTDs are identified, a geochemical transport/reaction model is used to estimate the time that has elapsed since the perturbation of the pore water system and, thus, the timing of the MTD emplacement. We conclude that geochemical analyses are a powerful complementary tool in the identification of recent MTDs and provide a simple and accurate way of dating such deposits.


Mineralogical Magazine | 2013

Effect of increased glacier melt on diagenetic Fe cycling in marine sediments at King George Island (Antarctica)

Susann Henkel; Sabine Kasten; Hernán Sala; Adrian S. Busso; Michael Staubwasser

The supply of trace metals to the surface ocean via dust deposition is important for primary productivity and the global biogeochemical cycle of many elements. Here we utilise the systematic variation of the chemical properties of yttrium and the rare earth elements (YREE) to investigate trace metal release from dust in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean. We present YREE data for the dissolved (<0.45 μm) and suspended particulate matter (SPM) collected from the mixed layer during Polarstern cruise ANT-XXIII/1 in Oct-Nov 2005. Saharan dust can be traced with the Al content of the SPM revealing a broad maximum extending from 15° to 3°N. The PAAS normalised YREE patterns of the dust dominated SPM are relatively flat with a broad peak centred around Eu and Gd. This dust dominated SPM is also characterised by lower Y/Ho and Er/Nd ratios than the particulate material from outside the high Al zone. The dissolved YREE distributions show normal seawater patterns with the relative enrichment of heavy REE over light REE. The samples with dust dominated SPM are enriched in the light and middle REE by a factor of approximately 2 compared to the other samples and a Sargasso Sea surface water. The dissolved Y/Ho and Er/Nd ratios obtained from the dust dominated SPM zone are also low compared to the samples outside the zone but display a fractionation between the SPM and the dissolved phase. This comparison indicates a consistent incongruent dissolution of the dust associated YREE which are probably mainly hosted by oxide coatings on the particles.In order to analyse differences in concentration, speciation and total mobility of arsenic two different locations were studied near the Helgoland Mud Area, North Sea. The first location is characterised by natural sedimentation, the second by deposited sediments dredged from the port of Hamburg. Porewater as well as sediment profiles were analysed with respect to arsenic compounds (As (III) and total As) and major redox species as total and reactive manganese and iron. The sediment samples were handled under inert atmosphere before and during extraction by water, phosphate, hydrochloric acid and aqua regia. Total element contents in porewater and leachable extracts of sediment fractions were analysed. The results show a strong redox coupling of arsenic with manganese and iron. Oxidized arsenic seems to adsorb to manganese- and iron-oxyhydroxides in surface sediments. In contrast to the solid samples, the pore water data shows a release of As (III) into porewater when manganese- and ironoxyhydroxides are reduced in the upper part of the cores. Also a remobilisation of As (V) occurs. Downward diffusing arsenic can be fixed by carbonate below the zone of manganese and iron reduction. In the anoxic parts of the sediments As (III) and As (V) are released and could be fixed at authigenic iron sulphide or arsenic sulphides formation. A sulfidic precipitation of arsenic in iron-dominated systems is limited by the occurrence of HS-. Total solid-phase contents in leachable extracts of sediment fractions of the natural area show significant higher arsenic concentrations than the core of the anthropogenic dumping area. This is due to the higher fines content of the Helgoland mud area. Higher total porewater contents of iron and arsenic in the core of the anthropogenic dumping area thus due to higher turnover rates of organic matter by iron reduction. Higher concentrations of arsenic may be due to a higher availability of iron in the dumped sediments.


Mineralogical Magazine | 2013

Fe isotope composition of sequentially extracted reactive Fe from marine sediments

Michael Staubwasser; Susann Henkel; Sabine Kasten; Simon W. Poulton

The partitioning of Fe in sediments and soils has traditionally been studied by applying sequential leaching methods. These are based on reductive dissolution and exploit differences in dissolution rates between different reactive Fe (oxyhydr)oxide minerals. We used lab-made ferrihydrite, goethite, hematite and magnetite spiked with 58Fe and leached two-mineral mixtures with both phases abundant in excess of the methods dissolution capacity. Leaching was performed with 1) hydroxylamine-HCl and 2) Na-dithionite as the reactive agent. Following Poulton & Canfield (2005) [1], the first dissolution is designed to selectively leach the most reactive Fe-phases, ferrihydrite and lepidocrocite, whereas the second dissolution is designed to leach goethite and hematite. Magnetite would then be dissolved in a third dissolution step with oxalic acid. First results show that the hydroxylamine-HCl method for ferrihydrite dissolves only insignificant amounts of goethite and hematite. However, magnetite-Fe constitutes about 10% of the total dissolved Fe. The Na-dithionite dissolved Fe from goethite-magnetite and hematite-magnetite mixtures contain about 30% of magnetite-Fe. We applied selective sequential leaching and Fe isotope analysis to fine-grained marine sediments from a depocenter in the North Sea, which contain abundant reactive Fe (oxyhydr)oxides and show evidence for Fe sulfide formation within the upper 10 cm. Fe isotopes of the hydroxylamine-HCl leach targeting ferrihydrite shows a downcore increase of !56Fe typical for sediments undergoing microbial reductive Fe dissolution, whereas Fe isotopes of the Na-dithionite leach (goethite and hematite) and oxalic acid leach (magnetite) are identical and show no downcore variation in !56Fe. This means, that only the most reactive Fe phases participate in the Fe redox cycle in this location. The similar isotopic composition of goethite + hematite and magnetite suggests a detrital source, which is not utilized possibly due to the abundant ferrihydrite and lepidocrocite present. [1] Poulton & Canfield (2005), Chemical Geology 214, 209– 221Seasonal Methane Fluxes and Sulfate Reduction Rates in a Eutrophied Baltic Estuarine System


Mineralogical Magazine | 2013

Controls on redox-nutrient cycling in the Cretaceous greenhouse ocean: Insights from S isotope systematics

Simon W. Poulton; Susann Henkel; Christian März; Hannah Urquhart; Sascha Flögel; Sabine Kasten; Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté; Thomas Wagner

Oceanic anoxic events (OAEs) were a frequent occurrence in the Cretaceous greenhouse ocean. Based on a variety of paleoredox indicators, euxinic water column conditions are commonly invoked for these OAEs. However, in a high resolution study of OAE3 deep sea sediments [1], revised paleoredox indicators suggest that euxinic conditions fluctuated with anoxic ferruginous conditions on orbital timescales. Building upon this, we here present new data for a continental shelf setting at Tarfaya, Morocco, that spans a period prior to, and during, the onset of OAE2. We again find strong evidence for orbital transitions from euxinic to ferruginous conditions. The presence of this distinct cyclicity during OAE2 and OAE3 in shallow and deep water settings, coupled with its occurrence on the anoxic shelf prior to the global onset of anoxia, suggests that these fluctuations were a fundamental feature of anoxia in the Cretaceous ocean. The observed redox cyclicity has major implications for the cycling of phosphorus, and hence the maintenance and longevity of OAEs. However, despite this significance, controls on the observed redox cyclicity are essentially unknown. Here, we utilize S isotope measurements (pyrite S and carbonate-associated S) from the deep sea and shelf settings to model oceanic sulphate concentrations across the redox transitions. Perhaps surprisingly, we find no evidence to suggest that ferruginous conditions arose due to extensive drawdown of seawater sulphate (as pyrite-S and organic-S) under euxinic conditions. Instead, S isotope systematics in the deep sea imply increased sulphate concentrations during ferruginous intervals. Based on these observations and other major element data, we infer that the redox cyclicity instead relates to orbitally-paced fluctuations in continental hydrology and weathering, linking the redox state of the global ocean to climate-driven processes on land. [1] Marz et al (2008) GCA, 72, 3703-3717.


Geobiology | 2014

An inorganic geochemical argument for coupled anaerobic oxidation of methane and iron reduction in marine sediments.

Natascha Riedinger; Michael J. Formolo; Timothy W. Lyons; Susann Henkel; Antje Beck; Sabine Kasten


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2012

Diagenetic barium cycling in Black Sea sediments – A case study for anoxic marine environments

Susann Henkel; José M Mogollón; Kerstin Nöthen; Christine Franke; Kara Bogus; Eric Robin; André Bahr; Martin Blumenberg; Thomas Pape; Richard Seifert; Christian März; Gert J. de Lange; Sabine Kasten

Collaboration


Dive into the Susann Henkel's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge