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Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *, P. Gaillot 1 , T.G. Ferdelman 1 , A. Kano 1 , T. Williams 1 , K. Abe 1 , M.S. Andres 1 , M. Bjaerger 1 , E.L. Browning 1 , B.A. Cragg 1 , B. De Mol 1 , B. Dorschel 1 , A. Fourbert 1 , T.D. Frank 1 , Y. Fuwa 1 , J.J. Gharib 1 , J.M. Gregg 1 , V.A.I. Huvenne 1 , P. Léonide 1 , X. Li 1 , K. Mangelsdorf 1 , X. Monteys 1 , I. Novosel 1 , S. Sakai 1 , V. Samarkin 1 , K. Sasaki 1 , A.J. Spivack 1 , C. Takashima 1 , J. Titschack 1 , and J.P. Henriet 3 1 Integrated Ocean Drilling Project (IODP) Expedition 307 Science Party Geological Survey of Japan, AIST International Workshop on Core-Log- Seismic Integration: New Scientific and Technological Challenges
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Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307

Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling:

Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound

Akiko Tanaka1,2*, P. Gaillot1, T.G. Ferdelman1, A. Kano1, T. Williams1, K. Abe1, M.S. Andres1, M.

Bjaerger1, E.L. Browning1, B.A. Cragg1, B. De Mol1, B. Dorschel1, A. Fourbert1, T.D. Frank1, Y. Fuwa1, J.J. Gharib1, J.M. Gregg1, V.A.I. Huvenne1, P.

Léonide1, X. Li1, K. Mangelsdorf1, X. Monteys1, I. Novosel1, S. Sakai1, V. Samarkin1, K. Sasaki1, A.J. Spivack1, C. Takashima1, J. Titschack1, and J.P.

Henriet3

1Integrated Ocean Drilling Project (IODP) Expedition 307 Science Party

2Geological Survey of Japan, AIST3RCMG, Ghent University

International Workshop on Core-Log-Seismic Integration: New Scientific and Technological Challenges

2005/10/04

Page 2: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

http://iodp.tamu.edu/publications/PR/307PR/307PR.html http://iodp.ldeo.columbia.edu/LOG_SUM/307/exp307.html

Page 3: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Location of Porcupine Seabight and Expedition 307 operations area.

Global distribution of cold-water coral reefs [www.unep.org].

Page 4: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

General view of Modern Carbonate Mounds - IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine drilling area.

Challenger Mound

GSI

Challenger Mound

Page 5: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Anneleen Foubert and Veerle Huvenne

Environmental Survey

Page 6: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Bathymetric setting of the Porcupine Basin off SW Ireland (contours in m), showing locations of mounds seismic profiles, side-scan sonographs and sample sites. [De Mol et al., 2002]

Page 7: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Seismic profile of the Belgica mound area, perpendicular to the slope. [De Mol et al., 2002]

Interpretation of high-resolution seismic profiles underlying Challenger Mound and slope (after De Mol et al., 2002).

Page 8: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Geological interpretation of Porcupine Basin stratigraphy in the Belgica province (after Naeth et al., 2005). Arrows = modeled pathways of hydrocarbon-rich gases.

Page 9: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Lithostratigraphy of the three sites projected on the seismic profile of Challenger Mound along a north-northwest to south-southeast transect.

Page 10: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Lithostratigraphic correlation. Geologic ages were estimated from biostratigraphic data.

Page 11: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

basic questions

- What is the sedimentology and structure of the mou

nd?

- What triggered mound initiation?

- How does the ecosystem interact with sedimentary f

luxes to make the mound grow?

- How are mound growth phases related to glacial-int

erglacial cycles?

- What role do microbial communities and geochemical

reaction play in the mound?

Page 12: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Details of logging operations completed during Expedition 307

Page 13: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Downslope seismic profile showing sigmoidal unit at Site U1316 and semitransparent seismic layer at Site U1317. Blow-up shows the high-amplitude reflectors and lenticular structures underlying drift sediments and adjacent mound.

Page 14: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Overview of the spliced depth curves of the different physical properties measured at Site U1316.

Page 15: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Interpretation

Page 16: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Comparison of mound base directly below the mound and under themound flank. Note the significantly better preservation of coral and sedimentary structures in the frozen split core.

Page 17: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

Core-log integration at Hole U1317 gamma-ray, porosity, density, velocity. Post-cruise correlation between features recorded in these logs (especially acoustic, density and gamma-ray) offer potential to provide in-situ ground truth for core data. Initial examination shows that the core depths are offset 4-6 m downwards from the log depths.

Page 18: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

summaryMound initiation on sharp erosion boundary- regional Miocene/Pliocene unconformity of at least 1.65 Ma

- siliciclastic pre-mound succession of Miocene age

Mound dominated by Pleistocene deep-water coral- 155 m thick coral-bearing succession

- 10 distinct layers of coral (Lophelia pertusa) presenting th

e active growth phase probably corresponding to Pleistocene in

terglacials

No evidence for hydrocarbon seeps- lithostratigraphy, pore water geochemistry and bacterial cou

nts detect no hydrocarbon fluid flow

- no significant gas quantities found in mound or sub-mound se

diment

Modern analogue to Phanerozoic- comparable in size, shape and geometry yet with coral frame-

work builders

Page 19: Preliminary Results from IODP Expedition 307 Porcupine Carbonate Mound Drilling: Geophysical View of the Challenger Carbonate Mound Akiko Tanaka 1,2 *,

My Research Interests on 307 Expedition

3-D Element-Concentration Mapping by X-ray CT using SR (SP8) (Ikeda et al., 2004).

Sedimentary Sequence

Analysis using Very Long Core at Lake Baikal (Nakano et al,

2000).