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  • Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; gas hydrates; Japan; Kumano Basin; marine heat flow; MARUM; mud volcanism  (2)
  • 138-844; 170-1039; 170-1040; 190-1177; 31-297; Calcite; Chlorite; Clay minerals; Comment; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Costa Rica subduction complex, North Pacific Ocean; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth comment; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Event label; EW0104; EW0104-02GC; EW0104-16GC; EW0104-24GC; EW0104-36PC; EW0104-40GC; GC; Glomar Challenger; Gravity corer; Illite; Joides Resolution; Leg138; Leg170; Leg190; Leg31; M54/2; M54/2_35; Maurice Ewing; Meteor (1986); North Pacific/Philippine Sea/BASIN; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Opal, biogenic silica; PC; Philippine Sea; Piston corer; Plagioclase; Quartz; Residual friction coefficient; Ring shear experiments; Sample code/label; Sediment type; SFB574; Shear strength; Smectite; TicoFlux I; Volatiles and Fluids in Subduction Zones; X-ray diffraction (XRD)  (1)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-11-10
    Description: Marine heat flow data, sampled by a 22-channel violin bow probe offshore Japan in 2016. Data are unfiltered, that is, they are measured field data, not necessarily refecting geothermal heat flux. The data are correct in a technical way but they are influenced by mud volcanism, gas hydrates and bottom water currents.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; gas hydrates; Japan; Kumano Basin; marine heat flow; MARUM; mud volcanism
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 9 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kopf, Achim J (2013): Effective strength of incoming sediments and its implications for plate boundary propagation: Nankai and Costa Rica as type examples of accreting vs. erosive convergent margins. Tectonophysics, 26, 958-969, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2013.07.023
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The location of the seaward tip of a subduction thrust controls material transfer at convergent plate margins, and hence global mass balances. At approximately half of those margins, the material of the subducting plate is completely underthrust so that no accretion or even subduction erosion takes place. Along the remaining margins, material is scraped off the subducting plate and added to the upper plate by frontal accretion. We here examine the physical properties of subducting sediments off Costa Rica and Nankai, type examples for an erosional and an accretionary margin, to investigate which parameters control the level where the frontal thrust cuts into the incoming sediment pile. A series of rotary-shear experiments to measure the frictional strength of the various lithologies entering the two subduction zones were carried out. Results include the following findings: (1) At Costa Rica, clay-rich strata at the top of the incoming succession have the lowest strength (µres = 0.19) while underlying calcareous ooze, chalk and diatomite are strong (up to µres = 0.43; µpeak = 0.56). Hence the entire sediment package is underthrust. (2) Off Japan, clay-rich deposits within the lower Shikoku Basin inventory are weakest (µres = 0.13–0.19) and favour the frontal proto-thrust to migrate into one particular horizon between sandy, competent turbidites below and ash-bearing mud above. (3) Taking in situ data and earlier geotechnical testing into account, it is suggested that mineralogical composition rather than pore-pressure defines the position of the frontal thrust, which locates in the weakest, clay mineral-rich (up to 85 wt.%) materials. (4) Smectite, the dominant clay mineral phase at either margin, shows rate strengthening and stable sliding in the frontal 50 km of the subduction thrust (0.0001–0.1 mm/s, 0.5–25 MPa effective normal stress). (5) Progressive illitization of smectite cannot explain seismogenesis, because illite-rich samples also show velocity strengthening at the conditions tested.
    Keywords: 138-844; 170-1039; 170-1040; 190-1177; 31-297; Calcite; Chlorite; Clay minerals; Comment; COMPCORE; Composite Core; Costa Rica subduction complex, North Pacific Ocean; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth comment; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Event label; EW0104; EW0104-02GC; EW0104-16GC; EW0104-24GC; EW0104-36PC; EW0104-40GC; GC; Glomar Challenger; Gravity corer; Illite; Joides Resolution; Leg138; Leg170; Leg190; Leg31; M54/2; M54/2_35; Maurice Ewing; Meteor (1986); North Pacific/Philippine Sea/BASIN; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Opal, biogenic silica; PC; Philippine Sea; Piston corer; Plagioclase; Quartz; Residual friction coefficient; Ring shear experiments; Sample code/label; Sediment type; SFB574; Shear strength; Smectite; TicoFlux I; Volatiles and Fluids in Subduction Zones; X-ray diffraction (XRD)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 449 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Kopf, Achim J; Asshoff, Kira; Belke-Brea, M; Bergenthal, Markus; Bohrmann, Gerhard; Bräunig, Anja; Düßmann, Ralf; Feseker, Tomas; Fleischmann, Timo; Franke, Philipp; Geprägs, Patrizia; Hammerschmidt, Sebastian; Heesemann, Bernd; Herschelmann, Oliver; Hüpers, Andre; Ikari, Matt J; Kaszemeik, Kai; Kaul, Norbert; Kimura, Toshinori; Kitada, Kazuya; Klar, Steffen; Lange, Matthias; Madison, Melissa; Mai, Anh Hoang; Noorlander, Cornelis; Pape, Thomas; Rehage, Ralf; Reuter, Christian; Rosiak, Uwe; Saffer, Demian M; Schmidt, Werner; Seiter, Christian; Spiesecke, Ulli; Stachowski, Adrian; Ojima, Takanori; Tryon, Michael; Vahlenkamp, Maximilian; Wei, Jiayong; Wiemer, Gauvain; Wintersteller, Paul; Zarrouk, Marcel (2013): Report and preliminary results of R/V SONNE cruise SO222. MEMO: MeBo drilling and in situ Long-term Monitoring in the Nankai Trough accretionary complex, Japan. Leg A: Hong Kong, PR China, 09.06.2012 - Nagoya, Japan, 30.06.2012. Leg B: Nagoya, Japan, 04.07.2012 - Pusan, Korea, 18.07.2012. Berichte aus dem MARUM und dem Fachbereich Geowissenschaften der Universität Bremen, 297, 121 pp, urn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00103543-13
    Publication Date: 2024-02-16
    Description: Temperature gradients and in-situ thermal conductivity, measured with the Bremen heat flow probe. There are 21 channels, spaced 0.26 cm.
    Keywords: Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; gas hydrates; Japan; Kumano Basin; marine heat flow; MARUM; mud volcanism
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 16 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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